Few things have more impact on an organization’s success than the health of its learning culture. According to research compiled by LinkedIn, employees who spend time at work learning are 39% more likely to feel productive and successful, 23% more ready to take on additional responsibilities and 21% more likely to feel confident and happy.
Such findings invite the question: How can you as a learning professional best promote a culture that will help your organization thrive?
When considering how to foster a strong learning culture, it can be useful to think of a successful organization as a flourishing garden. Leaders plant seeds for growth, which then germinate and are cultivated within the organization.
Enriching your culture is, then, simply a matter of knowing which steps you can take to make it prosper. Let’s take a closer look at what these are.
A healthy learning culture is rooted in a few essential elements: open communication, an emphasis on continuous learning and a value of diversity. Your learning culture will thrive when participants see connections between disparate trainings and are comfortable openly and honestly expressing what they don’t know.
To achieve this in your organization:
Once you’ve enriched the soil, it’s essential to treat each new learning experience as an opportunity to cultivate seeds for growth. Though these opportunities may range widely — from formal presentations and workshops to self-led elearning and touchpoints — they should all be designed to:
Remember, a healthy learning culture – no matter how well established – can never be taken for granted. You must tend to it regularly on both a micro and macro level.
To help evaluate the impact of each learning event from multiple perspectives, establish a committee of stakeholders that includes leaders, managers, training team members and learners. This committee should focus on two essential questions:
Though all these steps are crucial, there is one overarching rule that may be more important than the rest: Be adaptable.
To extend our metaphor, a healthy learning culture — like a thriving garden — will constantly evolve as it reacts to myriad outside forces. Never be so rigid about what you think should work that you ignore the obvious.
Don’t hesitate to discard practices that aren’t producing results and replace them with something new. Remember, you ask your learners to look on mistakes as opportunities. Always be willing to accept your own advice.
Nettie Bonham is a senior learning strategist and project lead at Encompass Communications and Learning. Email Nettie at nbonham@encompasscnl.com or connect through www.linkedin.com/in/nettie-longietti-bonham-766a5110/.