At the core of Information Governance is the need for change management — the need to deeply embed governance practices, disciplines, and behaviours in the organization. To achieve this, training design and delivery needs to address Hermann Ebbinghous´ “Forgetting Curve” to ensure that new knowledge is retained and applied. If not, attendees may only remember 30% of the training after 30 days.
Based on our extensive experience with developing and delivering training program for clients, we have identified the following success criteria for training:
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Relevant – attendees find the training relevant for their job
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Useful – attendees find the training useful for doing their job
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Memorable – attendees find it easy to remember the training
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Practical – attendees find it easy to use the newly acquired knowledge
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Outcome – agree with stakeholders the behaviours that should change
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Personas – segment the audience based on personas to ensure relevant and useful training
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Engaging – make the course memorable, fun, interactive, and enable attendees to also learn from each other
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Repetitive – first educate attendees in the why, then the how, and then require them to do it during the training
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Applicable – make it easy to remember and use the new knowledge with hands-on exercises, checklists, and on-demand repetition
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Measurable – define key performance metrics to identify how well the training changes behaviours