![Cleaning Matters](/orgfiles/ZORGF000011/CM/layout/cm-logo-2021.png)
![]() |
Chris Shaw
Editor |
Home> | TRAINING, EDUCATION & EVENTS | >Training & Education Courses | >Training vs education: The debate at the heart of managing change |
Home> | TRAINING, EDUCATION & EVENTS | >Training & Education Resources | >Training vs education: The debate at the heart of managing change |
Training vs education: The debate at the heart of managing change
06 March 2020
Ensuring that your workforce can take change in their stride, as Manuela D’Agata, ISSA international education and certification director, explains, means being aware of the key differences between training and education, while recognising the specific benefits each can provide in driving your business forward.
The speed of change is one of the biggest challenges to the commercial cleaning industry. Being able to adapt to change is a key characteristic of successful business in the digital era. Nevertheless, even the most agile of companies feels challenged by its unrelenting speed. Seamlessly incorporating factors such as; sustainability, robotic technology and different patterns of service delivery - including day-time cleaning - into your operations is essential if you wish to remain efficient and competitive.
How do you ensure that your company is in best position to identify the opportunities that change delivers? Crucially, how do you create a culture that consistently embraces this change?
For clarity, it’s necessary to define the differences between training and education. To be responsive and resilient requires the levels of knowledge and flexibility of a well-trained workforce. Training delivers the functionality – the how - in your operations: the understanding of equipment use, specific procedures, and achieving targets. It satisfies your immediate needs, getting the day-to-day job done as efficiently as possible, enabling new workers to become proficient, and eliminating any costly need for rework.
Education adds another dimension that is both theoretical and strategic, by helping individuals to understand the why behind what they do; making your company a more attractive proposition when negotiating contracts and delivering new opportunities. Education makes your workforce more invested in what they do, revealing a clear career path that confronts the perennial problem of staff retention.
If you invest in and nurture a well-trained and educated workforce, you create a resource for the future that’s highly adaptable to progress and change; while taking your place amongst the best in the industry. It represents a never-ending commitment which drives ongoing development and continuous improvement throughout your business.
Transformation can be better achieved within your organization through gaining the ISSA Cleaning Industry Management Standard (CIMS) certification. Built on the six pillars of cleaning management best practice, it equips and empowers you for change management, and the judgement to know when to act. With disruption accelerating, if you fail to recognize, or respond slowly to, this rapidly changing landscape, you’ll miss out on new business opportunities. The great danger is that when you’re fully aware of this - it’s already too late.
For more information, visit: https://ukcims.issa.com/
- Project to use food waste to tackle plastic pollution
- Researchers develop new system to manage pandemics
- National testing coordinator warns against unapproved antibody tests
- COVID-19: £14.7billion allocated for NHS and public services
- Covid infections reduced after mask upgrade
- The importance of office cleaning due to COVID-19
- CHSA puts spotlight on accredited members
- How we dry our hands can affect the spread of viruses
- Register for the Cleaning Excellence Conference & Awards
- Record cancer charity golf fundraiser