Training center performance varies dramatically across the industry, even among facilities equipped with similar simulation hardware from the same manufacturers. The difference between a training center that delivers excellent outcomes and one that underperforms relative to its equipment investment is rarely the quality of the simulators themselves. It is the operational practices, curriculum design, and management approach that determine whether simulation equipment achieves its full training potential. A data-driven analysis of training centers that consistently achieve superior outcomes reveals several common practices that distinguish high-performing facilities from the rest.
The oil and gas simulation software utilization data from high-performing training centers tells a clear story. These facilities maintain simulator utilization rates of 65-75%, compared to the industry average of 35-45%. They achieve this not by running longer hours — most operate on a standard working day schedule — but by minimizing idle time between sessions, pre-loading scenarios so that the next training session can begin immediately after the previous one ends, and designing training programs that keep simulators occupied throughout the operating day. The correlation between utilization and training throughput is nearly linear: a center that doubles its utilization effectively doubles its training capacity without additional equipment investment.
Ms Dewi walked through her training centre in Jakarta, tablet in hand. “Our simulator was running at thirty-eight percent utilisation last quarter,” she told Engineer Wu during his site visit. “That is below the industry average.” Engineer Wu studied the schedule board. “Your bottleneck is not the hardware. It is the gap between sessions — fifteen-minute breaks that stretch to thirty, scenarios not pre-loaded, instructors handling one group at a time.” Ms Dewi nodded. “And the fix?” “Batch your trainees. Pre-load all scenarios the night before. Schedule back-to-back sessions with five-minute turnover. You will hit sixty-five percent within a month without adding a single extra hour of operation.”
Curriculum integration is the second distinguishing factor. High-performing training centers do not treat simulation as a standalone activity that trainees complete separately from their classroom instruction. They integrate simulation sessions into the curriculum at specific points where the practical experience of operating the simulator reinforces the theoretical content of concurrent classroom instruction. When a trainee completes a classroom session on well control principles and then immediately proceeds to the simulator to practice a well kill procedure, the learning reinforcement is significantly stronger than when the two activities are separated by days or weeks. Integrated curriculum design is the single most impactful investment a training center can make in improving the effectiveness of its simulation equipment.
Performance data utilization is the third common practice. Every modern simulator generates performance data on every training session — reaction times, decision accuracy, error patterns, improvement trajectories. High-performing training centers extract value from this data systematically. They use it to identify trainees who need additional practice on specific skills, to evaluate instructor effectiveness, and to identify curriculum gaps where trainees consistently underperform. They share performance data with trainees as a coaching tool, helping them understand their own learning progress and focus their practice on areas that need improvement. And they use aggregated performance data to demonstrate training center effectiveness to stakeholders — operators, certification bodies, and regulatory authorities — who increasingly expect evidence-based training quality assurance.
