Is your learning and development (L&D) organization stuck in the middle between what your top executives say they want and what your learners say they need? Does it feel like you are bailing water with a teacup against an incoming tide?
If so, we don't wonder. Seventy-nine percent of CEOs believe a lack of essential skills threatens the future growth of their organization. Yet senior learning and development (L&D) leaders say they don't get enough direction from the top, and that the organization doesn't value learning. Only 57% of believe L&D aligns with the business.
We can't give you a magic solution that will turn all that around, but we can show you how hard work and a solid plan can get you to where:
The solution is in a learning governance framework.
The entire universe and everything in it tend toward entropy, which is the universal tendency toward disorder. Any energy that we (or any celestial body) put into preventing disorder has a price in energy.
It works that way in organizations, too. Without governance, organizations of any size trend towards chaos as each person in it reacts "in the moment" and does whatever they think is necessary to solve problems and get things done.
The primary function or duty of the Board of Directors is to govern or control the organization to make sure everything runs smoothly. The board governs:
In the same way, your learning function requires a governing body to help it run smoothly:
To put it in simple terms, good governance will:
The CEO invests the authority and responsibility for the learning mission in a learning governance board or council. You can call it anything you like.
How you structure your learning governance function will be unique to your organization. It will depend on your organization's culture, maturity, and how learning gets done in your organization. The structure will grow as your learning organization develops its governance capability.
Start Where You Are
If your learning organization has not yet matured into a strategic business function, operates as an independent service provider, or gets little or no direction from top management, your organization is not ready for a Learning Governance Council. You may want to start with a less formal structure led by HR.
Your learning governance program's objectives may be different from those of a mature governance function. Your mission will be to build readiness to collaborate in learning and prove the value of that collaboration.
Identify and Satisfy Learning Objectives
Every unit and sub-unit in your organization will have its unique learning needs and objectives. Form them into steering committees that will drive the execution of learning in their business functions.
Bring the people who lead those units into your governance program and show them how, as stakeholders, they have a voice in how learning happens, and that you aim to support them in achieving their goals.
The broader your organization perspective and the more involvement you have, the more your efforts will align themselves with your business strategy.
By this stage of your development, you will have seated steering committees and learning leaders throughout your organization that understand the value of learning and how it drives business results.
Connect to the Enterprise
The third part of the development is the discussions with your top executives about aligning learning to business strategy. Co-opt the CEO into leading learning and development for the company.
How you do that will depend on your relationship with the CEO. You could introduce the idea of entropy and explain no matter how well you organize it; any program will devolve unless you pay the energy price.
The price for all the excellence you will create is ongoing vigilance. Keep the energy going with ongoing communications about recent developments in learning and how they can affect your organization. Keep learning top of mind and report on learning successes to everyone in the organization.
If you are diligent about the development of your governance, learning will become a strategic function of the organization embedded in work functions across the organization, with a far-reaching impact on organizational performance.