Background on AI governance — useful context for training your team
A nonprofit director told me recently: "We did an AI training last year. Nobody remembers a single thing from it." That's a common story, and it's not the staff's fault — it's the training's fault.
Generic AI training doesn't stick because it doesn't connect to actual work. Here's what does work, based on what we see from sessions that actually change behavior.
Start With Their Actual Tools, Not Theory
The fastest way to lose a room is to start with "What is generative AI?" followed by a history slide. Your staff don't need to know what a transformer model is. They need to know what changes about their Tuesday morning.
Instead, open with a live demo of the AI tool they're most likely to encounter at work — usually ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot. Show it drafting an email they'd actually write. That immediately clicks in a way that theory never does.
Make It Hands-On Within 15 Minutes
If your session is longer than 15 minutes before participants type their first prompt, you've already lost retention. Passive listening drops off fast. Active doing sticks.
Bring a realistic scenario — drafting a donor thank-you letter, summarizing a meeting, creating a job posting — and have everyone try it in real time. Walk around. Help people when they get stuck. These "aha" moments are what people remember months later.
Address Their Actual Fears
Most workplace AI anxiety boils down to three questions that nobody wants to ask out loud:
- Is this going to take my job?
- Am I going to look stupid using it?
- Am I going to get in trouble for doing it wrong?
Name these fears directly. Acknowledge them. Explain your organization's stance on each. Teams that feel psychologically safe to experiment use AI more effectively — and more safely.
Teach the "Second Glance" Rule
The single most important habit to train is reviewing AI output before sending or publishing. AI makes mistakes. It invents facts. It misreads tone. The people who get value from AI without getting burned are the ones who always look at output with a critical eye before using it.
Make this a memorable rule: "Never send what the AI wrote without reading it twice." Repeat this throughout your session until people roll their eyes. That's when you know it's landed.
End With Specific Commitments
The last 10 minutes of a training are where retention is made or lost. Don't end with "any questions?" — end with each person writing down one specific way they'll use what they learned in the next week.
Follow up a week later with a short email: "How did it go? What worked? What got stuck?" This accountability loop is what converts training into permanent behavior change.
A Note on Format
The single biggest variable we see in retention isn't the content — it's whether the session is tied to real work. A generic workshop about AI has maybe 10% retention at three months. A workshop built around participants' actual current projects has 60-70%.
If you're planning AI training for your team, this is the question to ask first: is this training about AI, or is this training about our work, with AI as the tool?
Interested in training that actually sticks? Our AI Training Workshops are built around your team's real projects. Or book a free discovery call to talk through what would work best for your organization.