Earlier this month DPG partnered with the 70:20:10 Institute to bring the 70:20:10 methodology to the UK and offer the first 70:20:10 Performance Detective Programme in the UK (Facilitated and supported by Charles Jennings & Vivian Heijnen) to give you a flavour of what you can expect, below is a recent blog by Jos Arets a co-founder of the 70:20:10 Institute that really challenges the current L&D thinking.
If you like what you see and want to be ahead of the game by understanding and immersing yorself in 70:20:10 we recommend you join the immersive and project based 70:20:10 Performance Detective Programme and take advantage of the £200 DPG Community Member Discount that's available for a limited time.
If You’re Not at the Table, You’re on the Menu (Blog by Jos Arets)
For many years, L&D has been trying to demonstrate the value of learning. It has modernised the services it provides, reorganised its distribution methods for greater efficiency, and professionalised its measurement processes. But it is still failing. This raises some important questions: Should we continue to focus on learning value? Or is this the time to redefine the future of L&D and focus on business value? This blog post takes a closer look at how L&D can have a seat at the table instead of simply being on the menu.
L&D Under Stress?
In recent years, trend reports and articles have signaled that L&D is generally not working well in organisations. In his LinkedIn article, “ How to Save the L&D Brand from Irrelevance, Step by Radical Step,” sees the problem in this way: “Saying the responsibility for learning doesn’t belong to L&D feels like saying medicine doesn’t belong with doctors or hi-tech doesn’t belong in Silicon Valley.”
Indeed, Deloitte’s 2017 study, Adapt Workplace Learning to the Speed of Business, presents an alarming signal for L&D: 74 percent of organisations surveyed focus primarily on traditional learning methods that can fall short of empowering employees to acquire skills to keep pace with change and improve the work itself.Therefore, it is not surprising for Josh Bersin to state, “In the 15 years I’ve been studying corporate L&D, I haven’t seen the industry under so much stress. We are in a disruptive time, forcing companies of all sizes to literally reinvent their entire learning strategy, infrastructure and employee experience like never before.”
According to J.D. Dillon , an evolution is insufficient to improve the L&D function. He writes that a transformation is necessary: “Kick-starting the transformation to become a modern learning organization requires a fundamental mindset shift. Rather than put our library at the center of our efforts, we must shift our focus to the individual employee and design a right-fit learning and support experience that enables organisational goals.”
Over the past decades, L&D has been busy trying to demonstrate the value of learning. However, this is no longer seen as being sufficient or even relevant. Learning in organisations is intended to improve performance measurably. Simply measuring the process without measuring the results will not provide insight into realised value. This is one reason the interest to demonstrate business impact is so high in L&D.
Realigning L&D’s Focus
Demonstrating impact is impossible if L&D fails to realign its service from a focus on the learning paradigm to a focus on the business paradigm. For this to happen, L&D needs to extend beyond the exclusive offering of formal learning solutions ( Arets, Jennings, Heijnen 2015). Indeed, it is impossible to connect learning to the business if learning and working are separated from each other.
Optimally, there is a need for a consistent process of re-evaluation and deduction to determine the best solutions to deliver the desired organisational results. For this to occur, it is necessary to stop seeing formal learning as the basis of the L&D service.
L&D needs to embrace a culture of supporting learning by doing. From an economic point of view, learning by doing always involves organisational learning when people are working to improve productivity (Stiglitz 2014; De Grip 2015). The opportunities for L&D to change, and to remain relevant, lie in discarding the learning paradigm and adopting the business paradigm.
Table 1 lists the key changes required for this realignment. For instance, the L&D function of the future is no longer led by the chief learning officer, but by the chief performance officer, who focuses on key elements of organisational learning and performance, such as organisational adaptability and agility.
Table 1. L&D on the Move From the Learning paradigm to the Business Paradigm
Learning Paradigm |
Business Paradigm |
Knowledge deficits |
Performance and business problems |
Learning analysis |
Performance and business analysis |
Learning goals |
Performance and business goals |
Formal learning |
Organisational learning |
Learning is seperated from work |
Organisational learning is embedded in work |
Talent development |
Organisational development |
Aligned with HR |
Aligned with business |
Competency frameworks |
Business models |
Educational roles |
Performance roles |
Learning expert |
70:20:10 expert |
Learning consultancy |
Performance consultancy |
Learning solutions |
Business solutions |
Measuring learning outcomes |
Measuring business outcomes |
Evaluation Levels 1, 2, 3, and possibly 4 |
Business KPIs and ROI |
Learning Value |
Business value |
Chief learning officer (CLO) |
Chief performance officer (CPO) |
New Roles for L&D: The 70-20-10 Methodology
L&D’s current roles and tasks are based in the learning paradigm. Extending and renewing L&D services requires a different role-based view, which will make it possible to act within the business paradigm.
Consider the 70-20-10 methodology. This is a standardised, carefully considered way of acting to achieve the specific result of demonstrating business impact, and of working methodically to do so in a systematic, goal-oriented, process- and development-based way. As part of the 70-20-10 methodology, five new roles have been defined with 31 associated critical tasks. These five roles support L&D to demonstrate measurable business impact with a new and extensive set of 70-20-10 services.
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Figure 1 shows the five new roles of the 70-20-10 methodology (within the business paradigm). The differences in roles and tasks are significant and illustrate how the shift offers L&D new opportunities within the new business paradigm.
Figure 1. 70-20-10 Roles for L&D
Figure 2 provides a high-level view of the interconnection of the roles and the processes to achieve business impact. The characteristics of the methodology, in general, are:
- goal-oriented
- systematic
- standards-based
- process-based
- method-based.
Figure 2. The Dynamic, Cyclical Connections Between the Roles of the 70-20-10 Methodology
Enter New Business Models for L&D
New roles for L&D are not enough. For a deep change, we need to make strategic changes and reflect on the current versus the desired models for L&D, and then design and implement new business models.
A business model makes it possible to highlight the added value to the organisation in terms of income and expenditure, or in nonfinancial terms, and the factors that influence this. Alex Osterwalder offers a useful definition in Business Model Generation. A Handbook for Visionairies, Game Changers, and Challengers: “A business model describes the value an organisation offers to various customers and portrays the capabilities and partners required for creating, marketing, and delivering this value and relationship capital with the goal of generating profitable and sustainable revenue streams.”
The 70-20-10 Institute’s book, 70:20:10 Towards 100% Performance, makes a distinction between four L&D business models to redefine the future of L&D.The book draws horizontal and vertical axes for L&D as a function of the organization. The horizontal axis represents the continuum between HRD and the core business; the vertical one represents the continuum between strategy and operations.
The two axes create four quadrants (see Figure 3), There are the learning-focused L&D business models: order taker and learning enabler. And the business-focused L&D business models are performance enabler and value creator.
Organisations increasingly assess the different components of their primary processes based on business models, including determining measurable, added value. This is a logical process and applies at organisational and department levels. The L&D department is no exception. L&D is expected to show the value it creates for the organisation, in the same way other departments are required to demonstrate value.
The four L&D business models described here support the transition from learning to business value. To stay relevant in an ever-changing world, it seems appropriate for L&D to undertake a deep change to move from the learning to business paradigm, moving from the left to the right in our business model framework for L&D.
Figure 3. 4 Business Models for L&D
We do not intend to express value judgments about each of these four models. Their most important function is to act as elements in a framework to help engage dialogue, so that each L&D department can determine the difference between current and desired models, including the barriers, and the potential in its own context.
Our next post will offer a deeper dive into the four business models. In the meantime take a look at the 70:20:10 Performance Detective Programme and take advantage of the £200 DPG Community Member Discount that's available for a limited time.
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