Companies across North Africa invest significant training budgets in English programmes - and many see disappointing results. The most common cause is not a bad provider: it is a poorly designed programme. Without a clear needs analysis, appropriate format, and a way to measure progress, even high-quality instruction fails to transfer to the workplace.
This guide is written for HR directors, L&D managers, and decision-makers responsible for choosing and evaluating corporate English training. Cambridge English's CEFR framework provides the standard benchmarks used in corporate english training programmes to measure progress and set role-appropriate targets.
Why Most Corporate English Training Fails
Research into workplace language learning consistently identifies the same failure patterns in corporate english training programmes:
- Training is not linked to specific job tasks (general English instead of professional English)
- Sessions are too infrequent to produce retention (one 2-hour session per week is rarely enough)
- Mixed levels are placed in the same group without differentiation
- There is no accountability system for attendance or practice outside sessions
- Success is measured by attendance, not by language improvement or job performance
The solution to each of these is structural - it starts before corporate english training begins, with a thorough needs analysis.
Step 1: Conducting a Training Needs Analysis
A needs analysis answers five questions. It takes 1-2 weeks and is the most important investment in the training design process.
Who are the participants?
Run a CEFR placement test for all participants. Map results into A1-B1 and B1-C1 streams. Do not group A2 learners with C1 learners.
What tasks do they perform in English?
Survey managers and participants: How often do they write emails, attend meetings, present, or negotiate in English? Which tasks cause the most difficulty?
What is the business context?
Is there a high-stakes upcoming event (audit, conference, client pitch)? What sector vocabulary is required? Who are their English-language counterparts?
What format is feasible?
What days and times work across all participant schedules? Is travel required? Is remote training acceptable or preferred? What is the budget per participant?
What does success look like?
Define measurable targets before training starts: target CEFR level, target TOEIC score, or specific observable behaviours (leads meetings in English, writes independent client emails).
Step 2: Choosing the Right Format
| Format | Best For | Cost Range | Typical Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Online group (6-12 pax) | Broad skills, mixed teams, multiple cities | Low-medium | +1 CEFR level in 6 months |
| In-person group | High-engagement, department cohorts | Medium | +1 CEFR level in 6 months |
| 1-to-1 coaching | Senior managers, high-stakes preparation | High | Fast targeted improvement |
| Blended (group + 1-to-1) | Mixed needs, leadership teams | Medium-high | Best overall outcomes |
| Self-paced digital only | Supplementary vocabulary, flexible learners | Very low | Limited without live practice |
Most corporate english training programmes benefit from a blended approach: live group sessions for shared skills (meetings, presentations, email), supplemented by individual coaching for role-specific needs.
Step 3: Managing Mixed Levels
Mixed-level groups are the most common training design problem in corporate settings. Three practical solutions:
| Approach | How It Works | Best When |
|---|---|---|
| Stream by CEFR level | Separate A1-B1 and B1-C1 groups, parallel curriculum | Group is large enough (10+ total) |
| Task-based differentiation | Same task, different complexity roles (lead vs. support) | Group is small, budget is limited |
| Parallel tracks | Group sessions for common skills + individual coaching for gaps | Budget allows; priority on results |
Step 4: Measuring Progress and ROI
Training ROI should be measured at three levels:
Level 1: Language Progress
Run a CEFR reassessment every 12 weeks. The target is one sub-level improvement per 12-week period for active learners in corporate english training (e.g. B1 to B1+ or B2). Use standardised instruments - TOEIC for listening/reading, Cambridge BEC Preliminary/Vantage for integrated assessment.
Level 2: Task Performance
Manager ratings on key language tasks: "Does [participant] now write independent client emails in English?" These qualitative assessments, collected quarterly, are often more meaningful to business leaders than CEFR scores.
Level 3: Business Outcomes
Harder to attribute directly, but worth tracking: reduced reliance on translation services, improved client satisfaction scores where English is the communication language, or successful outcomes in international negotiations where language was previously a barrier.
Common Mistakes Companies Make
Without a baseline assessment, you cannot measure progress and you cannot group learners appropriately.
Fix: Run a 30-45 minute CEFR placement test for all participants before the first session.
Attendance does not equal learning. Participants can attend every session and retain very little.
Fix: Track performance on skill assessments, not just presence in sessions.
A finance team discussing travel vocabulary is wasting time. In corporate english training, content must reflect the participants' actual professional context.
Fix: Require the provider to customise at least 50% of content to your industry and role.
1.5 hours per week of instruction without self-study support rarely produces sustainable improvement.
Fix: Add structured self-study activities (shadowing, writing practice, vocabulary review) with accountability check-ins.
Corporate Programme Design Checklist
| # | Design Element | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | CEFR placement test completed for all participants | Before programme |
| 2 | Job-task analysis completed (email, meetings, presentations) | Before programme |
| 3 | Participants streamed by level | Before programme |
| 4 | Measurable success targets defined | Before programme |
| 5 | Minimum 2 hours/week live instruction scheduled | Programme design |
| 6 | Industry-specific content confirmed with provider | Programme design |
| 7 | Progress reassessment scheduled at 12 weeks | Programme design |
| 8 | Manager feedback process defined | Programme design |
Design a Corporate English Programme for Your Team
Direct English Live works with HR and L&D teams across North Africa to design training that fits your organisation's structure, budget, and measurable goals.
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