Employee Training Simplified

This vital management process doesn't have to be complicated or stressful.

Lori Culler
By  Lori Culler , DTN Farm Business Adviser
Training about the farm and equipment doesn’t have to be drawn out or in a classroom format, Image by Des Keller

When the words “employee training” are mentioned, most farm managers typically do one of three things: laugh out loud, shake their heads in disgust or look highly confused. There is a misperception when it comes to training, which is nothing more than sharing knowledge and teaching your employees their role so they can perform their best. It’s often looked at as a daunting task with an unknown reward for the farm, but it doesn’t have to be complicated to be highly effective.

Growing Necessity. With the pool of employees in agriculture shrinking quickly, especially as the boomers retire, hiring outside of our industry or acquiring more junior employees is going to be the name of the game. The farms capable of bringing new hires up to speed quickly are the ones that will remain competitive in the industry. We all want our next hire to walk through the door with a background full of farming.

The question remains, even if that individual does come walking through the door, is he or she the right person for the job? The resumes may look strong, but are the candidates calcified in their ways? What’s their work ethic like? I’ve heard too many farms get roped into hiring someone with experience even though they observed personality flaws in their initial discussions.

Sometimes, our best long-term hire doesn’t have the perfect background. An all-star farm employee can easily come from a smart individual with drive and basic skills. There’s a reason my husband with a military/construction background leads the tomato and grain operations on the family operation, and it’s not because he came with a farming background. He came with strong mechanical knowledge, the ability to lead others, a strong work ethic and personality fit.

Straightforward Process. Teaching employees about the farm, equipment and processes doesn’t have to be drawn-out, classroom-style training. Simply start with a basic document and build a list of items you want to cover with your new hire. On our farm, we originally started with two documents--one listed everything we wanted to share about the organization, and the other was a list of items to teach about the specific role on the farm.

Create an “About Us” page to document what you would like to share about the company, such as history, structure, family members, landowners, scope/size of farm, preferred communication style, company culture, key employees and their backgrounds, etc. You can slowly add to the “About Us” page over time and, in the future, expand to add work rules and job expectations.

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For a particular role such as farm operator, start a list of all the tasks and knowledge that have to be shared. It should include everything from preventative maintenance, to what to watch for in the field, problems that have risen in the past, what data needs to be tracked, etc.

Include the new hire in the process of expanding your original list. That person could keep track of everything he learned his first several months. With modern technology, he could use his smartphone to add in-the-moment ideas.

Not only is that a great way to implement your first “training” doc, you have now engaged your new employee in an important task that allows him to contribute to the farm on a deeper level.

Benefits To Training. There’s an extra benefit to outlining job roles and the company: It can be used as a guide for determining future hires. I encourage my clients to take a hard look at who fits within their organization.

In my organization, there are core attributes each of us share that are critical for our success. If someone doesn’t have them or has certain attributes we have defined as not a fit, we don’t hire that person. At AgHires, we have a farmer in Minnesota who looks for out-of-the-box thinkers, and culturally, he says they are pretty clean talkers, family-focused individuals with an all-hands-on-deck mentality. Someone who is too rigid in his or her thought process or prefers tasks to be mapped out wouldn’t fit. What are those core attributes your employees need to come with to be successful at your operation?

Besides the benefit of “molding” your new hire into how you prefer work to be done, you might discover you want to make changes to your practices. When working side-by-side with someone teaching them, you start to see these tasks from a different light, which might spark some changes.

For example, you might be informing them at the end of the day you would like to know the number of acres they finished, and, in that discussion, you end up coming up with a daily harvesting goal or a process for texting the number of acres to multiple people in the operation so everyone is on the same page. Merely walking through training spurs all sorts of questions from you and the employee on why you do things a certain way, and that just may result in better future practices.

Training doesn’t have to be a daunting task. Taking the time and putting a little effort into the process can help you find that star employee you need. Maybe that person doesn’t have an agriculture background, but he or she may have the skills to bring your organization to the next level.

Editor’s note: Lori Culler grew up on a vegetable and grain farm and is the founder of AgHires (aghires.com), a national employment recruiting service and online ag job board based in Temperance, Michigan. Email her at lori@aghires.com.

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Lori Culler