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Suppliers recognize packagers' training needs

In describing their own programs, suppliers acknowledge shortcomings and reflect the criticisms made by their customers. Time allocated for training remains the most pressing need, they agree.

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"Training should be spelled out and included in the selling price [of equipment]” is a change stressed by a Western-based systems integrator. This point was made repeatedly by supplier company respondents who participated in Packaging World’s training survey, conducted this summer at its Web site www.packworld.com.

Although the survey was structured to elicit the comments of end users of equipment and packaging systems, it’s obvious that representatives of packaging products manufacturers are equally concerned with field training. And their comments so closely mirror those of their customers that either they understand their own company’s failures, or they’re listening well to the complaints of their customers.

Most of the comments reported here were typed in on the survey questionnaire in answer to two open-ended questions: What’s the most important change in training needed to be made by OEMs and component suppliers? If you could fix one shortcoming in your company’s approach to training, which would it be?

Much like their customers, these representatives also see time as the most important barrier to good training. “On-site time constraints” is the major shortcoming seen by a representative of a Midwest conveyor systems manufacturer. “Longer training [programs] and a greater frequency of them,” was sought by a Canadian packaging systems consultant.

“Allocate more time and resources to training in concert with the manufacturer of the equipment, and an ongoing follow-up of both the manufacturer and our product managers,” is the suggestion made by a representative of a distributor of sealing products. The representative of a major Eastern contract packager not only mentions the need for more time for training, but adds that “employees need to better prepare for it” as well. This is echoed by the representative of an Eastern container manufacturer. “More preparation for future training and improved methods of communications” are the major shortcomings he’d like to fix.

In the end, then, the suppliers seem to agree that packagers are responsible for not allocating sufficient time for their employees to be properly trained, while the suppliers are to blame for not providing effective training programs. No participants, however, tackled the question of “which came first, poor training or the lack of time for it?”

“Add more time allocated to training employees. There is never enough time to complete this side of the equation and [packagers] end up paying for it in lost production and scrapped material,” stressed a respondent from a major national maker of case sealing equipment.

Manufacturers should “rate its importance higher and actually implement changes that have been discussed,” says a systems integrator’s representative. “Too often, things go right back to ‘the way they were’ before training [was conducted],” he points out. The same issue was brought up by a respondent from a systems integrator in Canada. “Inbreeding of ideas and approaches like always using in-house trainers and capabilities,” is what he’d like to change. “This leads to poor results and no growth of ideas and improvements.”

Individualized training

A representative from a packaging distributor in the West apparently has been listening to some of his customers. He sought “more time dedicated to one-on-one training. Individuals learn at different rates, so to achieve the required results usually requires more one-on-one training for certain employees.”

However, the respondent for a Canadian supplier of packaging materials saw it differently. “Train all employees in the same manner. This way, all employees are trained equally and know the same procedures,” she said. A representative for a maker of packaging equipment amplified on that: “Make sure that everyone is trained on a machine, not just the operators. Include the managers too,” she added.

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