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11 Ways for Demonstrating ROI on a Shoestring
Most agree there is significant merit to measuring and evaluating
training programs. But how do you get this done when budget
resources are limited?
“If an organization is running on a shoestring budget,
there are still ways to demonstrate results in monetary terms,” notes
Patti Phillips, author of CEP’s new one-day The Bottomline
on ROI Workshop. “We have proven, cost-saving approaches
organizations can take to show financial accountability.
It’s just knowing where to start.”
Phillips recommends the following11 ways to reduce accountability
costs:
1. Take shortcuts when evaluating participant reaction, learning, and application
Measuring participant reaction to a program as well as the level and use of
knowledge gained are important steps in implementing a comprehensive evaluation
process. “When your resources are limited, it pays to reduce emphasis
on these measures, and place greater emphasis on collecting and analyzing impact
data such as improvements in output, quality, cost, and time,” Phillips
suggests.
2. Fund measurement and evaluation activities with savings
from the use of ROI
Phillips notes, “Even with limited funding, the ROI
data you collect can be used to pinpoint efficiencies that
can improve program development and delivery processes or
to actually eliminate certain programs entirely. The resources
you free up can then be used to further enhance and fund
the measurement and evaluation process.”
3. Plan for evaluation early in the process
“
We find that all too often, program evaluation occurs as
an afterthought. You can reduce costs by avoiding having
to backtrack. The ideal solution is to build evaluation into
the training and performance improvement process from the
outset. Your investment in planning will reduce the required
investment in execution,” says Phillips.
4. Share responsibilities for evaluation
By assigning evaluation responsibilities to performance consultants,
program designers and developers, facilitators, participants,
management, and subject matter experts, you can eliminate
the need to invest in personnel specifically assigned to
evaluate programs. Distribution of responsibility helps
conserve important resources and enriches the process by
generating active involvement of all stakeholders.
5. Use shortcuts for major steps
One shortcut Phillips recommends is to establish baseline
data for the improvements you anticipate from a program.
Phillips adds, “These baseline measures can be derived
from existing sources like organizational goals or mission
statements, marketing plans, budgets, production volume,
benchmarking studies, process diagrams, performance records,
and quality reports.
Also, you can shortcut post-program data collection. One
of the most often-used shortcut methods is a simple questionnaire.
The questionnaire can ask a few pertinent questions to help
you generate an ROI calculation.”
6. Use estimates in data collection and analysis
“
People find this recommendation to be controversial-- but
estimates are often used in accounting and finance practices,
so the financial executives are comfortable with this practice,” says
Phillips. “In calculating training and performance
improvement ROI, we often use estimates to isolate the effects
of a program and to convert data to a monetary value. The
key is ensuring that the most credible source is used for
the estimates – and typically, participants are the
best source for this data as they are well aware of the impact
their performance is having on certain key measures.”
7. Use sampling to select the most appropriate programs
for ROI analysis
Patti Phillips suggests that you consider criteria such as
the life cycle of the program, your organization’s
objectives, the cost of the program, the size of the audience,
the visibility of the program, and management’s interest.
Once you have a list of candidate programs, prioritize them
and allocate ROI resources to the extent they are available.
8. Develop internal capability to implement the ROI methodology
While the use of consultants is valuable when only one or
two studies are conducted in a year, if you are interested
in fully implementing ROI into the training and performance
improvement process, you will save money by building internal
capabilities.
“This is a fundamental reason why I developed the
Bottomline on ROI Workshop,” says Phillips. “The
one-day workshop gives participants a chance to become familiar
with all the levels of evaluation, including the most sophisticated
level, ROI. Participants quickly assess in one day how their
organization can make measurement and evaluation part of
the department’s operating process, and they leave
with an action plan. To find out more and to enroll, click
here or call CEP Client Services at 800-558-4237.
For individuals who want all the skills to fully implement
the Phillips ROI methodology, there is a 5 day certification
workshop. For more information on certification, click
here.
9. Streamline the reporting process
“
A complete ROI impact study report (including the purpose
of the program, the purpose of the evaluation, the data collection
and analysis methodologies, results, conclusions, and recommendations)
can be as long as 150 pages,” explains Phillips. “However,
once key stakeholders are familiar and comfortable with the
ROI methodology you can streamline your reporting to a one-page
document that focuses on the results of the program.”
10. Use technology to reduce time
Technology use in evaluation continues to flourish. Automating
data collection using products such as Survey Pro or Metrics
that Matter may allow you to reduce both time and costs.
11. Build on the work of others
Phillips notes, “While there are unique challenges
in each organization, when it comes to training and performance
improvement programs, organizations are often quite similar.
You can access the experience of others by participating
in internal, local, and global networking opportunities,
and by reading published case studies. This is the purpose
for creating the ROI Institute, so that practitioners could
have a credible, single-source for the latest research and
thinking around measurement and ROI.”
ROI is a comprehensive approach to evaluating training and
performance improvement programs. Yet while comprehensive,
it can also be conducted using cost-saving approaches that
will maintain its credibility. If your organization is on
a shoestring budget, one or more of the above approaches
will help you save time and money in developing your next
ROI impact study.
Patti P. Phillips, Ph.D., is a consultant, author, and researcher
on the ROI methodology, as well as president of the ROI Institute.
Patti can be contacted at patti@roiinstitute.net.
The Bottomline on ROI Workshop is based on Patti Phillips’ award
winning book of the same name. Patti Phillips will lead all
the workshop sessions. Don’t miss the opportunity to
learn about measurement, evaluation and ROI from the co-architect,
along with Dr. Jack J. Phillips, of the Phillips ROI Methodology.
To enroll and for additional information, contact CEP Client
Services at 800-558-4237 or email clientservices@cepworldwide.com.
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