About 10 years ago my CD collection was stolen and I haven’t heard this tune since. Sass Jordan might be a little raw for your average professional but everyone needs to loosen up sometimes. Just-in-case you were wondering, I think this CD (Rat) was next to the Greatest Hits of Ella Fitzgerald—which they left behind. I love the singing by both women but for very different reasons.
Recently a client asked me to create a training course on how to train operators. I could have taught the operators myself, but there were so many people that needed training that we felt it would be more cost effective to train the trainers.
Usually I have multiple presentations archived that I can draw upon, but this time I had nothing. I had never trained engineers on how to be trainers before—at least not formally. I thought about what kinds of problems other Quality Managers have had in training internal auditors and how I have helped the auditors improve. The one theme I recognized was that most auditors needed feedback.
I finally decided to use the Deming Cycle (Plan-Do-Check-Act, or PDCA) as my framework for the training. Most QA Managers are very experienced and have little trouble planning an audit schedule. The next step is to do the auditing. The problem is that there is very little objective oversight of the auditing process. The Standard requires that “Auditors shall not audit their own work.” Therefore, most companies will opt for one of two solutions for auditing the internal audit process: 1) hire a consultant, or 2) ask the Director of Regulatory Affairs to audit the internal auditing process.
Both of the above strategies meet the requirements of the Standard, but neither strategy helps to make internal auditors better. I have interviewed a lot of audit program managers, maybe 50+, and the most common feedback for auditors is “change the wording of this finding” or “you forgot to close this previous finding.” This type of feedback is related to the report writing phase of the audit process. I rarely hear program managers explain how they help auditors improve at the other parts of the process.
When auditors are first being trained we typically will provide examples of best practices for audit preparation, checklists, interviewing techniques AND reports. After the auditors have been “shadowed” by the program manager for an arbitrary three times the auditors are now miraculously “trained.” Let’s see if I can draw an analogy that will make my point…
That kind of sounds like watching your 16 year-old drive the family car three times and then giving them a license. I guess that’s why my new Ford Festiva was severely dented on all four sides within 6 months. You might think my father was a Saint, but I think he might have totaled his tenth car by age 18. At least I contained the damage to one vehicle.
Anyway the key to training auditors to audit, or anyone on anything, is consistent follow-up over a long period of time.
The question is…was my training successful?
Well, how much follow-up training of the trainers did the client ask for?