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Choosing a good training company
These are tough times in the training business. Two years ago, you had
to be very careful to select a training company that actually knew their
subject - stories were rife of companies sending trainers who just read
the notes and couldn't answer questions, for example.
Now there's a new breed around - the training company that's hit hard times;
you may have had a good course from them in the past, but the gloss has gone off
their offering these days. But how do you identify such a company. Well -
we've seen or heard of all of these in the last six months ....
- A move from their own offices to training in shared facilities (at least this
might have better facilities than a hotel venue)
- Courses that once ran regularly now marked "call for dates"
- Where credit was previously offered, you're now required to pay with your
order.
- Administration and booking from what appears to be an accommodation address
in a different party of the country
- Companys that regularly cancel courses if they don't have enough bookings
- sometimes at the last minute. We've even heard of students turning up for
a course that they had not been told was cancelled!
- Companys that accept too many students for their trainers to handle
- Companys that combine too many student skill levels into a single course
- Web sites that tell you all about the courses that you've missed in the
last six months; if they can't update their web site, how can they be
updating their material?
Let's be more positive. What should you look for in a good training company
and course?
- A company with their own training centre, equipment, broadband
internet connection, etc.
- A company with full time staff who write and also present the courses.
- A company who you can pay at the start of the course, or perhaps even
offers credit terms where appropriate.
- A course that is suited to your needs
- A course that has been updated recently (is the web site up to date?
this is usually a clue!)
- A clearly stated policy on cancellation if there are too few bookings
(preferably "we will never cancel you"), and a clearly stated maximum
number of students (5 or 6 is ideal from the students and trainer's
perspective. 8 is manageable. More on a public course is TOO MANY)
- The good companies tend to be the busy ones, and the ones who'll
happily put you in touch with a recent customer if you ask.
Price is not necessarily a good guide, though perhaps a company that's
offering all sorts of discounts to someone it's never even heard of
before is perhaps just too anxious for your business!
Title: Choosing a good training company
Contact: enquiries@open-source-training.co.uk
Phone: +44 (0) 1225 708225
Date: Sun Jul 21 2002
This page: http://www.open-source-training.co.uk/news.html
Copyright © 2002, Well House Consultants Ltd
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