Transcript
Page 1: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

(and how to avoid them) ?

Biggest Mistakes in Language Training9

Page 2: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Having been in the language training business for over 45 years, we’ve seen companies make the same mistakes over and over again when it comes to implementing a language training program. We don’t want you to make the same mistakes.So let’s look at how NOT to do it.

Been there, seen that.

Page 3: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

There are many ways to get it wrong.We’ve seen too many English language initiatives go off the rails.Here are nine of the most common mistakes…

Page 4: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

1

A common mistake is to start a language training program without clear goals.

These are all different goals that fall under the same ‘English training’ heading, but each one would lead to very different programs and each one would have its own metrics to track success.

Start with goals first – it’s the only way to stay on track.

No aim, no blame.

1

Do you want to improve your sales team’s ability to negotiate?Empower your scientists to publish international papers?Get your economists to read the financial press?Teach your customer service reps to treat people like VIPs?

Action

Page 5: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Strategic initiatives succeed when they comewith top-level endorsement, however too many companies keep their language training under the management radar and off the boardroom agenda. That’s a mistake.

Staying under the radar.

2

Position your English training program as a strategic initiative, not a low-level tactical exercise. If the

leadership team wants the stated outcomes, they’ll value your approach and give it their full support.

Action2

Page 6: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Start your learning programs with assessments of each learner’s current skills. Taking someone from proficiency

level 3 to 5 is very different from taking someone from 1 to 4. Find out where everyone is today.

Action3

Many of your learners may already have some English skills. Some will be almost fluent, only needing a bit of practice. Others will be starting from the very beginning.But most language programs assume that everyone is starting from zero. That means the more advanced people become bored and frustrated.

Assuming everyone is at the same starting line.

3

Page 7: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Your learners need to know they’re building relevant skills. Make your programs flexible enough to focus the

training where it’s needed for each learner.

Action

Teaching everyone the same skills.4

A common mistake is to start a language training program without clear goals.

Unfortunately, many English development programs teach the same skills to everyone. This ‘one size fits all’ approach actually suits nobody.

A salesperson may need to improve writing and speaking skills.A senior executive may need to negotiate and present confidently.A factory head may need to focus on reading technical papers.An engineer may need to learn specialist vocabulary.

4

Page 8: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Build motivation, reward and recognition into your English training programs – you’ll get there much faster.

Action5

Motivation is the secret ingredient of all learning – especially language learning.But too many companies ignore the motivational aspect, expecting the learners to set their own targets and monitor their own progress. This only works for the most motivated learners – maybe the top one percent.

Taking motivation for granted.5

ON

OFF

Page 9: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Pick & mix is great for selecting sweets but it’s a dangerous strategy when it comes to training. If you let your people choose their own local language school or give local offices a budget and hope they get it right… chances are very high that they won’t.Results in English training vary widely. The same amount of time spent in one program can deliver half the results of another.

A pick & mix approach.6

Think about your language training strategically and centrally. Deliver a uniformly high-quality learning

experience instead of dozens of mediocre courses.

Action

E¡D*

6

Page 10: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Simply buying software licenses and sending the CDs to everyone whose skills you want to improve is the fastest route to frustration.Software and technology can play a role in any English language program but software alone never taught anyone anything.

Throwing software at the problem.7

Choose the best technology platform you can find but don’t leave everything to technology.

Make sure real teachers are incorporated to help deliver the learning experience. Ideally they should be available

whenever and wherever the learner needs them (that’s where technology can help).

Action

DD

E

C

C

D

E

C

C

¡

*•

7

Page 11: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

You need to track the participation and the actual progress of each learner so you can determine the

success and return on investment of the entire program.

Action

With any other investment, businesses would set performance targets and track progress.But with English learning, far too many companies and public sector departments leave the progress to chance.

Pay and pray.8

8

Page 12: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

In order to get it right first time around you need to focus on doing what you do best, and bring in the experts to

accelerate your peoples English skills.

Action9

The biggest mistake of all is trying to approach it alone English language training, without expert trainingand support.

Over $35 billion a year is spent in this way and the return on investment (if anyone measures it) is far below what companies would achieve by turning to the specialists. It’s expensive. It’s inflexible. And it’s far less effective.

Going it alone.9

Page 13: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

The mistakes summarised here may seem obvious to you.But most companies still make most of them – which seriously inhibits their progress.The alternative to this un-measured, poorly managed process is something we call Strategic English.It’s all about targeting your English language investment to your specific needs –- then actively managing and tracking success instead of leaving it to chance.(That’s exactly what we do for hundreds of fast-growing international companies.)

Starting to see what Strategic English looks like?

Page 14: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

Strategic English means treating English language development as a key driver of success – then managing and measuring it accordingly.As an HR professional or executive leader responsible for the success of your people…It’s time to get Strategic.

English

English

Page 15: 9 biggest mistakes in language training

@

EF is the pioneer of – and world leader in – the task-based approach to English language learning for large organizations.Our unique combination of great teachers, breakthrough technology and fanatical service adds more value to your business, and does it faster than any other method.

Strategic EnglishHow English language skills can power your global business

An EF Executive Briefing

Selling In EnglishThe seven big mistakes in English language learning for sales organizations

The Economist Intelligence Unit’sCompeting Across Borders: How cultural and communication barriers affect business An independent, global survey into how language skills impact the competitiveness of multinational companies.

The EF English Live™ e-brochureAll about our cloud school

About EF Corporate Solutions

Further reading:

[email protected]

AN EXECUTIVE BRIEFING FROM EF

How English language skills canpower your global business

STRATEGICENGLISH

Selling in EnglishThe seven big mistakes in English Language learning for sales organisations.A mini-eBook from EF