The organization I work for is very large. It excels at staying still and maintaining the status quo. It reminds me of a boulder: stable and dependable.
And like a boulder, this organization is all weight and no will. Too large to do anything independently, it sits and waits for its members to move it. When its members move in many directions at once, nothing happens. The organization continues to stand still. But it moves when members pull together in a singular direction.
You get the picure. The boulder relies on members – and that’s us, the people.
Lots of people are interested in changing how this organization approaches training. Experienced instructional designers are advising that formal training isn’t the panacea we had once yearned for. Before my time, facilitator-led classroom training was the T.Rex of training. Considered the strongest training solution, it was also the only one.
Our clients are also asking for variety in their training diet.
Formal learning is only part of a holistic training solution, and we have lots of reasons to change our training routine. As many reasons as there are employees.
As Charles Jennings states in this video on the 70:20:10 model, only about 10% of employee training should take place formally. Formal training can be expensive and time-consuming to create and maintain. (The ultimate reason, though, is that people learn remarkably little from formal training when they don't practice skills within an hour of learning them.)
Jennings goes on to say that the remaining 90% of employee training should be organized informally so that employees learn through experiences (80%) and relationships (20%). That makes sense, doesn't it? We learn by doing, and by asking those around us.
How could the 70:20:10 approach affect the future of our dear boulder?
I think we're actually following a path that has been well-documented. We are researching options for providing a variety of performance support tools to employees, and thinking about how we can connect workers through social media. As Jennings notes, informal training isn't managed, but supported. I can imagine a boulder excelling like no one else at the game of providing support. The stakes are high, and our future looks bright.
Until next time, happy learning.
Fran