As we expected, a major tech company says graduates of coding boot camps are not ready for the job. Training schools sprang up when the Federal government and other social engineers decided to re-skill displaced workers from the auto industry. The programs were inspired by the desire to soften the blow of the auto company bankruptcies of 2009.
Most people can learn to write code, but few learn to write well. Becoming a good developer takes more than knowledge of the code. A holistic mindset enables you to understand why you are doing something and where it fits in the program flow and models.
Any training program that provides only skill training does not prepare you for the job. Kyle Doherty of AlphaSights wrote an insightful article on this experience. He understands that much of the learning is not in the code.
The same principle applies to many roles in every industry. Skills are a starting point. Informal learning of how things work and where they fit creates competence. Unfortunately, many employee development programs don’t support this concept.
Implementing automated talent management platforms in the cloud in the early 2000s, we often wondered what the annual development conversations would be like. Our clients wanted “collaborative” workflow, where the plan passed back and forth between the employee and manager until they agreed and signed off. When we suggested more frequent check-ins, most clients demurred. They didn’t want to put the administrative burden on managers.
We often wondered if they would actually talk. If the current trends in employee engagement are an indicator, they don’t.
We thought back to our own development, where we had a structured career path with programmed learning steps along the way. Short, casual conversations during the work day taught what we needed to know about the way things work.
We are encouraged by the current trend toward more frequent performance and development check-ins during the year, but we still wonder if vital in-the-moment conversations will happen. Only a culture of accountability in employee development will make it so.
While we can make some general recommendations about accountability, we also want to suggest a few ways current and future technology can enable those conversations.