Hospitality businesses to ‘cut training spend’

-

More than half of employers in the hospitality sector are planning to reduce staff training costs during the downturn.

A total of 51 per cent of businesses are cutting training during the recession, but 25 per cent are planning to ramp up their spending, the State of the Nation report by People1st.com found.

According to the study, employers are looking afresh at training during the financial turmoil, with 37 per cent of businesses saying the recession will encourage them to seek support through Train to Gain or the apprenticeship programme.

“This will help upskill and professionalise the workforce as well as help support training budgets in this critical time,” the study claimed.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Meanwhile, 62 per cent of businesses that pay for external training say they will bring learning and development in house to cut costs.

Will Cookson, head of skills at Working Links, previously claimed one of the main advantages of training is that employers “get a higher calibre employee”.

 

 

hr106hrradvert

Latest news

CIPD recognises 30 HR leaders driving change across UK workplaces

The CIPD has unveiled its HR30 list for 2026, recognising senior people leaders whose work has delivered measurable impact across organisations and workforces.

Brits dream of being their own boss, but still cling to the monthly pay cheque, survey reveals

Britons say they like the idea of self-employment, but most still value the security and stability of traditional jobs.

AI Coaching Won’t Replace Managers. It Will Expose Coaching Debt.

As AI coaching expands, employers may gain a clearer view of where manager support is falling short.

Grant Wyatt: AI is as good as the standard you set

Most professionals treat AI like a vending machine: they click, prompt, and hope. When the output is mediocre, they blame the tool.
- Advertisement -

AI adoption accelerates as employers rethink workforce size

Employers are using AI to address staffing pressures, redesign roles and improve productivity as workforce planning increasingly incorporates automation.

Workers ‘pushing through illness’ as workplace pressure grows

Burnout, stress and working while sick are becoming increasingly common as many employees struggle to cope with workplace pressure.

Must read

Five ways to narrow your gender pay gap

Rachel Mapleston, Business Analyst at MHR shares five ways organisations can improve gender equality in the workplace and break down the barriers to drive women’s career progression.

Talia King: Less talk, more action – UK mentoring in its current state will not help businesses meet ED&I objectives.

What should companies should be focussing on to achieve their ED&I objectives?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you