Return to Virginia Business - March 2002

Customizing workplace training

How do you take tens of thousands of employees and create a unified team? Many large companies lack the time and knowledge to create an all-encompassing training package for their work forces. They may outsource some of their training, but too often they are left with a canned program that doesn't address specific needs.

Enter Vertex Solutions. The six-year-old Falls Church company tailors unique learning systems for each of its clients, roughly 90 percent of which are large government agencies. Working with more than 20 federal organizations, from the Internal Revenue Service to the Air National Guard to the Smithsonian Institution, Vertex has implemented training programs that make sure all workers have the same guidelines and expectations.

Although there are plenty of training companies vying for business, Vertex is running laps around its competitors. Last year, the company made the Deloitte & Touche Technology Fast 500 list — a list of the fastest-growing technology companies in the United States and Canada — having increased its revenues by 5,707 percent over five years.

"We come in and assess an organization's infrastructure. We look at the business processes they have in place and how they manage that from an IT perspective. We look at types of training they use. Then we work with the organization to come up with the right approach," says Jeff Kidwell, vice president of operations for Vertex. Past Vertex approaches have included interactive satellite video training, video conferencing, Web-based training, on-site classroom training, multimedia CD-ROM programs and even variations of low-tech paper-based training. According to Kidwell, "We don't believe in technology for technology's sake."

Of course, technology often provides the best training options. For example, the delivery system Vertex recently implemented at the Florida Law Enforcement Training Center featured an e-learning program for police officers. "[Vertex has] been good at understanding us and their recommendations have been insightful and direct. With the Web-based training, we've been able to focus on what's really important in law enforcement - the practical side of it," says Ned Futoran, program manager of distributed learning for the center. "And the students can go home to their families at night and take online classes when it's convenient for them."

- Elizabeth Thalhimer