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The ROI of Investing in Telecoms Training

The ROI of Investing in Telecoms Training

Introduction

Training is often treated as a cost, an unavoidable line item rather than a strategic investment. When budgets tighten, it is one of the areas that can be reduced, postponed or cancelled. Yet, it is well-known that organisations that perform the best in technical industries treat training the same as infrastructure.

In this article, we’ll explore the business case for telecoms upskilling, using the numbers, examining how targeted investment in training can improve performance, reduce operational risk and ultimately deliver measurable results.

 

The Cost of NOT Training

Before building the positive ROI case, it is worth quantifying what skills gaps actually cost. Because while the investment in training is visible and sits on a budget line, the cost of not training is invisible and far higher. In a telecoms engineering context, an undertrained team produces costs in several ways:

  • Slower project delivery each hour of avoidable troubleshooting or rework has a labour cost.
  • Increased third party dependency using external consultants and vendors to plug knowledge gaps.
  • Failed or delayed technology transitions; the difference between a smooth 5G SA rollout and an expensive one lies heavily on team capability.
  • Costs within recruitment when engineers plateau due to underdevelopment, attrition increases.
  • Competitive disadvantage teams that cannot operate effectively in new architectures lose contracts to those that can.

Skills gaps cost the US economy an estimated $1.3 trillion annually in lost productivity. In telecoms specifically, workforce capacity has been described by industry executives as 'a bottleneck for rapid expansion' of services.

Skills Gap: Data Reports 2026 

 

The Numbers Behind Training ROI

For every $1 invested in structured training, organisations see an average return of $5 in improved productivity and performance. This figure, from the Association for Talent Development, holds across technical industries including telecoms.

Source: Keevee – 37 Skills Gap Statistics 2025

Digital upskilling programmes increase productivity by an average of 21%. In a sector where network performance directly impacts revenue, a 21% productivity uplift in your engineering team is a material competitive advantage.

Companies implementing 5G technology using trained professionals complete projects 45% faster than those without formal upskilling in place. In telecoms, where deployment timelines are commercial commitments, project speed is directly linked to revenue.

The average payback period for professional telecoms training certification investment is just 2–4 months — making it one of the fastest-returning categories of capital expenditure available to technical teams.

Source: 5GWorldPro – 5G Training Certification Guide 2025

 

 

The ROI of Skills Assessments

Training investment decisions are often made with limited visibility. Even in highly technical environments, where precision matters everywhere else, learning and development can still rely on broad assumptions from, what teams should know, what roles typically require, and what courses are generally considered valuable.

Consider a telecoms team of 20 engineers, with a training budget of around £30,000 to deploy across the team on 5G and cloud-native capabilities.

Without assessment data:

  • The training manager books a 5G core programme for the whole team.
  • Six engineers already know the material; they sit through it passively and the cost per head is wasted.
  • Four engineers lack the prerequisite understanding to benefit, they follow along superficially and the gap persists.
  • Ten engineers gain genuine value, for them, the investment works.
  • The effective return on the £30,000 investment is roughly 50% of potential.

With NetXpert assessment data before the decision is made:

  • The training manager identifies which engineers need 5G core, which need prerequisite work first, and which already have that knowledge
  • Budget is allocated to the courses that will move the needle for each person
  • The entire team's training plan is both more efficient and more effective
  • ROI on the same budget approximately doubles

When organisations shift to data-informed decisions, the results tend to follow. With greater visibility into skills, it allows training to be aligned more closely with actual needs, improving both efficiency and overall return on investment. 

 

Building a Business Case for Leadership

One of the most common challenges for L&D managers and team leaders in telecoms is making the case for training investment to leadership, but the business case has never been stronger. PwC's Global Workforce Hopes and Fears Survey found that roughly one in three telecoms employees plan to change jobs within the next 12 months, making retention a boardroom-level concern. Organisations with strong learning cultures see 24% higher retention rates than their peers [Gallup*] meaning training isn't just a development budget line, it's a direct lever on performance, retention and competitive advantage.

PwC www.pwc.com/gx/en/industries/tmt/the-future-of-telcos-relies-upon-talent.html

*Gallup unboxedtechnology.com/blog/looking-ahead-predictions-for-ld-in-2025/

Shifting that perception requires presenting training as a risk mitigation and performance investment, not as a cost:

  • Frame skills gaps in terms of project risk: what specific programmes or deliveries are exposed by the capability shortfall?
  • Quantify the cost of current inefficiency: how many hours of avoidable troubleshooting, rework, or external support can be attributed to skills gaps?
  • Present the training plan as targeted, not generic: show leadership that investment is going where the data says it is needed, not based on assumptions.
  • Commit to measurable outcomes: before-and-after assessment scores and time-to-competency improvements.

NetXpert supports each of these elements:

  • Assessment data gives you the evidence to frame skills gaps in business terms.
  • Automated reporting gives you the before-and-after measurement.
  • The specificity of the recommendations demonstrates that investment is targeted, not scattered.

According to the training orchestra - 85% of organisations plan to increase investment in upskilling employees through 2025–2030. 72% of global CEOs are investing in workforce development as a direct competitive strategy. Schedule Learning for Telecommunications Professionals

In D2Ls recent report, 88% of organisations are concerned about employee retention and providing genuine learning and development opportunities is consistently the number one retention strategy cited by both employers and employees. www.d2l.com/blog/employee-training-statistics/

Telecoms engineers are in demand, and the skills gap is widening. Those with 5G, Open RAN, AI and Cloud Native expertise have many options and they know it. Organisations that invest in developing their engineers keep them. Those that don’t hand them to competitors who will. Retention alone makes the business case for investing in development a no brainer.

Find out how NetXpert can give you the data to maximise your training ROI. Request a demo below...

 


 

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