Most businesses don’t have a training problem.
They have a forgetting problem.
A session happens, people nod along, everyone goes back to work… and within a week it’s business as usual. Not because the training was bad, but because day-to-day pressures are stronger than good intentions.
Why one-off training doesn’t stick
Most training is delivered like an event. A calendar invite. A slideshow. A couple of hours away from the day job.
But learning doesn’t work like that. For most of us, confidence with tools comes from:
Without repetition, the brain does what it’s designed to do: it drops the new information and keeps the habits that feel safe.
What happens when people forget
When the new way of working doesn’t “land”, teams don’t usually raise a flag. They quietly revert.
You’ll see it in small behaviours, like saving files back to the desktop “just in case”, copying and pasting data between systems, using Teams like email, and just generally avoiding features that feel unfamiliar.
It doesn’t look dramatic, but it creates a slow drift back to inefficiency - and the investment you made in Microsoft 365 never really pays off.
Better training looks more like support
The organisations that build real capability don’t treat learning as a one-time box to tick. They treat it like adoption - something that needs reinforcement. This could mean a focus on short, regular sessions instead of longer style workshops that offer the opportunity to work through real documents and answer everyday challenges. It also could mean after-care, with simple guides and standards that people can refer back to, or weekly coaching emails that give tips that reinforce learning. It might even mean training for super users or "train the trainer" so that someone is able to answer ongoing questions that arise.
The goal isn’t to teach everything. It’s to help a few key habits stick - because those habits compound into hours saved and fewer frustrations.
Confidence comes from consistency
When people repeatedly use the same tools in the same way, they stop hesitating. They stop double-checking. They stop feeling like they might break something.
And that’s when Microsoft 365 starts to feel less like “new software” and more like part of how work gets done.
If you’d like help building training that sticks (without overwhelming your team), drop us a message - we’ll help you turn knowledge into everyday habits.