Transcript Document

Building a Learning Culture

Revisiting results - Yielding approaches

Sesh Sukhdeo

Summary

No single approach

. Out-of-the-box thinking HR / Learning Strategic advantage and imperatives

If knowledge =power, learning is = ?

LEARNOMICS

THE ECONOMICS OF LEARNING

Organizations with strong learning cultures outperform their competitors .

Imagine

A system which can read a CV and Map against a Job description without a key word search

Imagine

Imagine a system where you can check a 200 page training manual against a National occupational or quality standard - 46 secs and assess compliance baselines.

Imagine a world where CV’s are replaced by skills profiles Technology which can read and interpret your HR Data www.eduworks.com

Learning is undergoing another fundamental shift and new technologies have a lot to do with it. We have moved from periods of a one on-one model, a one-to-many model and a many-to-many model, and are now entering a new,

relationship centered period.

Technology is allowing us to leverage the various relationships that exist within the learning ecosystem in ways that were not previously possible. Learner Centered Teaching Centered Relationship Centered Joe Samson Abdi Stephen Allan Apprentice Centered

Building a learning organisation requires a shift in the way you see your business.

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A learning organisation always considers the impact of each decision on the whole organisation.

Employers are waking up to this fact and to the reality that a lot of learning occurs for their employees outside of the organization

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Why are Learning Organizations So Powerful?

     Agile and flexible Ability to anticipate and adapt Can accelerate product and process innovation Link and leverage all learning and resources Increase worker commitment and creativity

Learning Measurement in Practice

This data, is taken from the CLO magazine Assessment and Measurement annual survey, completed in January 2012, measurement practices of learning organizations

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Only 50% of organizations agree that their measurement and metrics are fully aligned with the learning strategy. Just over half, 54% measure external learning / customers’ satisfaction. 39% externally benchmark their measurement and metrics practices. 77% of learning organizations report that they do measure internal learning customers’ satisfaction.

6 Key Traits

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Personal mastery –encourages personal and organisational goals Mental models – know that a person’s 'internal' picture of their environment will shape their decisions and behavior Shared vision – build a sense of group commitment by developing shared images of the future Team learning – transform conversational and collective thinking skills, so that a group’s capacity to reliably develop intelligence and ability is greater than the sum of its individual member's talents System thinking – develop the ability to see the 'big picture' within an organisation and understand how changes in one area affect the whole system.

Motivate thoughts into actions

• • • • Learning achieved by organization system as a whole - almost as if it were a single brain Business goals and learning integrated Adapts and renews itself continuously in response to changing environment Five subsystems of learning, organization, people, knowledge and technology are integrated and synergized

Strategic Enablers

As a learning organization increases it’s alignment with the business, it moves from being perceived as a Cost Center to being perceived as a Strategic Enabler for the business.

Perception of the Learning Function

Respondents report that there is still a gap between the perceived importance of the learning function to organizational success, between the view of learning leaders and senior c-suite leadership. Overall 52.7% of respondents report that the learning function at their organization is seen as a strategic enabler for the business .

Strategic enablers:

1. 4-6% more likely to deliver training to customers. 2. 8-9% more likely to deliver training to partners/channels. 3. 4-6% more likely to deliver training to suppliers. 4. 25-42% more likely to report that training is aligned with business strategy. 5. Twice as likely to use objective measures of employee performance to align their learning to the business strategy. 6. Twice as likely to do formal learning requirements planning. 7. Four times more likely to have a learning advisory board with members from the business and the learning function. 8. 26-43% more likely to have an annual process of mapping the learning strategy to the business strategy for the year. 9. 39% more likely to have been demonstrating the impact that training has on the business

Corporate learning used to be very much about simply on boarding people and training them upfront to have a certain basic level of information.

What’s key to many organizations’ learning strategy is the need to formulate the right balance between formal and informal learning methodologies

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Organizations are seeing the benefits of the employee-driven, learning-in-real-time approach.

The chief talent or chief people officer needs a broader skill set, with more competencies than just understanding adult learning because he or she will have to work with senior business unit executives to develop a deep leadership bench.

Enterprises that emphasize ongoing learning and development also understand that these activities are the primary drivers of increased engagement, productivity and performance—the winning combination in today’s highly competitive global marketplace.

The Application of Business Intelligence The ultimate differentiator today is in the workforce data. Employers have grown far more diligent about applying internal metrics and analytics to various aspects of their business, including the HR business like performance, compensation, workforce planning and L&D. While some organizations focus simply on using hard data to justify their training expenditures, savvier organizations focus on measuring the actual impact of their L&D initiatives, assessing precisely how L&D affects employee performance and the company’s overall ability to achieve its business goals .

Global workplace skills

If you adopt this framework you cant go wrong

1. Service Excellence 2. Planning & Organising 3. Using Initiative - Achieving Goals 4. Decision Making & Problem Solving 5. Effective Communication 6. Team & Collaborative Working 7. Relationships Management & Networking 8. Innovation & Creative Thinking 9. Change, Adaptability & Flexibility

(Learning to learn)

10. Leading and working with others 11. Continuous Development (Self & Others) 12. Thinking & Acting Strategically Every level Every role Anywhere Anytime

The Rise of On-Demand Learning

On-demand learning is becoming increasingly popular These technologies all facilitate unstructured, untethered, 24/7 learning—a factor that has tremendous appeal to a growing segment of today’s workforce, especially younger workers. Traditional, structured learning still has its place in most organizations, but more and more employees want the opportunity to control where and when they learn—self paced learning

Trends To Watch in 2014 & Beyond

1. Tailor the learning experience to both the needs of the organization and the employee. 2. Ensure L&D offerings are directly aligned with the organization’s business strategy (i.e. driving growth by driving employee engagement and performance) 3. Tailor L&D opportunities in ways that will retain top performers, giving them the skills they need to excel personally.

Employees who utilize on-demand learning will seek out content that is relevant and contextual to their immediate needs; they’ll want an appropriate amount of information (not too little or too much) delivered immediately so they can put their new skills and knowledge to use once their training session is over. For their formal learning, employees will want a customized development plan tailored specifically to their job requirements and personal career goals.

Social media

Social media has become a fixture in many of our lives. For proof, look no further than the more than 1 billion active Facebook users and 72 hours of video uploaded to YouTube every single minute. Even the more professional platform, LinkedIn, has 175 million members worldwide.

U.S. companies spent 39 percent more on social learning in 2012 than they did the year before, according to Bersin by Deloitte. I have every reason to believe this trend will continue

Social & Informal Learning

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Will Continue To Soar.

Social and informal learning are all about capturing knowledge and expertise (from inside and outside of the organization) and sharing it with employees with maximum efficiency . Another benefit of social and informal learning is that both can be extremely effective on their own as well as when incorporated into more structured programs (e.g., combining a formal course with a learner discussion forum Therefore, over time, employers will need to shift their mindset from one of “supplying” employees with courses and content to one that focuses on expediting the sharing of knowledge and expertise.

To get started here are a few key considerations to keep in mind : 1. If you build it, they will neither come nor participate. Develop incentives, communicate, and have leadership model the behavior. All participating parties need personal incentives. 2. Don’t think technology first; think human interactions and building a shared understanding. 3. Support work that is accomplished through collaboration and team interactions. It will drive social engagement. 4. Create learning models and tools that support a culture of coaching, mentoring, feedback and interactions. 5. Ensure employees have a clear perception of your vision of learning, talent management, and social interactions.

Most learning is informal

The U.S. Department of Labor estimates 70% or more of work related learning occurs outside formal training. The Center for Creative Leadership (CCL) similarly believes at least 70% of learning occurs through informal learning processes driven by workers seeking to find the information they need to do their jobs. CCL breaks down the remaining 30% into two groups. • The first (20%) is through non-formal or social learning which is developed through collaborative relationships, networks and dialogue. • The balance (10%) occurs in well-designed formal learning programs6.

Finding content can be difficult

Informal learning implies a search for the right piece of information or the clearest set of instructions. Finding these learning assets is almost as important as having the assets themselves. Research shows that knowledge workers spend 15 to 30% of their time gathering information and these searches are less than successful 50% of the time. That is why it is essential to provide for people’s ongoing needs to gather information efficiently and to learn through formal, informal and social means.

The workforce is now not only comfortable with technology, they expect mobile and social platforms to be readily available to help them learn.

Learning organizations are moving from pushing learning to employees to helping workers find answers by leveraging mobile, video on-demand and other forms of just-in-time learning.

It is important for leaders to select the right practices for their individual business strategies.

Organizations which are focused on product innovation and excellence benefit from practices in the areas of empowerment and reflection (single- and double-loop learning). Companies that drive business value by being a low-cost producer benefit most from enabling knowledge-sharing throughout the organization.

Employees are looking for bite-size learning opportunities they can complete remotely between meetings or while they’re waiting for an appointment.

“You’re never going to get more agile by delivering more e-learning courses or delivering more classroom workshops,” “You’re going to get more agile by putting these kind of systemic pull learning improvements into the culture of the learning organization and increasing its ability to meet needs quickly.”

http://ima-changing.com/ If your interested in discovering how to enhance your learning culture – Go to the above url and when you type in your name – add hrm after it, for example – sesh sukhdeo hrm.

Three minutes will make a substantial impact – spend the time.

We will send you back some instant reports

Sesh Sukhdeo [email protected]