The busy local coffee shop barista asks the person ahead of you in line how their day is going and thanks them for their patience as they wait. Coffee in hand, you walk past a construction site where the lead is clearly delegating the day’s tasks to the crew. Ten minutes later, you enter your coworking space and overhear an employee thoughtfully sharing feedback with their coworker about the front desk registration process. On your lunch break, you stop by the home of your aging mother, whose eyesight is deteriorating. Her caretaker sits to the side of your mother’s direct line of vision and explains a new prescription to her.
You just witnessed employees from four small businesses putting critical skills into action at their jobs–from employability (formerly known as soft) skills like communication to industry-specific skills like understanding how vision loss progresses. Having witnessed these positive scenarios, you might imagine these small businesses provide regular training for their employees, a critical part of a quality job. After all, employees perform better and are more satisfied when they have the skills and confidence necessary to do their jobs.
But how can we help all small businesses offer timely, consistent training to their employees? Virtual reality (VR), as Jobs for the Future (JFF) saw through our recent pilot program, has the potential to make training more efficient, effective, and scalable for small businesses across the country.
The Reach of Small Businesses
The four employees you overheard represent the 61.6 million employees of small businesses in the United States. Small businesses create 62% of new jobs, or 1.6 million jobs each year, and 44% of U.S. GDP. If every small business employee had access to ongoing skill training opportunities, this would tremendously strengthen the U.S. workforce—especially for a sector that is critical for driving innovation and entrepreneurship, which are top priorities for policymakers at local, state, and national levels.
Don’t get us wrong—small businesses have a lot of competing priorities on a daily basis that sometimes make any training after an employee’s onboarding seem like a luxury. Small businesses constantly make tricky decisions with few resources, their employees often wear multiple hats, and their financial stability is not guaranteed very far into the future. Compared to larger companies, they are less likely to have a dedicated person, such as a human resources professional, responsible for learning, development, and training.
Yet these challenges are not always so different from what larger companies face: cost, capacity, and business priorities are always trade-offs for business leaders. And small businesses represent too great an opportunity to leave out of the conversation. We can take lessons from larger companies and their successful implementation of VR technology for training while also designing for small businesses’ unique needs.