Whether you call them happy sheets, training evaluation forms, or something else entirely, we can all unite on the importance of the collection and effective use of training feedback in order to improve our training offering.
Many training organisations underestimate the power of great feedback - either the questions on the form don't provide helpful, actionable feedback or the method of collection is inadequate.
There's a number of benefits of collecting feedback. Some of the most notable include:
Training feedback is often (and more commonly) associated with a post-course activity but it's becoming increasingly common to run pre-course surveys or questionnaires too. This allows you to gain information that you can then use as measurable for post-course evaluation - for example, are your learners really learning?
Find out more: The importance of feedback in training companies
Best practice dictates that before we start generating the survey, it's useful to have an idea of:
We work with hundreds of training providers and have unique insight into the kind of survey questions that provide the most value for our customers. Download our ultimate guide to training surveys or continue reading for our top 27 training survey questions to start asking your delegates.
Pre-course surveys are an effective way to find out what your delegates are interested in, how they learn best, their current level of competency and past experiences. It allows you to build a picture of your audience, personalise the experience, and be able to more effectively measure the impact of your training.
This is the most important pre-course question you could possibly ask. We're looking to establish why the delegate came to train with you in the first place, and where they are trying to get to. This lets you tailor your course to meet their objectives and, paired with your post course survey, provides a measurable to see if you reached their objectives. In rare cases, it can also be useful at highlighting any misalignment between the course you're offering and the value that participants see in how's it's being marketed.
Everybody learns in different ways. Not only do our preferred learning styles help us to absorb information more readily, but it also allows us to get more enjoyment from the training experience. By asking this question early on, you can tailor the content delivery to better match your learners, or, alternatively, move learners on to a different course or delivery method if you feel it won't be suitable for their learning styles.
What made the delegate choose your course over the others available? This question can tell you a lot about the motivations of your delegates and what stood out about your offering. Perhaps there's a particular module you offer that's piqued their interest, or your instructor has more industry experience than your competitors. There's a number of different potential answers to this question, but ultimately, they chose your business, and it's important to find out why!
Finding out the current understanding of your delegates on a given topic is helpful in tailoring the content to their skill level. Depending on the answers you get, it can also tell you a great deal about how the course is being sold and marketed. Informative and accurate website copy and marketing will mean delegates are on a course that is appropriate for their skill level and that of other participants.
This question looks similar to the one above, but has an important difference. Here we want to know if they've undertaken any specific training to validate their understanding of a given topic. It can tell us what they know already, but more importantly, what they are building on and what their professional aspirations are.
Don't let the delegate find themselves with unanswered questions going in to the course. There's a number of things that can need clarifying pre-course, whether that's related to the location of training, equipment needed for the day, pre-requisites or COVID measures. It's a simple question, but one you'd be wise not to leave out!
If training delivery isn't up to scratch, everything else falls down. When surveying delegates on training delivery, we're focusing on both the individual performance and general likeability of the trainer and how effective and engaging they are at delivering content to an audience.
The way the course is delivered is a key indicator of how much delegates enjoyed a course. When we say delivery, we're talking about the presentation of a course, the slides, the demonstrations, the discussions and activities that the trainer uses to deliver learning. It can tell you a lot about the variation of activities and flow of the session, but also how well you've catered to the different learning styles of your group.
It's common knowledge that the quality of the trainer can make or break a course. Remember the phrase, "It's not what you say - it's how you say it!" - that applies rather well here. Great trainers on boring topics are much more engaging than boring trainers on great topics. It's so important to have quality instructors leading your courses, and your delegates are bound to have feelings about how engaging, interesting, helpful, likeable and effective the trainer was.
When a delegate comes to be trained, it's expected the training is coming from an experienced and knowledgeable source. When questions are asked by delegates, or if points need further clarification, it's important the trainer comes up with the answer and is able to draw on real life examples and case studies to reinforce learning. Less experienced trainers may often rely on written material or slides for prompts (which may not necessarily be an issue), however you want to hear it from the delegates - how clued up did they feel the instructor was on a given topic?
The training content relates to your course material. Your training slides, your videos, your props - any information that is presented to learners falls under this umbrella. It's content that will remain with the delegate long after the course is complete - it's important this represents your brand and business well.
Establishing the relevance of your training is a really clever question to ask your learners. Were they put on a course that wasn't suitable? Ultimately, irrelevant training is a waste of time for the learner, a waste of time for the trainer and a waste of resource for an employer to send a delegate on the course. One would question how this could happen - it indicates a break down in communication at some point in the sales process.
If your learners don't learn something new, this highlights a fundamental problem with your training offering. It infers that the training was either irrelevant for them, uninteresting to the point they weren't absorbing information or they knew it all already. All of the above are a serious concern as a training provider.
At the heart of every great training program is engaging content. The answer to this question can tell you how well you understood and responded to the way the delegate says they learn best from the pre-course survey.
A training environment can either relate to a physical venue or a virtual learning environment (VLE). An effective learning environment is one which helps, not hinders learning. It should be conducive to the overall experience. Our template has post-training surveys for both online and in-person learning.
Aptitude within technology can vary massively, however a learning environment shouldn't be difficult to use, even for a novice. If users are struggling with navigation through your learning environment, it's typically obvious in their time spent on the platform. If usability issues arise, it's worth hiring a UI/UX designer for some support in restructuring to make it more user-friendly and accessible.
In the modern day, when customers are paying for online training, pixelated images, stuttering videos and outdated clipart aren't going to be well received by delegates. Despite everyone probably having a different idea of what constitutes 'quality' multimedia, it's expected that everything is clear, high enough resolution and relevant for the topic.
Any technical problems encountered within your learning environment need to be rectified straight away. In the rare occurrence that the delegate hasn't mentioned this before the end of the course, this represents a final opportunity for them to vocalise any issues to you. Without the prompt, there may be minor (or even major) issues that fall under the radar because no-one ever asked if there was even a problem.
What makes a good training environment? In truth, there's a number of factors, including the location, comfort, setting, lighting, temperature, refreshments, technology and lots more. We can't ask about all of these aspects individually, but we can get an idea of the big picture. Don't underestimate how much the facilities at your training premise feed in to the overall experience for the delegate.
Your delegates are bound to have experienced other training environments that have stuck in their memory. This question can help to draw any ideas out of them to help improve your centre. They may also pick up on some issues within the environment that you hadn't been made aware of previously, such as parking troubles, noise from outside, or COVID security.
Questions related to the structure and duration of the course are often forgotten or left out of post-course evaluations, which is unwise as they tend to provide valuable feedback for future training sessions.
If the training session is poorly structured, it can feel very disjointed and lacking any kind of flow or progression. It may also mean that things overrun or breaks don't happen as they should. When this happens, it can cause confusion or lead to delegates switching off. Ideally, you want training sessions to unravel like a story, and ensure key topics are covered when delegates are most attentive!
We have all experienced this in school - everyone learns at a different pace. For some, complex ideas would simply 'click' and for others, it would need practical application or regular reinforcement. It's hard for trainers to cater to every pace of learning, however it's useful feedback to hear from delegates what they thought of the learning pace. If this is heavily weighted in terms of the session running too fast or too slow, this suggests the session plan needs some work.
Particularly for multi-session, CPD or online learning courses, having enough time to complete training modules is crucial. Unless it's exam conditions, no learning should feel rushed or diluted due to time constraints.
We all have an idea of how we want a training session to go and what we want coming out of it. Asking about the expectations of your delegates is effective at telling you how well you did at positioning the course and doing what you said you'll do. If it doesn't meet expectations, there's work to be done in finding the root cause - whether that's to do with the delivery of training, the content, the structure or the advertising of the course.
It's one of the most commonly asked questions in a survey - "would you recommend us?" And rightly so. This question is used extensively within customer experience. An NPS (Net Promoter Score) format would be advised for this, where (on a score of 1 - 10), scores of 9 or 10 indicate a promoter of your business, 7-8 are passives and a score under 7 is a detractor. Your customer experience team can follow up on these scores to either help gain referrals, or to find out what you can do better next time.
Unfortunately, you are likely to come across bad feedback sometimes, no matter how hard you try to avoid it. Read our blog on how to respond to negative feedback to learn the best ways to work past it.
In any training session, there's usually something that stands out above the rest. Whether that's a particular topic, an activity, a story or something else entirely. Finding out what that is each time you run a training session can help you to do more of it in the next one. It might be surprising to find that your delegates each preferred something different about the session!
Asking delegates to recite three things that have stuck with them from the session is a great way to reinforce learning through memory recall, but also find out what it is that stuck with them. You'll usually find it was something that relates to a practical activity, video or story. It's important to recognise when these moments in your session occur, as they can be strategically placed to engage delegates when attention tends to drift.
It wouldn't be an effective survey without some constructive criticism. The worst answer you can get to this question is 'nothing'. There's always something that can be improved, what's important is drawing this out from your delegates openly and honestly. The question proves much more effective if the instructor is active in encouraging the constructive feedback.
Learning and development is a continuous cycle. By asking your learners what they want to learn next, you're identifying a future opportunity to upsell before they've had chance to forget about you. You may find that delegates aspire to learn more about a topic or course that you don't currently offer! If responses to this question are lacking, it's worth investigating why!
An easy way to find out how useful a training session was is to simply ask if the delegate would take it again. The great thing about asking this is that it requires minimal thought for the delegate - it's a closed question - it was either useful and enjoyable and they'd return or it was not worth their time (read: irrelevant, boring) and they wouldn't come back. Simple, but certainly effective.
Read: 3 powerful ways to transform your training with data, research and insights
The technology you use to create and distribute your surveys can determine whether you receive hundreds of useful, informative responses or a handful of rushed scribbles. Our annual training industry report has tracked the use of happy sheets over the past 5 years and found an increasing trend of them falling out of favour, with most training professionals switching to online evaluation forms - and for good reason! Read more: Training feedback: Is the paper happy sheet dead?
Online training forms are preferred for a number of different reasons:
It's common for training professionals to use tools like SurveyMonkey for survey creation, however many training and learning management systems such as accessplanit now have their own survey-builder already incorporated within the software. This saves any hassle moving data between platforms, and means as soon as your survey is created it's ready to distribute and collate responses against the user record!
This is particularly useful if you're concerned about response rates - you can even set up workflows to ensure that a certificate is only sent out to a delegate once a feedback form has been completed.
Our handy training survey templates come in both PDF and Word format so they can be easily emailed, printed, edited, filled out online or copy and pasted into your online survey tool of choice.
Asking the right questions is crucial when running training surveys.
Every question should have a unique purpose in trying to draw out helpful information from the delegates experience with you. Pilot tests are a great way to gauge survey length, structure and flow and ensure you get the highest response rate possible. Care should be taken to adjust and reword surveys as required, especially if certain questions aren't relevant in some training scenarios.
If you're after further guidance, there's a number of different models you can use to help you structure your surveys, including Kaufman's Five Levels Of Evaluation and The Kirkpatrick Model to name a couple.
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