The food manufacturing industry is no stranger to rapid shifts in workforce demands, skills gaps, and a heightened need for operational efficiency. Wholestone Farms, a company dedicated to producing high-quality pork, has navigated these challenges head-on by embedding a culture of compliance, competency, and continuous development into its HR strategy.
Grant Prenzlow, HR Director at Wholestone Farms recently joined us for a webinar where he shared how they accomplished building a culture of learning and development and reduced turnover by 25%.
When Wholestone Farms split from their parent company they needed to do a full re-start of their learning and development programs. Grant and his team saw this as an opportunity to build a learning and development program based on a culture with an emphasis on competency, not compliance.
They started with identifying the challenges they needed to solve for first:
Given these pressures, Wholestone Farms committed to a "hire to retire" training model, focusing on upskilling, succession planning, and career growth. The focus areas included:
Securing support from leadership was critical. The team at Wholestone used data and ROI projections to communicate how this approach would alleviate challenges such as high turnover, increased production requirements and audit challenges. They framed the initiative as a solution to “what keeps your leadership up at night,” making the case for investing in long-term workforce improvements.
Wholestone Farms has seen substantial gains from its development initiatives:
Wholestone Farms’ journey illustrates the transformative power of a committed approach to employee development. By fostering a culture of continuous learning and aligning HR initiatives with business goals, they have created a resilient, high-performance workforce poised to meet future challenges.
Listen to the full session to learn more about how Grant and his team, in partnership with WorkForge, accomplished these great results.