General Motors and McDonald's pioneered the corporate university concept. Now
an estimated 1,600 corporate colleges exist at companies like Motorola, Walt Disney,
Carpet One, Verizon, Sears Roebuck, and Microsoft. Many other corporations,
even small to midsize businesses, are establishing corporate schools. Like the traditional
college or university, corporate universities have buildings, classroom
courses with instructors, catalogs, and even course numbers. In some cases, students
receive degrees or certificates for such training. Some companies are having
their programs accredited so employees can convert some in-house course work
into college credits for graduate degrees. Robert Brado, senior vice president of
Strategic Management Group, a consulting firm that specializes in helping companies
develop training programs, stated as follows: "You think that employees are
attracted to companies because of how much they pay. But typically, excellent
training programs, such as corporate universities, are always in the top three reasons
why people are attracted and why they stay." Ford Motor Company has taken a different approach to some of its training. In
2003 Ford announced that it would offer its technical training classes to global suppliers via a new Web link to the Michigan Virtual University. The courses are the
same ones used by Ford to train their engineers and provide the supplier companies
the added benefit of knowing that their approach is the same one followed by
Ford. The courses provide many of the core tools required to implement Ford's Six
Sigma-training. Source: Amit Shah, Charles Sterrett, Jerry Chesser, and Jessica Wilmore, "Meeting the Need for
Employee Development in the Twenty-First Century," S.A.M. Advanced Management Journal, Spring
2001, pp. 22–28; and "Ford to Offer Training through Michigan Virtual University," Vocational
Training News, March 2003, p. 2.
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