Is Your Organization Growing With the Flow?
Is Your Organization Growing With the Flow?
Corporate learning is ever evolving. And, the latest trend is moving from “learning in the flow of work”?to?“growth in the flow of work.”
That’s the overarching takeaway from research conducted by Josh Bersin, renowned talent market analyst, author, educator and thought leader. He shared the results of his company’s year-long study of corporate learning organizations in a recent article in Human Resource Executive:
“Of the 94 practices we studied, those that have highest impact on business and people performance outcomes are the relevance of a company’s learning offerings and the way they support employee growth,” Bersin writes. “This makes perfect sense. Many people are feeling stressed and sometimes overworked; they are also aware of other job options. If your company can deliver relevant and meaningful learning opportunities that help people grow, you’re making a positive impact on employees and paving the way for business success.”
In today’s world of learning content and general information overload, are you providing your employees with what they need to grow in the flow of work so they – and your organization – are successful?
Effectively doing this hinges on streamlining and measuring each employee’s learning journey … and engaging them in optimized, intuitive experiences.
This can be done by:
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As corporate learning continues to evolve with no end in sight, we must all continue to empower our employees to grow with the flow.
Have thoughts about this?
Reach out to me. I’d love to hear them as here at 4DS, we continue to architect the future of workplace intelligence.
Frank Urso
SVP-Commercial, 4th Down Solutions
In a competitive job market and the era of 'quiet quitting', it is critical to provide your employees not only with the opportunity to learn, but to truly grow. To us, 'growing in the flow of work' is the practice of developing your team with consistency and intention by offering relevant, meaningful opportunities to evolve. Read more in this recent blog by Frank Urso