Tuesday, January 31, 2012

ASTD Issues State of the Learning/Development Industry Report


Employers spent more on employees than ever  before in 2011, according to American Society of Training and Development's (ASTD) 2011 State of the Industry Report. Organizations in the U.S. spent $171.5 billion on employee learning in 2010, up from $125.8 billion in 2009.

Overall, ASTD says, the findings demonstrate "that despite current economic challenges, senior executives understand that a highly skilled workforce is a strategic differentiator and they are investing in the development of their employees." Other key findings"
  • 60% of expenditures were on internal expenses ($103 billion)
  • Per-employee spending increased 13.5% in 2010 ($1,081 in 2009, $1,228 in 2010)
  • There was an increased expenditure on tuition reimbursement.
  • About 70% of all training was delivered by an instructor in a classroom, up 3% from 2009; 60% of this instruction was delivered by live instruction
  • Technology-based delivery of instruction declined from 36.3% in 2009 to 29.1% in 2010.
  • Managerial and supervisory training was the most offered content (12.8%) followed by profession- or industry-specific content (11.3%), and mandatory and compliance content (10%)