Employers Focusing on Training to Retain Employees

Pay raises are the top retention strategy for employers, but many are also offering training and professional development.

Men look to training courses as stepping stones for promotion/advancement at 37%, while women see them as a means to higher pay at 35%. (Photo: Shutterstock)

While pay increases remain the top choice of employers looking to retain their best employees, the second most popular option is training.

But, according to PayScale Inc.’s Professional Development: What Employees Want report, employees have very definite notions about which sorts of training they are most interested in — and employers should pay attention.

Although pay raises were the top retention strategy for 61% of employers, only a hair less — 59% — said they’d be focusing on offering employees training. But, according to Wendy Brown, director at PayScale, it’s not all that simple.

“While there are some significant trends, our research shows professional development is really not a one-size-fits all approach,” Brown says. “Employers should take the time to truly understand which programs and training opportunities would be most important to help every employee progress in his or her career in a meaningful way.”

Training preferences

The report cites specific training goals among employees, such as the big winner — management and leadership training — chosen by 32% of respondents as their top choice for an employee professional development program. The next most popular among workers were professional certification (30%) and technical skills training (17%).

Then there are the less popular options, chosen by less than 10% of respondents: teamwork/interpersonal skills training (8%), employer-subsidized degree (7%), communications/public speaking (4%) and diversity and inclusion training (2%).

Men look to training courses as stepping-stones for promotion/advancement at 37%, while women see them as a means to higher pay at 35%. And when it came to the type of training, that varied depending on the field in which employees work. For instance, 36% of health care employees said they were most interested in professional certifications from the selection of training program options, but workers in human resources were the most likely to want professional certification (43%) when compared to other occupations.

Then there’s the age variation. Millennials wanted professional development across the three top programs: management/leadership training, professional certification and technical skills training. But boomers were more interested in teamwork/interpersonal skills training and public speaking training than millennials.