How HR Can Help Employees Grow While Working from Home
Labor shortages and skills gaps are only getting wider. Now it’s time for
HR to help employees grow their careers when working from home before they
lose them.
According to one report, 89% of learning and development (L&D) pros say
proactively building employee skills helps organizations navigate the
evolving future of work. This upskilling and reskilling prepares your
workforce for future roles within your organization and throughout their
careers.
The Harvard Business Review found that:
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Organizations with a strong learning culture are 92% more likely to
develop novel products and processes, 52% more productive, 56% more
likely to be the first to market with their products and services, and
17% more profitable than their competitors.
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Employees who receive professional development opportunities are 15%
more engaged and have 34% higher retention than those who don’t.
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94% of employees would stay at a company longer if it invested in their
career development.
So the benefits of employee development more than pay for the costs —
especially considering that 86% of employees would jump ship if a new
company offered them more career advancement opportunities.
Let’s explore the best career development tips for remote employees you
can start using today.
How HR Can Help Employees Grow Their Careers When Working From Home
Our guide on outlines seven tips for organizations, managers, and team
leaders to ensure their virtual workforce achieves its full potential.
Those best practices include:
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Make learning part of your company culture. Stats show retention rates
rise 50% when employees are encouraged to level up.
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Outline a clear career path for each remote role. Helping candidates
envision a future with your organization and providing the means to get
there boosts job satisfaction and loyalty.
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Invest in learning opportunities, such as virtual workshops, webinars,
and lunch-and-learn sessions. Offer a learning stipend to cover the
costs of books, online courses, online coaching/mentoring, etc.
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Provide on-the-job upskilling. Job shadowing, cross-training, stretch
assignments, etc., empower remote employees with new skills and
confidence.
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Encourage mentorships, both between peers and between junior-level and
senior-level employees.
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Prioritize consistent, real-time feedback to increase visibility on your
employees’ hard work and hear their suggestions to improve your L&D game
plan.
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Reward employees for their achievements. Recognize your employee’s
accomplishments and show them how much you value and appreciate their
contributions.
Now, HR teams should definitely follow those tips. However, the primary
duties of human resources employees differ from those of department
managers and team leaders.
HR is responsible for overseeing a company’s workforce by ensuring that
employees feel supported, engaged, and able to progress in their career
development. They’re in charge of recruiting, hiring, onboarding, and much
more.
So taking remote employee career growth from an HR perspective, we think
it’s best to:
1. Create L&D Paths for Each Role
Employee development is all about improving your workforce’s skills via
professional training and continuing education. The best organizations
align their L&D paths with their business needs, industry trends, and team
members’ existing skills.
Let’s say your business is growing and developing your current agents will
help move them into leadership positions, so you can hire new reps to
staff your 24/7 outreach channels.
Promoting from within increases employee morale and retention. It also
helps your team save on recruiting costs (which can get expensive for
leadership roles!).
In this example, your L&D paths may include ongoing training for new
outreach methods (think: web, social media, text, knowledge base
articles, etc.), soft skills, emotional intelligence, and more.
Investing in staff development creates a highly skilled workforce that can
confidently tackle your business’ future demands.
2. Recruit Curious, Life-long Learners with Your Job Listings
It’s much easier to train people who want to learn than force
uninterested folks. Good news? The best recruitment practices can attract
those curious cats right to your inbox.
To show candidates why working remotely is good for career building at
your organization:
- Highlight your learning culture on your Careers page
- Include L&D in your remote job listings
📬 Want more remote applicants? Check out these guides next:
- How To Write a Job Listing that Sells
- FREE Remote Job Posting Template
Don’t forget to assess your job posting guidelines to ensure they attract
and facilitate internal promotions too.
3. Emphasize Your Culture of Learning During Onboarding
Remote onboarding is key for your organization’s talent management
strategy. It introduces new hires to your team’s policies and company
culture while explaining how their work will contribute to your mission.
Organizations with a strong onboarding process improve new hire retention
by 82%. Unfortunately, only 12% of employees describe their organization’s
onboarding as “good.” Yikes!
So how do you set the right tone?
Ask About Your New Hire’s Career Goals
Gartner found that 82% of employees want their organization to see them as
a person, not just another worker bee. Yet only 45% of employees believe
their organization actually sees them this way.
So use your onboarding time to get to know your new hires and learn how
they wish to grow in their careers. Once you understand their goals,
tailor the role’s L&D path (remember tip #1?) to brainstorm a customized
game plan that includes:
- Online training courses
- Certifications they should receive
- Mentors to pair up with
- Webinars or virtual conferences to attend
Over 91% of employees want personalized and relevant training. So a bespoke
L&D path may speed up employee integration, boost productivity and
performance, and skyrocket their commitment to advancement.
Set Milestones and Goals for New Hires To Reach
Did you know that 60% of businesses don’t set any goals or milestones for
new hires during onboarding? This is a huge missed opportunity.
Remote workers need clear objectives to progress in their roles and
careers. Setting goals and milestones for new hires:
- Clarifies expectations, so they can focus and prioritize their tasks.
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Encourages accountability, so they can take proactive ownership of their
work and performance.
- Motivates with a sense of purpose.
Setting goals also gives your HR team a framework for performance reviews.
Check in at key milestones to evaluate, share feedback, and set new goals.
Get in the habit of recognizing and celebrating achievements too.
Your performance evaluations may only occur annually, but employee
recognition should occur more frequently with your new hire’s direct
manager.
Arrange a 1:1 with a Direct Manager
More than 72% of employees say 1:1 time with their direct manager
contributes to a positive onboarding experience. That’s because this
initial meeting allows both parties to:
- Get to know each other. This is vital for establishing
trust and understanding. It also helps your managers provide the best
guidance and resources to support them.
- Establish a regular check-in model. How will new hires and managers
keep in touch and evaluate progress? Let them work out a way to bring up
concerns, challenges, and feedback with each other.
Improving your remote onboarding with a focus on career development tells
new hires that you’re invested in their advancement and expect them to
grow.
4. Ensure L&D Opportunities Benefit Everyone
Is your organization remote-first or remote-friendly?
Remote-friendly organizations may unintentionally show proximity bias
toward on-premise employees, leaving remote workers behind in terms of
career growth. This often happens when leaders:
- Fail to recognize contributions made by employees working remotely
- Offer new assignments and promotions to on-prem employees first
- Only schedule in-house training
So how does HR help develop employees remotely and promote equity between
on- and off-site teams?
You draft policies that ensure visibility and train your teams/leaders to
remove this bias from the workplace.
On the other hand, remote-first organizations with fully-distributed
workforces give all employees a more even playing field. But that doesn’t
mean your L&D opportunities are equally accessible.
To ensure everyone receives the same chance to grow and succeed:
Provide Flexible Online & Mobile L&D Options
Digital learning opportunities (aka e-learning) refer to virtual training
sessions, online coaching/mentoring, online knowledge bases, and more.
Online learning saves organizations millions in expenses and allows
employees to consume more content in less time. It’s
also brilliant for employees working in different time zones, as they’re
not forced to attend a live training session outside of their typical work
hours.
According to employee surveys:
- 68% of employees prefer to learn at work.
- 58% prefer to learn at their own pace.
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Most employees (85%) want to choose training times that fit their
schedule.
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Nearly 90% of employees believe training should be available anywhere
and anytime they need to do their job.
E-learning satisfies all these employee preferences. To implement it:
Choose a digital learning platform with individualized learning plans.
Employees can sign into their personal accounts to complete relevant
training modules or take hand-picked courses tailored to their career goals.
To boost employee engagement, look for e-learning providers that offer online
courses with gamification and incentivization.
Host, record, and share live webinars, workshops, and virtual conferences
for others who could not attend.
Add microlearning to your knowledge base. Upload short,
employee-created videos, wikis, blogs, podcasts, etc., to your knowledge
base to cross-train others asynchronously. Employees can snack on this
bite-sized, easily digestible content and message coworkers with questions
on their time.
Knowledge sharing allows employees to show off their expertise, improves
collaboration, and facilitates remote team-building.
Schedule L&D during work hours. Don’t let your team get too
burned out to invest in self-improvement. Encourage a healthy work-life
balance that includes time on the clock to complete regular learning
sessions.
Or consider implementing a 4-day work week so your remote employees have an
extra day to spend on their professional and personal development.
Keep Cultural Differences In Mind
In our guide on Supporting and Managing Cross-Cultural Remote Teams, we
discussed how cultural differences may affect L&D participation. Check out
that guide to guarantee that your initiatives land with every team member
(not just the majority) and think about ways to be more inclusive.
For example, you could offer language learning resources to help team members improve their multilingual communication skills.
5. Lean Into Leadership Development
How can HR improve work-from-home career development from the top? By
investing in leadership training. Your managers must learn how to take
your L&D strategies and use them to support their remote teams. Bad news?
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59% of managers who oversee one to two employees report having no
training at all.
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Managers tasked with developing their employees spend only 9% of their
time doing so.
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45% of leaders feel they don't possess the necessary skills to build up
their employees.
Developing your employees provides a vast talent pool of candidates to
step into your leadership positions. So encourage and reward managers for
developing and recommending talent for promotional opportunities rather
than “hoarding” skilled employees for their own team.
Now HR Can Start Supporting Remote Workers’ Career Goals
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