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Customer Story

How iO upskills its workforce to retain talent

iO is an end-to-end full-service agency in communication and digital transformation. To attract and retain digital talent, iO wanted to upskill its junior software developers to provide them with personal growth and greater job satisfaction. With a custom learning program, iO's teams now grow and develop more quickly than before.

Related Services
Custom Learning Program

Industry
Digital

Company
Xebia Academy

iO is an end-to-end full-service agency in digital communication and digital transformation. With solutions in strategy, content creation, marketing, and technology, iO works with local and international clients. To empower their brand, improve digital systems and grow sustainably.

Besides business-related services, iO also collaborates with its customers for R&D and innovation. The company utilizes those 'Infinite Opportunities' that constantly arise in a constantly changing market. As talent is the foundation of these opportunities, iO has set up campuses as innovative breeding grounds to develop and accelerate its employees' skills. iO has 11 campuses in Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden and Bulgaria.

Why
Attract and retain talent, while growing teams more quickly 
What
A custom learning program to move Junior Software Developers to Architect and medior roles
How
Jointly created a learning program by combining Domain-Driven Design (DDD) and Agile Architecture training while tailored to iO's employees and customers

The war for talent

"It remains difficult to find good people in the market," says Friso Geerlings, Technology Director at iO in Eindhoven. "Everyone is looking for communicative team players with a solid technical base."

iO is an end-to-end agency with a growing team of experts in communication and digital transformation. With services in strategy, content creation, marketing, and technology, they work in a highly volatile digital market. One of the cornerstones of their success is the iO campus concept, a place where they can meet and exchange ideas with colleagues, clients, and partners, spread all over Europe.

Friso is in charge of the Technology service line, a team of engineers focused on creating tools to solve complex web and integration problems. Think about financial services and security-related projects, though their scope also extends to complicated e-commerce platforms that incorporate many other systems.

Currently, roughly 150 people work at the iO campus in Eindhoven, to design and run technical projects for airports, medical service providers, and financial institutions. Attracting talent remains a complex and universal problem, however. Demand is high, especially in the Eindhoven region. Unsurprisingly, iO needs more than 150 specialists to cope with its growth.

That’s one of the multiple reasons why iO has chosen to invest even more in its people. More specifically: in jointly creating development programs for the talent pool that is already in-house.

Learning and training on the job

Through this combination of gaining experience and following tailored training, Friso believes that, as they have already experienced, these talented juniors can handle more responsibility much sooner – more than you would expect from people who have just left school.

For example, Friso and his team saw that junior software developers, with their limited experience and only two rounds of training, were already at a level that would typically require someone with ten years of experience to reach. A challenging job for any recruiter to do.

"Our ambition is, therefore, to offer our employees (even) bigger learning journeys,” Friso continues. “To delve a bit more into simple analysis methods and customer understanding. We want to include training like Xebia Academy's as a standard part of their personal growth and development plan."

"One of the strong - if not the most powerful - elements of this collaboration and training: besides the conventional training building blocks, we can expand the training course with challenges we experience within IO."
iO Logo
Friso Geerlings Technology Director at iO

Better than hiring: upskilling internal talent

Since 2016, iO has been working with Xebia Academy. Seven years later, they’ve already run about 30 training days together. In close collaboration, we’ve set up various learning journeys that fit the development paths that have been set up for iO’s employees.

What is particularly pleasing about this cooperation is that a training course has been jointly developed that is completely tailored to iO’s needs, Friso explains. Based on proven Xebia Academy's building blocks, but adapted to the target group within iO.

On a daily basis, the software developers taking part in these courses deal with questions like: “How can I ensure that the software meets the customer’s needs? And when coming across an issue, is the customer aware of the issue? Is it perhaps a known unknown or an unknown unknown?”

Together with the customer, they will then explore a possible software solution. The goal is to determine what the software needs to do and test the requirements in an iterative process. However, a more efficient process and proven methodology could directly speed up this process, run projects more efficiently, and deliver faster.

So, iO and Xebia Academy sat down to determine the specific demand for the desired learning journey around customization and integration projects. In doing so, we defined two axes:

  1. The People ➡️ dealing with shortage.

  2. The Projects ➡️ dealing with complexity.

The result of our deliberation was that we developed training that included a combination of both Domain-Driven Design and Agile Architecture.

A custom software development learning program

"Software is beyond the point of writing requirements and building out. We went to an Agile process to see results quickly and then iterate," Friso states.

The first group of people who went to the training comprised 15 young software developers who were excited to become an architect. This 5-day training can roughly be divided into two parts:

  1. Three days Domain-Driven Design (DDD), and

  2. Two days Collaborative Agile Architecture.

The training course covers, among other elements, the topics below.

  • Before diving into a project, the software developers should first take a step back and examine the big picture, learning as much as possible about the customer's domain and the more complex requirements.

  • They also need to be able to split their project into manageable chunks, which is called ‘bounded context’. What is a subdomain? What is its boundary? And what can I say about that boundary?

  • Another element is, “How can you make a client envision the stakeholders needed for the software project?” Thinking thoughtfully about the architecture needed and the development of that architecture at an early stage is a crucial part of your software project. With Domain-Driven Design methodologies, you can involve the right stakeholders in time and make proper arrangements before the project kicks off.

More than three rounds of this training have been organized. After each round, iO and Xebia Academy work together to fine-tune the training content and setup.

One of the outcomes of that fine-tuning was the desire to go more in-depth. For example, the content of one of the latest courses focused more on IO-specific cases. As a result, last fall's program was even more extensive than the previous learning sessions.

As Friso puts it: "One of the strong, if not the most powerful, elements of this collaboration and training: besides the conventional building blocks, we can expand the training course with challenges we experience within IO."

"The long relationship we have with Friso and iO is a great compliment and extremely valuable to us. It shows that the close collaboration has produced the results we envisioned when we started our conversation.”
Xebia Academy logo
Wesley van de Pol Customer Success Manager

Tailored training solutions for the best outcome

With the developed learning program, we ensure that we complement the technical skills that college and university graduates already acquired during their studies. By mimicking a software developer’s practical skill development, they can experience the skills they usually acquire during the first few years on the job.

The learning journeys are aimed at helping employees with different experience levels, though the first classes were aimed at iO’s ‘newbies’. Often employees who freshly started at the company and just left college or university. These journeys not only open opportunities for employees but also for iO and the different project teams within the organization.

As students gain experience as ‘software developers’, iO equips them with the skills necessary to advance to the ‘architect’ role on complex software development projects.

In the words of Friso, "With the correct and, thus, greater experience in architecture and technique, as well as the direction of professionals who also like educating young people, we can assist our teams to grow and develop more quickly."

What this means, is that iO can quickly promote junior workers to more medior roles in projects where their colleagues are familiar with iO processes. Consequently, employees who’ve been in a medior position can move on to senior positions at a higher pace. A win for all.

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The secret to learning success

The mix of theory, cases, and practical exercises is beneficial to the overall learning goals and is all tailored to fit the needs of iO's customers.

Friso is confident that you don’t have to remember 100% of a training course you followed. He believes it's more important to apply what you learned to your context. Know what else is out there so you can make a conscious decision.

By running some large projects themselves, the trainees could experience in real life which elements of the course they could apply themselves. At the same time, they were able to come up with new questions, which served as input for their own unique learning journey.

Every ten weeks, the learning journey trainees meet again with Kenny Baas-Schwegler – a trainer at Xebia Academy – to discuss progress and developments. The outcomes and findings of these sessions also serve as new material to refine the training further.

This is how we safeguard that the latest technical issues always align with reality. Quite a challenge, as you can imagine, given the rapid developments in technology.

For Friso – and everyone involved at Xebia Academy – these return sessions are great fun as we can all witness the tremendous growth that a team has gone through in that period. And as the participants feel this growth too, they also become aware of how their projects and client communication has improved considerably.

That's the real treasure of the project, the goal of starting this collab in the first place. When team members realize they've evolved professionally or personally, the project's overall quality improves. As a result, the whole company's quality rises.

“Within iO, we have partnered with Xebia Academy to put money into the company's most valuable asset: its people," Friso concludes. “We contribute to the future and present success of iO and our clients by investing in our internal talent.”

iO's learning program results

  • iO’s junior software developers advance to the architect role on complex software development projects.
  • iO can quickly promote junior workers to more medior roles.
  • Consequently, employees in medior positions can move on to senior positions at a higher pace.
  • Junior workers can handle more responsibility much sooner.
  • Junior software developers were already at a level that would typically require someone with ten years of experience to reach.
  • Higher retention and job satisfaction among the trained employees.
  • A proven case to develop similar learning programs for different roles, like data roles.

 

Would you like to set up your own tailored learning program? Let us know or check out our learning solutions here. 

 

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