New industry research uncovers the link between training gaps and operational losses, offering a blueprint for strategic workforce development.
A new report from workforce development platform WorkForge reveals a critical, often overlooked cost factor in food manufacturing: inconsistent employee training. Titled The Hidden Costs of Inconsistent Employee Development in Food Manufacturing, the report offers a comprehensive analysis of how outdated training models are undermining safety, productivity, and profitability—often without detection. With food manufacturing turnover rates hovering near 40% and the average cost of replacing a frontline worker estimated at over $10,000, the cumulative financial impact of unstructured training is staggering. WorkForge's research—based on interviews, case studies, and operational data from mid-sized and enterprise food manufacturers—highlights a growing disconnect between training investments and business outcomes. HR Technology Insights: Zoom, ServiceNow Partner to Enhance Customer, Employee Experience "The findings are clear: reactive, check-the-box training programs are costing manufacturers millions in preventable losses," said Nathan Walts, Chief Executive Officer of WorkForge. "When companies fail to invest in scalable, structured development from day one, they open themselves up to increased rework, safety incidents, compliance violations, and employee churn." The report highlights ten critical areas where unstructured training impacts operations—from employee attrition and waste to compliance violations and missed innovation. From high turnover and waste to safety risks and low morale, the absence of structured training leads to inefficiencies across the board. HR Technology Insights: ControlUp Names Beau Dolinsky, Vice President of Customer Experience