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ATD Blog

Learning and Development as a Strategic Voice in the Organization

Thursday, October 13, 2016
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Recently, I was leading a round table for senior leaders in learning and development (L&D). While this particular session was in India with a mixed industry group, the location and group dynamics aren’t significant. I have presented this same topic in China, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and the experience has been the same. We start the session by asking the question, “What challenges do you face in being a strategic voice in your organization?” The responses are typically the same: “We are the first function to get cut.” “I’m just an order taker.” “I feel like I can only talk about training.” “I can’t get the attention of executives.”

As organizations strive to grow their business and meet their clients’ needs, L&D professionals play a vital role in creating and implementing talent development solutions for their organizations. In a recent study by Deloitte, human capital strategy was viewed by many CEOs as one of the top priorities for growth, presenting an exciting opportunity for learning professionals to take a critical role in developing an organization’s human talent.

To address this crucial role of connecting talent development to an organization’s complex growth strategies, L&D must strategically go beyond the need expressed by one person, one department, or one executive and help to define what the business truly needs. This requires elevating yourself to a trusted L&D adviser and true partner with other strategic leaders inside your organization, and focusing on discovering business needs and connecting them to the talent development needs of the people within your organization.

Let’s explore three key principles that point the way to becoming a trusted L&D adviser.

Creating the Trust in Trusted L&D Adviser 

Successful L&D professionals know that if you don’t have strong, trusting relationships within your organization, you won’t be seen as a trusted L&D adviser, and you won’t be successful. First and foremost, creating a trusting relationship requires the right mindset. You must truly believe that your job is to help advance the business. L&D professionals whose actions focus only on their function will be perceived as only being interested in training, not the company’s business needs.

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Facilitate the Buy-In Process 

The best way to facilitate buy-in is to refrain from presenting your pitch about the latest research on training approaches. Rather, focus on helping your internal customers buy in. The trusted L&D adviser helps internal customers see that you are focused on helping to solve the issues they face through talent development support.

Addressing your internal customers’ needs requires: 

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  • helping your internal customers discover the urgency behind their needs and defining the problems that have to be solved 
  • helping internal customers see how solutions address their need and add value 
  • helping internal customers gather support for solutions within the organization, creating alignment for action.

Helping internal customers get buy in cannot be done by following an L&D-centric process; it requires a two-way conversation between your internal customers and you—the trusted L&D adviser who can understand the problem, identify the urgency, and agree upon a solution. 

Making Sense of Complexity 

The good and bad news is that there is an infinite amount of information available at everyone’s fingertips. The responsibility of a trusted L&D adviser is to help internal customers make sense of this complexity and cut through the clutter to find the right solution to their problems. The discipline of the trusted L&D adviser is to bring forth your expertise and link the identified solution to the advantages and benefits for internal customers. By making sure there is a clear and direct connection from your recommendation to advancing the internal customers’ business issues, you can make sure you are adding value to their business priorities.

As L&D professionals, we appreciate a clear process. So, to become a more strategic L&D professional, you should follow these key steps:  

  • Take ownership for creating trust. 
  • Facilitate the customers’ buy-in process.  
  • Make sense of complexity by making a clear and direct connection between your recommendations and advancing the business issues for your internal customers. 

Your efforts will produce ongoing, long-term relationships that present multiple opportunities for you to be a strategic voice inside your organization.
Want to learn more? Join me November 17-19 for my session at the ATD 2016 Asia Pacific Conference.

About the Author

David Yesford, senior vice president of Wilson Learning Worldwide, has more than 29 years of experience developing and implementing human performance solutions around the world. He brings valuable experience, strategic direction, and global perspective to his work with clients. Over the years, David has had strategic roles in his organization’s core content areas of sales and leadership, as well as e-learning and strategic consulting. He is an active member of the Wilson Learning Global Executive Board, with current responsibility at a global level. He has held managing director positions in both China and India.   David is the contributing author of several books, including Win-Win Selling, Versatile Selling, The Social Styles Handbook, and The Sales Training Book 2. He is a frequent international speaker focusing on a variety of issues, including sales and sales strategy, leadership, employee and customer engagement, branding, and strategy implementation. He has been published in numerous business publications in the United States, Europe, Latin America, and the Asia Pacific region.

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