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Learning and Development Impacting Your Bottom Line

Learning and Development Impacting Your Bottom Line

Guest post by Rachel Kay

 

Image: ShutterStock

 

How, then, can L&D positively impact the bottom line? Which areas will it improve, how will it save money, and what are its overall benefits?

Increased productivity

The level of employee productivity, in addition to the general quality of work, is one of the most important things to impact upon a company, and it’s one of the things that learning and development can help to improve. As employees develop other skills, their productivity naturally increases. This enables the company to achieve its goals more quickly and to grow.

Higher engagement levels

If a staff member is not engaged, this is a problem that has to be addressed as soon as possible. The person will not be particularly productive and the quality of their work may be lower than it should be. This naturally damages the company, both financially and operationally, but L&D can rectify the issue. A desire by the company to educate and develop employees helps to give them a sense of purpose and importance, in addition to increasing their skills and confidence in their abilities.

Talent attraction

Being able to demonstrate a strong track record of developing talent over the years can be a major selling point when it comes to hiring new staff. If they have the raw skills but need a bit of refinement, being able to show that you can improve their skills and increase their future employability will help to convince them that your business is one that they want to be a part of.

Staff retention

According to HR Review, it can cost over £30,000 to replace an employee, which can obviously eat up a budget very quickly if there is a high level of staff turnover within the business. The knock-on effect of the point about L&D ensuring a higher level of engagement amongst team members is that it motivates them to remain with the company, where they feel valued and know that they can develop themselves (both professionally and personally). This is good for the company, which can retain its most talented members. Each party is now invested in the other, benefiting them both.

 

 

Rachel Kay

Rachel is a regular contributor to Enhance – The Magazine for Learning and Development.

 



This post first appeared on Passion For Software, please read the originial post: here

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