The pie charts illustrate the distribution of the employees attending five distinct types of communication training alongside with their main motives to enroll in such courses.
Overall, part-time training which was held on evenings accounted for the most popular course type, with holiday travel being the dominant underlying reason. In contrast, the smallest share of employees were interested in distant learning, while communication with clients was considered to be the least shared motive.
In detail, part-time training on evenings was the most favorable types of training at 39%, followed by part-time training on weekends and self-tuition both representing 22% each. In contrast, the lowest proportion of the employees were keen on distant learning at 5%. Meanwhile, a fair share of 12% attended intensive training courses.
Moving to the second chart, nearly half of the attendees reported holiday travel as the main reason behind enrolling in such courses at 46%. Business travel was ranked the second dominant motive at 17%, followed by personal interest and other reason at 14% and 13%, respectively. Conversely, only 10% of the participants were looking to improve their communication with clients.
