The Top 2 Reasons Training Investments Get Cut During Tough Times — And Why That’s a Strategic Mistake
When financial pressure increases, training budgets are often the first to go. On the surface, these decisions look rational: training is frequently viewed as discretionary, difficult to quantify, and rarely deployed in a way that changes on-the-job behavior and performance. Yet beneath that surface lies a deeper pattern — one that exposes how organizations with low learning cultures have:
Let’s take a look at each.
Weak Training Strategies
Leaders rarely set out to create ineffective training strategies — yet many end up with company-wide learning approaches that waste money, frustrate busy employees, and fail to shift on-the-job behavior. The problem isn’t a lack of good intentions. It’s a lack of strategic clarity, measurement discipline, and cultural alignment. When training becomes disconnected from real work, it becomes transactional benefit rather than a strategic lever.
Weak training strategies undermine a high performance culture and share a familiar set of symptoms. They:
Without these elements, training is disconnected from business priorities and should be cut — even when times are good.
Misread Both Risk And Opportunity During Downturns
In addition to weak training strategies, several other dynamics help training investments get cut during tough times.
The Bottom Line
The real issue isn’t that companies cut training; it’s that they haven’t done the work to make training a valuable enough component of their business strategy. When learning is tightly woven into strategy execution cutting it becomes as unthinkable as turning off the ERP system. The real strategic question is not which training investments get cut during tough times, but whether your talent management plans are strategic enough to matter.
To learn more about how to avoid the reasons training investments get cut during tough times, download Top 5 Training Strategies and Key Mistakes to Avoid
Explore real world results for clients like you striving to create higher performance