Three Things Your Subject Matter Experts Can Do For Your Training Programs

You want to make sure your training is solid and rises to the next level. Tap into the best knowledge bank in your organization, your subject matter expert.

Subject matter experts (SMEs) are the people inside your organization who hold the unique knowledge, skills and attitudes that keep your customers coming back for more. They hold the keys to your competitive advantage that is the unique value and distinction that your company offers in the marketplace. SMEs are your company’s entrée into your industry.

For that reason, your SMEs are essential to building critical training programs. (See last week’s blog for the distinction among non-essential, essential and critical training) SMEs are the people who know what goes into your unique, probably patented, products. They are also the people who have established irreplaceable relationships with your top customers and make sure the organization hums by promoting a company culture that values employees and innovation. SMEs an be found in all corners of your organization, so whether you are designing a safety program, a manufacturing module or a leadership retreat, make sure to consult closely with the people who are getting it right, right now.

What kinds of information are you looking for when talking with your SME? Three things. They know your past, understand your competitive advantage in the present marketplace, and have the insight to understand your organization’s needs into the future. They can:

1. Ground your training: Your employees already talk your industry’s language to a greater or lesser extent. Your training needs to ground them in the history of how and why you do what you do today. An organization’s SMEs have a grasp on what has been tried, failed and succeeded, or they wouldn’t be there today. Make sure you download some history from them so your training tells a complete story by providing context, and also helps your employees avoid past mistakes.

Your company has already tread the hard road. Preserve those lessons for the future to avoid the curse of “those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.” That history resides with your SMEs.

2. Instill best practices. Because your SME already intimately knows your business, they are the best place to start to make sure your employees are getting the full and correct story the first time. When you are building training with your internal experts, you will be forging ahead from your first interaction.

Your employees have a lot to learn from your SMEs. Make sure your training leaves employees with an “Ah-ha!” that shows they are coming up the learning curve. That additional knowledge resides with your SMEs.

3. Find the dragons. Your SMEs got where they are in your company because they are not just a leading light inside your organization, but because they are a leading light in their field. True players can read the tea leaves, not because they are omniscient, but because they are highly skilled in a specialized area and can connect the dots that the layperson does not see. Every business wants to know where the opportunities and threats lie in the industry. Your SME can ensure your training materials see around the corners and build that competency into your future leaders, as well.

Keep your company on the cutting edge by giving your employees vision into an uncertain future. If dragons go there, your SME knows it.

In this highly competitive environment, no matter your industry, your competitive advantage is your best friend and that best friend is your SME. Tap into their knowledge to communicate your company’s value and distinction to your employees. Make sure your training includes the unique solutions that keep your company competitive.

As Grandma used to say, “Don’t hide your light under a bushel basket.” Your SMEs are lighting your organization’s path. Consult with them.

Please note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive or off-topic.

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2 thoughts on “Three Things Your Subject Matter Experts Can Do For Your Training Programs

  1. No one can argue that SMEs are the key to producing effective content. Whether you are an external consultant, an internal consultant or a line of business training and development professional, your SMEs are vital to the success of any training initiative you are responsible for delivering. As you say “consult with them” is probably the best advice you can give a consultant or training professional when they need to partner with a SME.

    However, this partnership is a two way street. In order for the consulting to be an effective experience, both parties need to come to the table understanding the value each one brings to the process. In my experience, there are two misconceptions as it pertains to the relationship between a SME and a consultant/training professional. First, it is often misunderstood that SMEs, because their expertise lies with the technical content of the training, know the best way to execute a training program and secondly a consultant/training professional, who may not be familiar with the technical content of the training, cannot provide value in executing an effective training program.

    Interestingly enough we have all been part of training programs where SMEs without the support of a consultant and/or training professional did not produce an effective training program and consultants and/or training professionals who did not appreciate the expertise SMEs bring to the process, ended up producing a training program that provided no value.

    As such, it is important to remember that the power of this relationship comes from the ability of the consultant and/or training professional to be able to build a strong partnership with the SME and help influence the relationship so that both parties understand the value that each one contributes to the process.

  2. Hi Suzanne,

    What you say is so true. In my book, I discuss tactics for getting SMEs, instructional designers, project managers – everybody on the training team – on the same page. Before a project begins, you can have written expectations, schedules and roles to help address practical issues. The book also deals with creating understanding among different stakeholders to address these issues.

    A second edition of the book is in process and I’ll let you know when we have a good idea of the publication date. The charts, graphs and tools will be enhanced and easier to see and use than in the current ebook, and it will be available in a print version which I think will be a better format for using it.

    Thank you for your feedback!
    Peggy