Soft skills training boosts productivity

January 26, 2017


Research by Professor Achyuta Adhvaryu shows workers trained in skills like time management and communication have better workplace outcomes

 

Workers with well-honed soft skills — time and stress management, problem-solving, communication, and good teamwork, for example — tend to work at better firms and fetch higher wages.

Employer surveys suggest that this set of skills is just as highly demanded as technical know-how.

Adhvaryu

Adhvaryu

Achyuta Adhvaryu, assistant professor of business economics and public policy at Michigan Ross, wondered whether providing soft skills training to female garment workers in India could improve their workplace outcomes.

“We found that despite a high overall turnover rate in the industry, more treated workers are retained,” Adhvaryu said. “And treated workers are 12 percent more productive than those who did not receive the training in soft skills.”

Adhvaryu, along with co-authors Namrata Kala of Harvard University and Anant Nyshadham of Boston College, partnered with Shahi Exports, the largest ready-made garment exporter in India, whose clients include Gap Inc., Walmart, JC Penney, and Target, according to its website.

The firm is also the single largest private employer of unskilled and semi-skilled female labor in the country. The program Adhvaryu and colleagues evaluated aimed to empower female garment workers with training in a broad variety of soft skills, including communication, time management, financial literacy, problem-solving and decision-making, and legal literacy.

To assess the program’s impacts, the researchers conducted a randomized controlled trial in five garment factories in Bengaluru, a large city in southern India. Workers enrolled in a lottery for the chance to participate, and then were chosen at random to take part in the program. Those who were not randomly selected served as controls.

Nine months after the program ended, productivity gains, along with an increase in person-days due to retention changes, helped generate a whopping 256 percent net return on investment.

“Wages rose very little — about 0.5 percent — after the program period, indicating that the firm keeps most of the gains from the increased productivity of labor,” Adhvaryu said.


This article originally appeared in the Ross News Blog.