• 27May

    It is very easy to spend months, or $$$$$ on a competency-based program, and end up with very little to show for it.

    Three tips:

    Tip One: You are likely to run into a very specific problem, unless you are working with a fully-qualified competency expert. (Look for an international qualification, specifically in competencies, like City and Guilds.)

    Here is the problem: as you discuss competencies, you become very familiar with the information. You therefore take the material to higher and higher levels of abstraction. You also start to clump the competencies together, so you end up with about 12 broad abstract statements, covering a whole position. These are no use at all.

    This common trap also applies to writing presentations, so fix both problems together. Buy “Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die” by Chip Heath and Dan Heath. It has a crystal clear explanation of this almost-universal error. The Heath brothers will repair both your presentations, and your thinking about competency formation.

    Another check: ask yourself “can I write an assessment document from these competencies?” If the answer is no, get a competency expert to give you a lesson on how to write them, before you waste time or money on getting it wrong!

    Tip Two: Don’t reinvent the wheel. US competencies do exist (e.g. the CUNA ones if you are in finance) or you can begin with the international ones for your industry. Then customize them. Then customize the assessment documents.

    I gave you these starting points last July, so here is a reminder:

    The National Vocational Qualifications (NVQs) in England & Wales
    The Scottish Vocational Qualification (SVQ)
    The National Qualifications Framework (NQF) of New Zealand
    The National Qualifications Framework (NQF) of South Africa (SAQA)
    The Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF)
    The European Qualification Framework (EQF

    Tip Three: In the case of competencies, the dictionary definition applies. The word competency means “having suitable or sufficient skill, knowledge, experience; properly qualified”. It means that your people know, and can do, everything necessary to do the job properly.

    Competency is the standard you need. Someone is either competent, or not yet competent.

    So we train towards the standard (competency) and we assess against the standard (competency). We manage to the standard (competency).

    For some years, I worked in ultra-precision engineering. I’d work with a SME, and create a protocol of competency (in Tampa, but with the UK competencies in hand). If the person trained was not competent, the lathe slide would crash, the diamond tools would be ruined, and an engineer would have to go to the site (maybe the Far East) to fix the mess. The damage might cost $50,000. So the standard was competency.

    If your employee does not know, or cannot do what is required, you lose customers, reputation, team spirit, maybe materials and equipment. Your productivity and retention suffers. Maybe the damage is also $50,000. Your international competitors are all using competency-based learning and performance standards for that very reason. Clarify your competencies and use them!

    Posted by Glynis @ 11:15 am

    Tags: , ,

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.