Sunday, October 20, 2019
How to choose a business-writing training provider - Emphasis
How to choose a business-writing training provider   How to choose a business-writing training provider  Writing skills is a subject that many trainers claim to be able to  provide. Heres our guide to sorting the wheat from the chaff.    Writing analysis  Its important always to build on what trainees know already. So a  good provider should start by assessing documents that delegates have  written  and do so preferably in advance of the training course. (At  Emphasis, we start by assessing 14 aspects of each delegates writing,  producing a graph to show which skills they should concentrate on.)  Its also useful if they can do the same after training, to assess  the effectiveness of the training and pick up on any outstanding  learning needs.  Specialist trainers  The fact that English is usually the first language of trainees does  not mean that any English-speaking trainer can train them to use it  effectively. Many trainers claim to be able to deliver writing-skills  training. But you need to make sure that they have specialist skills in  this area  apart from experience of running training courses on the  subject.  To state the obvious: English may be our native language, but its  still a language. So it demands specialist skills. After all, you  wouldnt want to learn Spanish from a trainer whose only qualification  is that they read a book on it last week.  Flexible, solutions-based approach  The objective of all training should be to give trainees the skills  they need to work more effectively. It should not be simply to run a  training course. Make sure, therefore, that the providers you choose can  be flexible in their approach. They should be able to use a range of  training techniques (eg. group-based training; one-to-one, on-site  coaching; telephone coaching), so that they can adopt the methods most  suited to the trainees needs and circumstances.  Bespoke training  Training needs to be authentic to work, as trainees need to be able  to apply the techniques they learn to their jobs straight away, without  having to translate it. So make sure that the provider you choose has  the resources to provide bespoke training courses.  Follow-up support  The true test of training comes when trainees get back to their desks  and have to plough through the 30 emails that have piled up while they  were on the course. New techniques are easily dislodged by day-to-day  workloads, and its all-too easy to slip back into bad habits. So ask  what back-up the trainer can provide  such as telephone/email support  or regular reminders of key messages.  If youd like to discuss how we can help you or your team improve your business-writing, call us on +44 (0)1273 936 907 or send us a message.    
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