By Amy Campbell
Recently, a friend of mine was fired from a new job after just 70 days of employment. It was a difficult job in which my friend had little experience but she was willing to work hard to be successful. After just a four days of training, she was deemed ready to work.
However, the complexities of the position proved to be many, and she made quite a few errors in the first few weeks. Nothing catastrophic, but mistakes just the same. After six weeks on the job, which included logging 55 hours or more each week with a single day off, she felt like she was finally beginning to master it. In fact, her supervisor told her at her 60-day review she was improving. Then came the dreaded, Were going to have to let you go. Her supervisor's only remark about her performance was that she wasnt at the place where they needed her to be to perform the job. Bye-bye.
Now, my friend isnt a slacker. Shes a really hard worker and gives it her all. Jumping into a new career took a lot of guts, and she truly tried. But over the past few months she kept telling me, Im not sure Im doing this right. During her very short time in the job she worked with five different supervisors. Five in just two months. While the company had some policies in place, each supervisor had a different way of doing things, adding to her frustration. When she approached one supervisor around week three to relay her concerns about needing more training, she was told, It will get easier. Youre fine.
We all know training is an essential component to being successful in any job. What often falls through the cracks is how much training an employee needs. Truly it all depends on the job and the employee. One job may only require a week of training while another could be stretched out over three or four weeks or even months.
In the self-storage industry, training covers many facets including learning the management software and security system, sales, maintenance, reports, etc. Of course the goal is to hire someone who can jump in and learn quickly, but what do you do when it doesnt happen on the timetable in your head? Are you quick to pull the plug and give the employee a pink slip, then start the hiring process all over again?
Lets not forget the money and time lost if youre too quick to fire a new employee. Its often been said that the cost of hiring and training just one employee is about $4,000. Even if you didnt spend this much, you still need to consider the value of your time.
Of course, there will be instances when a new employee looks great on paper, interviews very well, then isnt up to the rigors of the job. Then its a matter of taking a hard look at your hiring process and see where you can make changes so this doesnt happen again.
But if you have a new employee whos on the border of being capable or not, you should ask yourself will more training help push this person where I need him to be? If the answer is yes, take that leap and put forth the effort. Here are some great articles on employee training from the ISS archives to help you build your employee-training program.
- Training Self-Storage Managers: Creating a Manual, What to Teach, Choosing a Trainer and More
- In High Demand: Winning the Fight to Hire (and Keep) the Finest Staff
- Building an Effective Training Program for Self-Storage Facility Managers
Youll also find dozens of resources in the Inside Self-Storage Store, including manager-training materials from some of the top self-storage operations consultants in the industry.
While theres no cookie-cutter approach you can take when it comes to training new employees, one thing is certain. If you hire the right person, then log the training hours, your new self-storage manager will have a better chance at being successful. After all, thats the ultimate goal. You dont just want someone to man your office. Youre looking for a partner who will help your self-storage facility be the best in its market.
Whats your training method? Share your thoughts by posting a comment below or on Self-Storage Talk.