Email: support@pragmatic-consulting.co.uk
Tel: 01926 674340

Training isn’t just about what you do — it’s also about when you do it. Whether you’re planning a team’s competence pathway or deciding the best moment to schedule key courses, understanding training trends can make your 2026 plans more effective.
In this post we take a light‑but‑insightful look at how people and organisations actually book training, when interest peaks, and what that means for construction and utilities employers planning ahead.
Recent industry trends show that training activity isn’t evenly spread across the year. Instead, demand often clusters around key months for planning and development:
June and September emerge as booking favourites
Analysis of course enrolment behaviour shows that June and September consistently have higher training activity — well above the expected monthly average, with September typically having the highest enrolments for the year.
This makes sense:
In contrast, August and December are the quietest months for training bookings — likely a reflection of holiday seasons and year‑end slowdowns.
While sector‑specific UK training data is limited, broader workplace trends show that many employers cycle training throughout the year:
Around a third of organisations favour quarterly training — many employees prefer structured learning every three months, followed closely by monthly sessions.
This aligns nicely with the general surge in mid‑year and early autumn booking peaks, suggesting that quarterly planning can help organisations time their training to meet both seasonal and operational demand.
What Are People Training For? (Clues from Other Trends)
Although not specific to construction, wider workforce data shows that training investment remains strong overall:
This suggests that, while booking behaviour varies through the year, the priority for training remains practical, workplace‑relevant skills, particularly safety and compliance.
Digital trends show the training landscape itself is evolving:
Online bookings and e‑learning continue to grow — with many providers now taking the majority of bookings digitally and offering flexible options for learners.
While in‑person training still has its place — especially for hands‑on, competence‑based courses — the rise of blended and online learning means organisations can better match training opportunities to their workforce’s schedules.
So, what can employers take away from these trends?
If training had a calendar of its own, it might look something like this:
January: New‑year planners dust off those training lists.
February–April: Steady bookings as projects gear up.
June: Mid‑year boost — a popular time to firm up skills.
September: Peak activity as teams return from breaks and refocus.
December: Time to reflect — but maybe not book courses!
Understanding these “training seasons” can help you schedule more strategically and support your workforce when they’re most motivated to learn.
Training trends aren’t just trivia — they reflect how organisations manage change, compliance, and skill development throughout the year. By knowing when people book, what they prioritise, and how learning delivery is evolving, you can make your training program more effective and aligned with both business and workforce needs.
Got your own insights on booking patterns or training behaviours? We’d love to hear how your organisation plans training — especially for the year ahead!
Registered Office:
Unit 78, Avenue Q
Stoneleigh Park
Kenilworth
Warwickshire
CV8 2LG
Registered company number: 08612308
© 2014 - 2026 Pragmatic Consulting Ltd. All rights reserved.
Home | Privacy Policy | Cookies | Site map | Admin