Friday 28 September 2012

A message to our customers


I've never understood people who say they love travel (I met someone this month who more specifically told me he loves air travel); I love visiting new places; I adore foreign holidays; but travel is just the painful process to be endured to get there - and home again. I find flying the worst kind of travel, as we are herded around, told where to sit, penned in, strapped in, and generally inconvenienced while held in the smallest possible space. I especially hate flying Ryanair, as they maximise the inconvenience to the customer, in return for the lowest prices (a Faustian bargain I now try to avoid).
 
I admit, therefore, prejudice against Ryanair Chief Executive Michael O'Leary, but I approached his Q&A-style profile in thismonth's Management Today in the spirit of being willing to be persuaded otherwise. Unfortunately, he confirmed all my prejudice.


O'Leary is paid 20 times more than the average Ryanair employee - fair enough, in my view, but O'Leary says the gap should be wider, as he claims to "probably work 50 times harder"! Is he serious? 50 times harder than the average employee? What a message to send to your staff! (I wouldn't be surprised if a CEO adds 50 times as much value as their average employee; at least that would be a more credible claim, but greater industry?)


Yet not so surprising when you go on to read the message O'Leary sends to customers. He tells the story of a family who turned up at Alicante airport without their boarding passes, and were charged €60 for each replacement. That strikes me as an excessive penalty for a minor administrative task, but O'Leary not only refused compensation, he told the (female) customer "it was your fuck-up".

 
The corporate ethos of Ryanair may be damaging the image of the airline industry (a deliberate choice, doubtless judged a sacrifice worth making for capturing the budget end of the market), but O'Leary seems to be on a one-man crusade to destroy his business - remember Gerald Ratner's gaffe?


 

Tuesday 18 September 2012

Total Value Add


I’m pleased to announce the publication of my first e-book, written in collaboration with my business partner, Dr Alasdair Rutherford.

Total Value Add: a new approach to evaluating learning and development is available from Amazon at £7.50 in the UK and $11.90 elsewhere.

The book brings together some of the ideas from the free paper series at www.airthrey.com and from seminars we have held in the past year, packaged with the glossary and book review features of the website.

Our core concepts are that learning evaluation has been badly neglected, and where it has not, has been subject to counter-productive dogma.  Therefore we need a new way of thinking about it.  Not a new tool or technique, as there are plenty of those, but a fresh approach.  Our approach places value at the centre, contends that we need to recognise, capture and measure all the value learning adds, and advocates a situational approach, selecting the evaluation methods that best meet needs.

Hardly rocket science, but sometimes simple messages get confused in a world of complexity.

I hope you read the book and find it useful.  If anyone wants to review it for any journal or website, please get in touch.

Friday 7 September 2012

New learning tools


The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development is launching a new online product, Toolclicks, a subscription-based resource featuring practical tools for implementation (soft-launched at HRD Week in April, formal notes of interest are now being taken).

Among the tools is a series of 20 on learning evaluation, which I was privileged to contribute.  Naturally, as one of the authors, I wish Toolclicks every success.  Learning evaluation in particular is something I believe is not conducted effectively by most organisations, and I hope these tools go some way to help.

More info from People Management.

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