The Future of Learning
Anthony Onesto
Top 50 HR | CHRO & Chief People Officer (VC & PE-Backed) | COO & President | Growth | EBITDA | AI in HR Today Newsletter | Advisor | Gen Z, AI & Future of Work | Published Author | HR & Recruiting Product & Go To Market
The future of learning is getting what you need, exactly when you need it.
Have you ever binge-watched an entire season (maybe multiple seasons) of a show? Have you done it in under a weekend? I am going to bet that 9/10 folks said yes. But, of course, we all have binge-watched shows on Netflix or your favorite streaming service. I did this for "You," the widely strange and engaging show on Netflix.
Hello, You!
According to a?2019 survey?from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average American watches 2.8 hours of TV per day or nearly 20 hours each week. Much of that time, we binge-watch — Deloitte's?14th edition Digital Media Trends Survey?found that among 2,103 U.S. consumers, 38% of them were binge-watching weekly for an average of 4.2 hours per session.
So why do we binge-watch? It's simple - it makes us feel good. In fact, according to one study,?73%?of us have positive feelings about binge-watching TV — feelings that Dr. Renee Carr, Psy. D, a clinical psychologist, attributes to our body's own natural response to enjoyment. It's that dopamine hit and the conscious decision to keep that feeling going that gets people hooked on watching just?one more?episode as the clock ticks past midnight. Powered by algorithms, the technology understands your specific behaviors and interests and serves you shows that it knows you would like to watch. They KNOW you'd be interested in watching. Learn more here ->?The Social Dilemma.
How about TikTok? TikTok's technology has more to do with the combination of human behaviors and algorithms. TikTok is really good at the algorithm part. The algorithm studies your view habits and serves you content relevant to your interests. Since this algorithm is in place, it provides you content directly (even trending content), so you don't have to go searching for the content you'd like to see. Unlike the binge-watching behavior of streaming shows, TikTok has short videos (30 seconds to 1 minute). This short run time makes it so easy to immerse oneself in the never-ending content, and even in, say, 10 minutes, you can watch 10-15 videos. And thus, you never want to stop. Since the content is user generated for the most part, though some companies and comic book characters (yes!?Ella the Engineer?has a TikTok page), the content is always "fresh" and new.
How do Human Resource professionals, People Leaders, and heads of Learning and Development bring these key behaviors and engagement into learning? Well, to steal something from?Professor Galloway, we think the future of learning is A-Learning or algorithmic learning.
Here are a few ways:
So if you are a Head of Learning and Development or a Founder/CEO at a learning experience or management platform, the times are a-changing. People want both long-form, studio-quality content that they can binge-watch ala Netflix. They also want fresh, quick, and relevant content, ala TikTok, to stay up on the latest skillset trends and movements.
This new world is called A-Learning or Algorithmic Learning.
Keynote Speaker|Leadership Development Facilitator & Coach "I help leaders and teams transform their communication strategies to accelerate decision-making, drive measurable results and unlock innovation
3 年Very well written article. If the content is geared towards solving real problems, when they need to be solved, it creates results. Engagement is bound to come for such content.
Sr. Director, Operational Excellence Technology @Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | Manufacturing Technology | Innovation & Makerspace Leader | Board Member @ Open Works | Tool Nerd
3 年We use user-generated video learning across our learning ecosystem, especially in our plants and DCs, and have found to be extremely effective in capturing institutional knowledge and sharing best practices!
Senior Director, Professional Development and Education Center, IAB
3 年Great post, as usual. The only challenge I see with the no-gatekeeper model is that without oversight it's easy for insufficiently vetted content to make its way to the learner (certainly we see examples of this across all media now). So we've got to consider how user-generated content can be quickly curated to avoid most of the risk while still allowing for near-realtime delivery. Maybe that's mitigated with the combination of studio quality longer form deep dive content and short, user-generated "how do I do this one thing in excel" types of content.