How to Create a Training Program That Sticks

Training Without Retention Is Wasted Investment

Companies spend billions on corporate training globally, yet research from the Harvard Business Review suggests that up to

70% of what employees learn in training is forgotten within 24 hours. In the UAE, where upskilling is a national priority tied to

Emiratisation and Vision 2031, the ability to create training that actually changes behaviour is critical.

The problem is not that training does not work – it is that most programmes are designed to deliver information, not to drive

application.

Start with the Outcome, Not the Content

Most training programmes start with “What do we need to teach?” The better question is “What do we need people to do

differently?”

Define the behaviour change:

  • What specific skills or actions should employees demonstrate after training?
  • How will you measure whether the training worked?
  • What does success look like 30, 60, and 90 days after the programme?

When you start with the desired outcome, the content becomes a means to an end – not the end itself.

Design for Application, Not Attendance

Use Real Scenarios

Generic case studies do not resonate. Build training around real situations your team faces. When employees see their daily

challenges reflected in the material, engagement and retention increase dramatically.

Make It Interactive

Passive learning – lectures, slideshows, long videos – produces the lowest retention rates. Active learning methods are far

more effective:

  • Role-playing and simulations
  • Group problem-solving exercises
  • Peer teaching and knowledge sharing
  • On-the-job practice with feedback

Space the Learning

Cramming everything into a single day overwhelms learners. Spaced learning – spreading sessions over weeks – improves

long-term retention by up to 200%.

Recommended structure:

  • Short sessions (60-90 minutes) over 2-4 weeks
  • Practice assignments between sessions
  • Follow-up reinforcement activities

Involve Managers in the Process

Training fails when managers are not aligned. If an employee returns from training and their manager continues doing things

the old way, the new skills die quickly.

  • Brief managers before the training begins
  • Ask managers to support application on the job
  • Hold managers accountable for reinforcing new behaviours

Measure What Matters

Track these metrics:

  • Reaction – Did participants find the training valuable? (Post-session surveys)
  • Learning – Did they acquire the intended knowledge or skills? (Assessments)
  • Behaviour – Are they applying what they learned? (Manager observations, 360 feedback)
  • Results – Did the training impact business outcomes? (KPIs, productivity, quality)

Most companies only measure reaction. The real value is in behaviour change and business impact.

FAQ

How do we make training engaging for experienced employees?

Focus on advanced application, not basics. Let experienced employees lead discussions, share case studies, or mentor newer

team members. Challenge them with complex scenarios rather than reviewing foundational content.

What is the best format for training – in-person or online?

It depends on the content and audience. Soft skills and leadership development often benefit from in-person interaction.

Technical skills and compliance training can be effective online. Blended approaches – combining both – tend to produce the

best results.

How often should we run training programmes?

Training should be continuous, not annual. Build a learning culture with regular micro-learning opportunities, quarterly

skill-building sessions, and annual comprehensive programmes for major development areas.

Conclusion

Training that sticks is designed with purpose, delivered with engagement, reinforced through practice, and measured by

impact. Companies that treat training as a strategic investment – not a compliance checkbox – build stronger, more capable

teams. If your current programmes are not producing visible change, the fix starts with aligning training to real business

outcomes.