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Fortune
Paige McGlauflin, Joseph Abrams

How turning corporate trainings into games can boost business performance

A young business woman sits in an office, using a laptop and wearing a headset. (Credit: Maksym Belchenko—Getty Images)

Good morning!

Employers are rethinking their approach to training and upskilling employees. But there’s one problem standing in their way: Traditional training techniques are, to be frank, mind-numbingly dull. 

To fix this, some companies, including Walmart and Coca-Cola, have started offering gamified training, or a video game-like educational platform, instead of forcing workers to sit through video courses or hour-long PowerPoint sessions.

One study from researchers at Harvard Business School and Columbia Business School analyzing the effects of a specific gamified training platform at professional services firm KPMG was able to gauge how practical this training is over a long-term period.

The researchers studied a training platform, KPMG Globerunner, used by client-facing employees at 24 KPMG global offices over 29 months to help employees learn more about the firm and its services. After creating a video game character, players “travel” around the globe, answering questions about the firm and earning points for every question answered correctly. Players receive instant feedback and a detailed explanation of questions answered incorrectly.

To gauge the effectiveness of the gamified training, researchers analyzed several variables, including changes in fees collected (a revenue generator for the firm), the number of clients served, and the total number of new business opportunities per office. The study found that the gamified training led to a 36% increase in fees collected by participating offices, a 16% increase in clients, and a 22% increase in business opportunities with new clients. 

However, the effects on performance were not equal across all employees. Overall, workers who already exhibited high levels of engagement at the firm were more likely to see a boost in performance. In fact, offices with a higher concentration of workers willing to use the training saw a 16% higher increase in fees collected than other offices. Leadership support was also important. Employees were more willing to sign up for the game when more leaders registered for the game as well. Offices whose leaders used the game saw a 19% increase in fees collected and a 7% increase in clients.

These conditions were the most surprising discovery for Wei Cai, an assistant professor of business at Columbia University and co-author of the study. Gamified trainings can be a useful tool for other workforces, and "if [HR leaders] want to improve the engagement in the training, then maybe encourage the leaders to play the game first,” Cai says.

Lastly, leaders might need to wait for the full benefits of the training to take effect. The study found that the performance increase happened in the second or third quarter after offering the training. 

“Managers or leaders need to be very patient because we find it takes some time for the effects to show up,” Cai says.

Paige McGlauflin
paige.mcglauflin@fortune.com
@paidion

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