Role-Specific Training Plan Checklist for Marketing & Digital Agencies
A checklist for developing and delivering a structured training plan tailored to a specific role, ensuring the new team member gains all necessary skills and knowledge.
Includes provisions for Australian Consumer Law (ACL), Privacy Act compliance for customer data, and ACMA spam regulations.
Complete Checklist
- 1Identify all core competencies and skills required for the roleCritical
- 2Assess the new team member's existing skills against the role requirements
- 3Define learning objectives for each competency area
- 4Create a training timeline with milestones over the first 90 daysCritical
- 5Identify the training methods for each topic: hands-on, e-learning, shadowing, or classroom
- 6Assign subject matter experts or trainers for each training module
- 7Prepare all training materials, guides, and reference documents
- 8Schedule training sessions in the team member's calendar
- 9Include compliance and mandatory training requirementsCritical
- 10Build in practice time and supervised work between training sessions
- 11Set up knowledge assessments or skill demonstrations at key milestones
- 12Plan regular check-ins to track progress and address difficulties
- 13Include soft skills and cultural training alongside technical skills
- 14Document the training plan and share it with the team member and their manager
- 15Review and update the training plan based on progress and feedback
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a role-specific training plan last?
Most roles require a structured training plan spanning 30 to 90 days, with the intensity front-loaded in the first two weeks. Complex or highly technical roles may need six months or more. The plan should include clear milestones so both the team member and manager can track progress. After the formal plan ends, transition to ongoing professional development.
How do we balance training with getting the new team member productive quickly?
Integrate training with real work as soon as it is safe and practical to do so. Start with supervised tasks that contribute to actual output while reinforcing learning. Use a graduated approach where the new team member takes on increasing responsibility as they demonstrate competence. Avoid the extremes of all training with no work or all work with no training.
How should training effectiveness be measured?
Use a combination of assessments, observation, and performance metrics. Test knowledge retention through quizzes or practical demonstrations. Observe the team member performing tasks independently and provide feedback. Track role-specific KPIs to measure whether training translates to on-the-job performance. Gather the team member's feedback on the training quality and relevance.
Need help implementing these checks into your daily operations?
Our team can build custom checklists integrated into your daily operations workflow.