| Q |
Al, what’s the major
difference between what companies were looking for five years ago from
English language training, and what they expect nowadays? |
| A |
Before the Baht floated, a fairly large number of companies
simply "threw" money at training. As long as the teacher was fairly
competent and didn't cause too many problems and the reports looked good,
they were happy. Then money got tight...and training budgets became very
competitive in terms of where the money was going to be spent. Value became
the key...in the true sense, not in the sense of cheap, but in the sense of
getting something worthwhile for your money. How that affected expectations
varies from company to company, but just about everyone is more demanding
today. Some much more demanding. |
| Q |
We’ve all taught
largish groups of low-level company staff, who seem to make little progress
it must be said. Are companies beginning to steer away from training the
‘lower orders’ |
| A |
At least some are. Others are putting
the responsibility for low-level training on the employees, expecting them
to make the effort to improve and show evidence of it on their own before
the company will consider providing language training for them. Others are
monitoring more, and if someone doesn't progress within a certain time
period, the company stops providing the training. All sorts of different
solutions out there. |
| Q |
Would you say that the corporate language business is
too competitive for its own good and that the low-end providers spoil things
for schools who do want to take things seriously? |
| A |
I actually think it's the opposite in
a way. The low-end providers create a situation where companies realize that
they have to pay for quality service if that is what they want. I have
always felt that a good program was easier to set up at a company after they
had a bad experience with a provider that promised them the moon for a cheap
price than with someone who hadn't had any experience with a language
provider. Of course, there are also the companies that choose not to have
language training because of such experiences.
|
| Q |
What are examples of programs you put
together? |
| A |
I've put together a lot of highly customized programs for companies that
have specific needs...specific report writing programs for engineers,
programs tailored to positions that are not addressed by any EFL/ESL
materials, programs to assist busy executives, coaching programs for a
company's internal quality improvement program. Those type of programs are
where I am focused with my current position. In the past, I put
together "in-house" programs for a number of clients and put together a
variety of programs spread out over a good part of Thailand. The focus for
me has always been creating a "win-win" solution for everyone involved...the
client, the language school, the teacher, and myself. If any of those parts
didn't feel it was worth doing, it wasn't going to work. |
| Q |
Talk us through the process of
actually delivering a first-class corporate training program |
| A |
The process is time consuming, but it actually is pretty simple.
1. Find out what the client wants. Their goals and priorities.
2. Find out where the students are.
3. Present a realistic solution and justify it. Make sure that expectations
are realistic (this is the hardest part...the magic wand is what too many
want).
4. Deliver the program
5. Follow up. |
| Q |
You know the minds of many of the HR
and training managers. What are they looking for in their corporate teacher? |
| A |
1. Professionalism.
2. Reliability
Professionalism means being a good teacher and well-prepared. It also means
looking the part. Dressing smartly. Being where you are supposed to be when
you are supposed to be. No surprises. No tantrums. There are a lot of
teachers in Bangkok who are not professional.
Reliability for the HR people means that they don't get a change of teacher
part way through the program. That is probably the number one thing that
loses schools corporate clients. Teacher changes during the course. I said
there were a lot of teachers who aren't professional? There are even more
that aren't reliable.
By the way, I happen to think there are some absolutely superb teachers in
this town. I've had the good fortune to work with a number of them.
Top-notch reliable professionals. But I don't see how many of them can stay
here with the wages being offered by many schools. I also think that IF the
teacher has been well-prepared by the school - briefed on expectations,
goals, etc. - most of the teachers I have worked with are very capable of
delivering a good product. |
| Q |
Are the larger multi-nationals finding
it impossible to get what they want from the language providers here? |
| A |
Well, I know that some of the larger multi-nationals have brought in people
from overseas to run seminars and workshops in areas that you would think
some of the local vendors should be able to deliver. And at very high cost
as well. Impossible? Well, if there is anyone out there who currently thinks
that, I hope to have the opportunity to change their mind. |
| Q |
Has there been a shift in the times
that corporate staff study or is it still very
much a Tuesday/Thursday 5.30 to 7.30 gig? |
| A |
I think that is still the bulk of the
time frame. I've been fortunate in that I've dealt extensively with clients
who were willing to consider other schedules in order to have the right
teacher for the job. |
| Q |
“How can we guarantee that our staff’s
English will improve?” I bet you wouldn’t mind a dollar for every time
you’ve heard that? |
| A |
I don't hear it much anymore. I pre-emptively
strike it. No matter how good a program or how good a teacher, no one can
guarantee that someone's language skills will improve. We, as teachers, know
that. Language aptitude is a concept I find worth explaining to customers.
It's nicer than discussing students' study habits. |
| Q |
Is
using the bog-standard mid-term report, final report, and token teacher
observation really enough to make the client think they’re getting a good
deal? |
| A |
Less and less. And I think you are
going to see some major changes in that regard. Things that I hope are
better for the client and the teacher. |
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