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The Learning and Development function continues to focus on the wrong 3 things...

Much of L&D's time continues to be focused on 3 things: 1. Bringing control; (of 'content', 'delivery' and admin.) 2. Creating 'programs'; (which only help with the diminishing business problem of speed to compliance ) 3. Demonstrating a useful identity; (not just interrupting busy workers...) I believe there are 3 new things that L&D should focus on instead: 1. Bringing clarity ; helping leaders and teams to understand a learning culture and how they can contribute through their own work 2. Creating connections ; developing the conditions for individuals and teams to move their knowledge, experiences and ideas easily across the organisation 3. Demonstrating confidence ; providing a new leadership blueprint for the organisation to follow: curiosity, adaptability, reflection, failure tolerance, better questions, problem solving, horizon scanning and communication. Paul helps L&D teams to step up and do more of the important work that...

The lack of recognition for the role of learning isn't a cost issue or a technology issue...

The need to be seen and respected. This is a perennial L&D question that surfaces every year usually around February or March. Coincidentally, the Havard Business Review released a report this February entitled 'The Leaders Guide to Corporate Culture'. Here they interviewed 1,300 senior executives to understand their leadership styles and analysed the cultures in 230 companies across a range of industries. Corporate culture types were grouped into eight different flavours. 89% of executives ranked a "Results culture" as their first or second placed aim for their organisation. By "Results culture" they defined consciously creating an environment where targets, execution and delivery is the focus for everyone. (In the 'Industrial economy' value in a business was created by producing faster and cheaper than the competition. Employees were viewed by leaders as simply interchangeable parts of the system). Just 7 ( seven ) % of the executives...

10 (possibly new) questions for Learning and Development teams to use in 'Learning Technology' vendor discussions

It's a sellers market. So, I've put together a list of 10 (possibly new) questions for L&D teams to use in your 'Learning Technology' vendor discussions: 1. What is the big change your business is trying to make / facilitate / accelerate in the world of work? 2. What is your 'worldview' of the role of learning in business settings today? 3. Who exactly is your proposition for and, not for?: (i.e. which work contexts and cultures does your 'solution' best support and why?). 4. Describe how your organisation interprets the terms 'training', 'learning', 'learner', 'learning culture' and 'digital transformation'. 5. What is currently the biggest challenge for leaders of teams in organisations from your perspective? 6. How do we balance support for both productive and generative learning in your opinion? 7. According to the Havard Business Review "Leaders Guide to Corporate Culture" report...

The human stuff is the basis of 'digital learning transformations'...

The human stuff is the basis of 'digital learning transformations'. The technology platforms are secondary. They work best when: They help to simplify or speed up what people have always done while working; (research / answer questions / share / store) They enable people to work in new ways that they have learned are more efficient and effective; (cooperatively / 'out loud' / across different teams) A 'digital mindset' for businesses could include these ideas: Constant change is inescapable - so it's curiosity and adaptability that create value in work teams New possibilities and solutions come from connecting many sources of information People can take responsibility for solving work problems Failing fast is helpful Creating wide and diverse networks of expertise and experience is crucial Customer ('end user') centricity keeps everyone better aligned Silos don't help Flatter, less hierarchical teams move ideas and solutions ...

The 'Art' and the 'Science' of corporate Learning and Development

The 'Art' and the 'Science' of L&D There are two different conversations in what continues to be called 'L&D'. I don't believe one is any more right than the other. I do believe that they need to happen in the right order: The 'Art' of L&D L&D teams working alongside the organisations' leadership team to agree: How work gets done today and what needs to be different in the future for the organisation to prosper The environment needed to create this way work of working; (the stop, start, continues) If compliance and efficiency are important? (because this organisation will thrive through it's processes) If new ideas and practices are important? (because this organisation will thrive through it's adaptability and innovation) If sharing knowledge and experience quickly and openly is a priority? What is meant by 'high performance' for individuals and teams? How high performance will be measured and ...

What L&D can learn from the music business

For decades the music business had the perfect model. You had to go to a record shop to buy their products. When the old record wore out you had to spend money on a replacement. The record companies were in complete control of the artists and of production. Their products were spread by a free sampling tool - the radio. It was the ultimate centralised, hierarchical, money making machine. With the internet everything changed. The record company's monopoly on production and content ended. Every record ever made was available for free. Control was now in the hands of the artists who could create, share and market for themselves. Communities of fans could come together on new digital platforms to engage directly with each other. Fast, open, two-way and connected. Reliance on the old model where the record companies decided who got signed and what music was made (and for who) soon collapsed. There are parallels here for the work of L&D teams in the new knowledge economy. L...

Continuous learning - The 4Es plus 'Expectation'

I'm a big fan of the '4Es'. In my experience they provide a helpful way to unpack the "702010" bundle and, to diffuse the wrangling over which three numbers should sum to one hundred. The idea covers these elements of a continuous learning approach in an organisation: Creating the learning Environment : Developing performance support opportunities, available at the exact time an employee needs to learn something new. Enabling Exposure to learning opportunities: Building networks of peers and fellow professionals, supporting mentoring and coaching (formal or not), encouraging joining social networks and associations and following though leaders through social media. Providing access to Education resources (where required): Necessary / mandatory / process / procedure 'knowledge transfer' provision (AKA training). and Facilitating learning Experiences : Opportunities including job rotations, structured shadowing and stretch goals. These expe...

Most senior people in large organisations only have one job. To keep their job.

Most senior people in large organisations only have one job. That is to keep their job. This is not a criticism, because it's inevitable. It is how hierarchy businesses have evolved over 100 years. The majority of senior people's time and capacity is spent assessing requests from stakeholders and processing how much risk they present. In a hierarchy business, where achievement equals status, this risk radar becomes honed. A bias towards short term thinking, about 'hard' stuff (risk, money, data, profit, reputation) often prevails. Understanding this status game is a new challenge for L&D professionals who want to lead a change away from the old rules. Most corporate training is still based on the idea of knowledge transfer (regardless of the latest fad or technology). The objective of knowledge transfer is to scale understanding of the (one) way that things get done around here. This dates back to Henry Ford and the birth of industrialisation. Mass production...

In corporate Learning and Development its easy to love what you do, but...

I played in a pub band for a few years. I joined the band because I loved the instrument, rock songs and the sound I could make. It was the classic dream, built on years of listening to music, collecting records and going to 'real' gigs. The other pull was the idea of the band. The team. The tribe. Being with people who loved similar records, the same bands and the same sounds. And by playing together we became the only ones who really know what it took to get good enough to do your hobby in public. So being in the band was about me and us. But in reality, the band was only there for other people. The pub owners who needed new bands to help bring customers in. The bar teams who organised the bands. The customers in the pubs on the night we were playing. The band who had played there the previous week that people had liked more. The people in the pub who only wanted to hear a certain kind of band or certain songs. The people in the pub who didn't want to hear any band th...