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Everyone enjoys a good event. You get to sit and watch and be entertained. But treating learning like an event fundamentally misses the mark on how adults learn. We have found that training needs to be treated like any other business process. The instructional period (“the event”) is only one link in a chain of causation that is not complete until the training has produced the desired business results on the job.
Our research has shown that companies that give equal attention to all three phases of learning, i.e. what happens before formal instruction, the instructional event, and what happens after to drive learning transfer reap the greatest dividends. Unfortunately, more often than not, the vast majority of resources are committed to the instructional period with little time, attention, or money allocated to what happens before and after the formal instruction.That’s a mistake, because what happens before and after profoundly influence whether value is generated or not.
So, if learning is to be changed from an event into a process that yields transformational results, what needs to be different? We need to begin focusing holistically on the complete learning experience. Great instructional design paired with a skilled facilitator is necessary but inadequate if optimal results are to be achieved. As with baking a cake, if all you focus on is mixing the ingredients, you are likely to be disappointed with the end result. Oven temperature and cooking time are also essential elements that if overlooked will sub-optimize the results.
We need to break the current paradigm and begin to reorient our focus to give equal attention and adequate resources to the preparation phase and the post-program learning transfer phase.
D1: Define Business Outcomes
D2: Design the Complete Experience
D3: Deliver for Application
D4: Drive Learning Transfer
D5: Deploy Performance Support
D6: Document Results
= Value Created
To maximize the return on training and development, manage all three phases of the learning process:
clearly articulate the business rationale;
Great article, Andy. I find businesses are slowing coming around to the fact that the single-shot training "intervention" can be a big waste of money and time.
Leslie Allan
Author: From Training to Enhanced Workplace Performance
http://www.businessperform.com/effective-training-tools
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