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ATD Blog

Transforming to a Sustainable Learning Organization

Friday, February 10, 2017
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The end goal of most learning leaders is to be in a position where they can help set strategic direction, link learning and performance, and create a culture of continuous learning—consistently, over time. After all, it’s one thing to achieve performance goals in the short term. It’s quite another to ensure that the commitment and momentum for dynamic learning is deeply embedded into an organization’s DNA, beyond the fanfare of a single program or initiative. Achieving that level of continuity and consistency does not happen overnight.

Those that have succeeded say that it involves perpetual growth, where small, evolutionary stages, rather than revolutionary ones, form the basis for transformation and continuous improvement. Continuous improvement is essential to the learning organization because:

  • Learning strategies, products, and services become stale or obsolete in shorter periods of time. 
  • Employees’ skills and knowledge are depreciating faster than ever.  
  • Learning leaders no longer “own” the learning experience; employees are increasingly responsible for their own development and can access information in multiple ways outside a traditional learning environment. 
  • Learning strategies can be disrupted or derailed more easily in the face of increased business disruption. 
  • Improvement measures, or lack thereof, need to be collected, integrated, and used to inform decisions, make necessary adjustments, and facilitate action planning. 
  • Learning cannot retain its competitive edge as a driver of business strategy and performance without continuous improvement and innovation. 

Subsequently, the people, products, services, and processes associated with a learning organization need to be regularly renewed and transformed to remain relevant amid shifting business conditions. 

Transformation and the Sustainability Cycle 

CEOs know that strong learning and talent management practices are needed to grow an engaged, high-performing workforce and maintain a competitive edge. Yet despite investments in developing leaders worldwide, a high proportion of executives say they are dissatisfied with the quality and nature of their organization’s development offerings. Perceived gaps between the capabilities needed and delivered by today’s learning leaders have caused many executives to call for a radical transformation of their learning organizations.

For learning leaders, this kind of transformation may involve: 

  • re-engineering of the learning and development function 
  • restructuring workplace training and talent development strategies 
  • changing old habits of conceiving, designing, delivering, and evaluating learning and development or performance improvement projects 
  • reconfiguring roles and responsibilities to be more business- or results-focused 
  • actively engaging executives, managers, and employees as learning champions 
  • integrating technology for more blended and social learning solutions 
  • functioning more as an enabler of learning than as a learning gatekeeper 
  • incorporating advanced measures of learning effectiveness, including the use of analytics.

It’s important to note that these kinds of changes represent a transformation process that goes beyond including more efficiencies or tracking more effectiveness measures. True transformation is about building and sustaining a more innovative, adaptive, and resilient learning organization and then expanding it to reach more people in more effective ways. Transformation has more to do with how the learning organization adds sustainable value outside the boundaries of its own function than with how it manages its own internal operations. Yet expanding too quickly, without an adequate foundation and supporting infrastructure, can cause the learning function to implode or flounder. Much like the stories of a building, the stronger the foundation is at the lower levels, the more stable the higher levels will be.
Building a foundation for high levels of stability, relevance, and sustain¬able value generally represents a procession of small, evolutionary stages. These evolutionary stages are often likened to maturity levels, where development processes are transformed from ad hoc, undisciplined states to disciplined processes or practices capable of predictable, sustainable results. These processes build on the infrastructure established at earlier maturity levels and, subsequently, become the foundation for more sustainable, sophisticated processes at the next level.

As a learning organization moves between stages, its business alignment, business impact, learning and performance capabilities, and overall efficiencies improve. Evolving learning practices and processes to achieve more sustainable, relevant impact requires progressive changes from the learning function as well as from the business. The focus for learning leaders in each evolutionary change period is to find a new set of organizational processes that will become the basis for managing the next period of growth. 

Sustainability Requires Cultural Change 

Establishing a fully integrated, sustainable learning organization is ultimately about cultural change: the act of moving from an old state of activity-based learning to a new state of results-based, sustainable learning that is unequivocally part of an organization’s DNA. In keeping with the idea of sustainability as a holistic change process, each stage in the cycle reflects specific elements of both organizational change and learning and development process maturity. The focus here is on the capability and maturity of the whole learning organization, rather than specific initiatives (good results are possible even with low levels of maturity).

For our purposes, then, sustainability is like a wide-angle lens through which you’re examining the long-term endurance and business value of the whole learning organization (or ecosystem)—its strategies, services, processes, practices, programs, personnel, and results—instead of the outcomes or strategic value achieved by a single project, program, or initiative.

As shown in Figure 1, there are predictable stages of development in this change process. While the degree of complexity and duration of each stage will vary from organization to organization, the Sustainability Cycle has proven true across all types and sizes of learning organizations and across all industries. 

Figure 1: The Sustainability Cycle for Learning Organizations

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Figure1_Sustainability_Cycle_Burkett.png

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

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Based on research and interviews with hundreds of learning leaders, Figure 2 illustrates the defining features of each stage in terms of the learning organization’s process, people, and structures. 

Figure 2: Sustainability Stages and Their Features

Figure2_Sustainability_Stages_Burkett.png

Finally, Figure 3 shows how each stage represents progressively mature levels of L&D capability and business value. In other words, the more capable the L&D organization is at optimizing services, processes, and programs to close strategic gaps, the more value is added, created, and multiplied. 

Figure 3: Sustainability Maturity Cycle

Figure3_Sustainability_Maturity_Burkett.png

Editor’s Note: This article is excerpted from Learning for the Long Run: 7 Practices for Sustaining a Resilient Learning Organization (ATD Press, 2016).

About the Author

Holly Burkett, PhD, SPHR, is an accomplished talent builder, change leader, and performance consultant with more than 20 years of experience advising organizations like Apple, the SEVA Foundation, and Premera Blue Cross. She is passionate about developing resilient leadership capabilities that enable high engagement, employee wellbeing, and operational excellence. A certified change practitioner, Associate of the ROI Institute, Stakeholder Centered Coach®, Forbes Coaches Council member, and Conference Board fellow, Holly is a sought-after coach, speaker, and facilitator. Award-winning author of Learning for the Long Run, she regularly contributes to industry resources, including ATDs Handbook of Training and Talent Development, ATDs Organization Development Handbook, ATDs Talent Development Body of Knowledge (TDBoK™), and itsROI in Action series. Her doctorate is in human capital development.

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