Aaron Levy: "Why Leadership Training Doesn't Work"
iStock Photo

Aaron Levy: "Why Leadership Training Doesn't Work"

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbescoachescouncil/2018/02/23/why-leadership-training-doesnt-work/

Author: Aaron Levy, Founder & CEO of Raise The Bar

It’s the structure.

Most leadership training programs are designed for ease of operational delivery within an organization, not for habit formation. They are event-based trainings,?meaning that the training takes place over a day or two.

In a traditional one-day or two-day long workshop, you’ll increase your knowledge. You’ll learn several key insights and be excited to implement the 5-10 new learnings into your leadership toolkit immediately. Inevitably, you won’t be able to put all of these new learnings into action.

After two or three weeks, you might remember the concept but not how to implement the idea, and you’ll be lucky if you retain even two of the ten key points from the session. According to a Mckinsey & Company survey , adults typically retain just 10% ?of what they hear in classroom lectures. Cramming all the key learnings into one lengthy training makes logistical sense, but it greatly restricts learning retention.

Leadership training is aimed at giving leaders new skills — at helping them change their behaviors to go from being a top individual contributor to a leader of people. As a leader, your success is dependent on the success of the people you’re leading. It’s quite a shift in perspective.

Simply learning what to do over the course of one to two days doesn’t lead to acting differently in the long run.

How habit formation works in our brains.

Habit formation doesn’t just happen. Our brains aren’t wired to adopt a new habit that quickly. No matter how good and engaging the presentation is, habit formation takes time. It occurs when a new action, like the leadership skill of listening with intention and attention, is practiced over and over.

Each time you practice listening in this new way, neurons in your brain are firing and creating a new neural pathway. The more you practice, the stronger the neural pathway becomes and the easier it is for you to listen.

The neural pathway for listening can be created or rediscovered in one session, but for the pathway to be strengthened, you need to practice deliberately. Role-playing with peers is a safe way to start, but it doesn’t replace the real thing. To practice effectively, you’ll need to try listening in a real-life scenario. Only, once applied in the real world, you’ll get the feedback you need to validate, adapt and adjust your mental model of what it looks and feels like to listen with intention and attention.

Often, real-world practice doesn’t go as planned. Something goes wrong. It’s like trying to ride a bike for the first time -- you’re going to fall. You need to reflect on what went wrong, what could be improved and what you can carry over to your next attempt at listening to learn a new habit.

If you are committed to challenging the status quo, to achieving results and?not excitement, to giving your leaders the tools and skills to transition from individual contributors to powerful leaders, here’s a process that works.

Phase 1: Learn

This is where the training on a new skill is delivered to a group of leaders. Leaders learn the skills, as well as why they are valuable and how they can, theoretically, be applied to the workplace. This is where most workshops spend 90% of their time. I suggest only spending 15% of any workshop on the teaching or knowledge-building phase. It’s simply not as crucial as the application.?

Phase 2: Apply

It’s in this phase where leaders practice applying the new habits. It happens during in-training application and through real-world application.

In-training application occurs in the moment the leaders learn a new skill. It’s key to put them into practice applying the skill right away. Ideally, you’ll spend 80-90% of the time applying the new skill and reflecting on how it can be improved. By doing this, you are activating the neural pathway and strengthening it.

Part two of the application occurs in the real world, through the completion of a homework assignment. Applying the new skill outside of the safety of the workshop brings a whole new element to learning. It’s no longer structured. It can take a leader out of their comfort zone, which is exactly where growth occurs.?

Phase 3: Reflect

Reflection includes holding a short coaching debrief with the leader to reflect on what worked well and what could be done better.

The reflection phase serves two purposes. One, it holds the leader accountable to completing their homework. Two, it allows for the leaders to assess and evaluate how they did and how they can apply the new skills better in future interactions. They likely won’t perfect the delivery of a habit on their first attempt, so this phase is important to reemphasize how habit adoption is a learning process. Even though the leader is not actually practicing the new skill in this phase, the reflection process is still triggering the newly created neural pathway. By the end of this phase, a leader will have visualized, practiced or reflected on a singular habit hundreds of times, turning it from a skill to a habit adopted.

Habit change requires commitment from the organization.

The Learn-Apply-Reflect model is designed to get your leaders practicing skills and putting them into action. The quicker and more frequently a leader can take a learning, apply it to a real-life situation and dissect their performance of it, the quicker a new skill becomes a habit.

Organizational change occurs when the behaviors of the individual leaders change. It starts right here, by working with your leaders on adopting the habits that will make your organization succeed.

Are you ready to commit the time and energy to experience the change you want?

Chris Weber

Organizational & Leadership Development Professional, Owner, Palm Shell Pottery

1 年

Amen!

回复
Jorge Alberto G.

Vice Chancellor | Higher Education Professional | Leadership and Management | Team Builder | Driver's Education Advocate

1 年

Thanks for sharing Robert David always interesting to read about leadership training. I agree with this article, especially with the notion that these programs are crammed in for ease of operation delivery and not for habit formation. I would just like to add another reason why these programs are not successful is because they are not designed unit by unit, rather, in the flawed one-size-fits-all approach.

A continuous cycle of PDCA...

回复
Elizabeth Nesius

Associate Dean of Humanities, Business, and Social Sciences Rowan College at Burlington County

1 年

In my experience, the best leadership trainings focus on forming better habits. They start with reflection - identifying current habits, what works and what doesn't in one's current situation. They ask participants to identify what they want to change (whether it's a habit or a result). Then they provide techniques to effect that change but acknowledge that what they teach is aspirational and taken out of the real-world context. They encourage on-the-spot, reflective application and discussion, and the REALLY good ones are multipart so that participants can apply what they've learned to their own worlds, reflect on that application, and then come back to a room of colleagues and experts to discuss what happened and adjust and refine techniques. For me, that second part is the most important. Speaking with colleagues about their processes and practices, getting ideas and advice after trying things, and revisiting what was learned with the benefit of experience are extremely helpful in building a consistent, mindful leadership practice.

回复
Lindsey Caplan

Employee Engagement & Learning Consultant | Facilitator | Organizational Psychologist | Communication Strategist | 3x Head of Learning & Development

1 年

great article!

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了