In recent research, business leaders have voiced concern over the ability of L&D to deliver what their companies need to address the growing skills gap. Bersin’s Human Capital Trends 2015 report showed a growing disconnect between the need to develop leaders and L&D’s ability to deliver.
The following year, the Human Capital Trends 2016 report showed L&D still struggling with old platforms and static learning approaches. Employees are demanding dynamic, self-directed, continuous learning, but many L&D organizations cannot deliver it.
Users are not happy with their learning management systems, and many companies are doing something about it. In Brandon Hall Group’s 2016 Learning Technology Study, 48% of respondents said they are exploring new technologies, and their priorities are collaborative tools and mobile delivery.
They are behind the change curve. Impatient with L&D’s ability to deliver, employees and their managers have turned to resources outside their firms. We saw the growth of “shadow IT” in the past few years as tech teams could not keep up with the demand for consumer-grade cloud software. In the same way, employees and their managers have increased their reliance on solutions outside of L&D and the LMS.
The LMS is often no longer at the center of corporate learning. The needs of business and its people are at the center, and the LMS is now an essential part in the universe of learning. This fragmentation creates endless possibilities in duplication, poor quality control, and misdirected strategies.
How can L&D make sense of this?
Attempting to gain control will meet with resistance. The right approach is to form partnerships with line-of-business leaders as you build out your L&D strategy for the future.
Other business functions have adapted to new realities. IT has transformed itself from a siloed technology provider to a services and consulting business within the business. Marketing has grown from an action-oriented sales focus to data-driven demand creation and buyer enablement. Finance has developed from a bookkeeping operation to becoming the investment advisor for the business.[1]
What the future requires is a new mindset.
It’s time for an L&D transformation. Much has been written about the need to realign learning with the business it supports. Our e-book Align Learning and Development to Business is a practical guide on how to get started in building partner relationships throughout the organization. We encourage you to take advantage of it to start your transformation.
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