
Why Do So Many Technicians Fail to Level Up? It Turns Out These Are the Skills They’re Missing
May 18, 2026Committing your company’s employees to a three-year electrical apprenticeship programme is a significant decision. It involves time, budget, coordination with your operational team, and a degree of trust in a training provider’s ability to deliver what they promise.
For HR managers and operations directors evaluating TSDC’s programme, the natural question is: how do we know this is the right fit for our team before we commit?
That is exactly the question TSDC’s Pre-assessment was designed to answer.
TSDC at Merdeka Copper Gold: A Pre-Assessment Visit
TSDC’s training team recently travelled to the Merdeka Copper Gold facility in Gorontalo to conduct a pre-assessment session with a group of the company’s electrical technicians. The visit was not a full training day, and it was not a sales presentation. It was a structured, three-hour engagement designed to do two things simultaneously: assess where each participant’s technical knowledge currently stands, and give both the participants and the company’s management a genuine first experience of what TSDC’s electrical training approach looks and feels like in practice.

The session combined a structured pre-assessment with a hands-on practical component — the same combination that defines every module of TSDC’s three-year electrical apprenticeship. Participants came in as they were: in their site PPE, straight from their normal workday, with no special preparation required. That was intentional. The goal was to see their real starting point, not a rehearsed performance.
What the Pre-Assessment Reveals — and Why It Matters to Your Company
The pre-assessment phase is where the session began. Participants worked through technical material relevant to their field, with TSDC’s trainers observing not just what they knew, but how they approached problems they were less certain about.
For Merdeka Copper Gold’s management team, this phase produced something genuinely useful: an honest, observable picture of their electrical workforce’s current competency level. Not a self-reported skills inventory. Not an assumption based on years of experience or the certificates on file. An actual structured assessment, conducted by qualified trainers, that showed clearly where each participant’s knowledge was solid and where the gaps were.
This is the kind of information that HR managers and training coordinators rarely have access to in a form that is both objective and actionable. Most companies know, broadly, that their electrical team has areas of weakness. A pre-assessment with TSDC tells you specifically what those areas are — and gives you a clear picture of what a structured electrical apprenticeship would need to build.
For companies considering enrolment in TSDC’s programme, the pre-assessment visit is also the first real indication of how your employees will respond to the training approach. You can observe their engagement, see how they interact with the material, and form a grounded judgment about readiness — before any long-term commitment is made.
The Practical Component: A Glimpse of What Apprenticeship Looks Like
Pre-Assessment and Learning Sessions
The session opened with a structured pre-assessment. Participants engaged with technical material on screen and worked through written assessments that gave TSDC’s trainers — and the company’s own management — a clear picture of where each participant’s current knowledge level sits.
This pre-assessment phase is one of the most valuable elements of the short course for HR and training managers. Rather than entering a long-term training commitment without knowing where your team stands, you receive an honest, structured baseline of your electrical workforce’s existing competency. You can see clearly which areas are strong, which have gaps, and what the full apprenticeship programme would need to develop.
For Merdeka Copper Gold’s team, this meant management could observe their technicians engaging seriously with technical content — and could see the starting point from which the TSDC apprenticeship would build.
Practical Learning on Real Equipment
The second phase moved from theory to hands-on practice. TSDC’s trainers brought their portable training equipment directly to the Merdeka site — the same kind of practical learning tools used in the TSDC workshop in East Jakarta, now operating in a site meeting room in Gorontalo.

Participants gathered around the equipment, working through electrical concepts with real components in their hands. This is the part of any TSDC session that consistently makes the strongest impression: the shift from discussing electrical principles to applying them directly, with a trainer guiding each step and correcting technique in real time.
For companies evaluating whether TSDC’s training approach is right for their workforce, watching your own technicians in this environment is more informative than any brochure or programme outline. You can see how they engage, how quickly they grasp hands-on instruction, and what level of practical foundation they are already bringing to the table.
Why This Matters for Companies in Remote or Industrial Locations
Committing to a three-year electrical apprenticeship for your workforce is a significant decision — and it should be made with full information. The pre-assessment visit is how TSDC ensures that companies are making that decision with their eyes open.
By the end of a pre-assessment session, your management team has seen your electricians engage with structured technical material. You have observed their response to hands-on instruction. You have a baseline assessment of where their competency sits today. And you have experienced, firsthand, the approach that your employees would encounter across three years of structured electrical training with TSDC.
That is a fundamentally different starting point from signing up based on a programme description alone. It removes the uncertainty, aligns expectations, and ensures that when enrolment begins, both your company and your employees are genuinely prepared for what the apprenticeship involves.
For companies in remote or industrial locations — like Merdeka Copper Gold in Gorontalo — TSDC’s willingness to conduct pre-assessment visits on-site removes the logistical barrier that often prevents quality training from reaching the workforces that need it most. Your team does not need to travel to Jakarta to experience what TSDC’s electrical training looks like. TSDC comes to you.
Is Your Company Ready to Experience the Impact?
If you are an HR manager or operations director evaluating electrical training options for your workforce — particularly if your team is based outside Jakarta or in a remote operational location — TSDC’s short course is the most direct way to experience what structured, practical electrical training looks like in your own environment.
You do not need to commit to a three-year programme to find out if TSDC is the right partner for your company. You need a short course session that brings the training to your site, shows your team what the approach looks and feels like, and gives your management team the information they need to make a confident decision.
That is what TSDC delivered at Merdeka Copper Gold in Gorontalo. And it is what TSDC can deliver at your facility too.
Contact our team to discuss a short course engagement at your site, or visit our Admission page to learn more about company enrolment in the full 2026 programme.
WhatsApp: +62811 8111 3032 | Email: marketing@ptodg.com | Website: tsdc.co.id




