Title: Best Practices of Learning Organizations
1Best Practices of Learning Organizations Results
of a Global Survey
CSTD Conference, Nov, 2003 Presented by Dr Tammy
Dewar Dr Dave Whittington
2Session Goals
- Explore the results of a global survey about
learning organization practices carried out by
Calliope Learning. - Compare these results with the 2003 Conference
Board of Canada Training and Development Outlook - Discuss how your organization measures up against
both of these survey results.
3Why did we do the survey?
4Learning Organization Research Results
- 127 responses to an online survey emailed to
several learning, training and e-learning lists
in December, 2002
5Learning Organization Research Results
6Learning Organization Research Results
7Learning Organization Research Results
8Learning Organization Research Results
9Training and Development Outlook 2003
- Survey completed by the Conference Board of
Canada June, 2002 (published June 2003) - 158 Canadian organizations representing primarily
medium and large sized organizations operating in
all major regions and industries
10Question
- How important is being a learning organization to
you personally? - How important is being a learning organization to
your organization? - Extremely Important
- Very Important
- Important
- Somewhat Important
- Not Very Important
- Not Important At All
11Learning Organization Research Results
12Conference Board of Canada
- Actual training expenditures in 2001 in Canada
were 768 compared to the US at 1137 (both in
CAD) - Only 30 surveyed predict increases in formal
training expenditures while 15 forecast a
decrease - 30 of employees do not receive any formal
training at all
13Question
- How successful is your organization at being a
learning organization? - Extremely Successful
- Very Successful
- Successful
- Somewhat Successful
- Not Very Successful
- Not Successful At All
- Why or why not?
14Learning Organization Research Results
15Learning Signature (Business Lab, 2002)
16Extremely Successful (12)
- 3 were independent consultants and attributed
their success to individual motivation and
learning characteristics. - The remaining 9 were in education and attributed
success to things like high educational
standards, quality instructors and materials,
ongoing research and classes, a diverse number
of courses offered, or high grade point averages.
17Comments
- Almost 10 percent of ABC freshman class ranks
in the top one-half of 1 percent in the nation in
SAT and ACT scores. - ABC ranks in the top five in the nation among
all comprehensive public universities in National
Merit Scholars enrolled per capita and in the
graduation of Rhodes Scholars. - ABC had 288 Sooner Scholars, or 64 percent of
OU student athletes, who earned above a 3.0
cumulative grade point average last semester.
18Very Successful (17)
- 16 in education
- The majority of responses pointed to retention
rates, assessment strategies or passing exams
100 of the time. One response, we are
teachers is the most striking example of people
interpreting learning organizations as teaching
organizations - 3 organizations moved beyond this narrow
interpretation to note things like improvement of
employee skills, involvement in jobs, sharing
learning on the job, reviewing daily job
processes for learning, and lower turnover.
19Successful (18)
- 7 were from the education sector, and the
remaining were from industry - The majority noted the importance of leadership
support and staff buy-in to the importance of
learning. Several noted that although commitment
was there philosophically for being a learning
organization, size and geographical diversity
made things difficult to implement and change.
20Comments
- The level of success depends on the buy-in of
each staff member. (Staff includes dept. chairs,
supervisors, and first-line employee.) Some
supervisors emphasize learning organizations more
than others do. - This is a concept that has been implemented in
the last 2 years of our 70-year history. We are
still working our way through the integration of
technology and the needs of the organization.
21Somewhat, Not, or Not at all Successful (75)
- Even mix of education, government and industry.
- This group of respondents provided the most
insight into the characteristics of learning
organizations (addressed all 4 learning signature
quadrants) - Implicit in their responses was an understanding
of the issues that must be addressed when an
organization shifts from a training or teaching
culture to that of a learning culture.
22Comments
- The culture of our workplace must adapt so that
informal learning becomes just as prominent and
valued as formal learning. - Becoming a learning organization is something
that is talked about but there is no general
agreement about the definition or what this
actually looks like for the organization - what
changes? How can this be measured? - There is still a real mental block at the top. We
facilitate students to understand what learning
is and how it can assist organizational
development and competitiveness. However, we do
not 'walk the talk' in our own organization.
23Comments
- There isnt wholesale buy-in or indeed
understanding as to what the learning
organization looks like. It is easier to target
aspects such as e-Learning. -
- There is little effort to promote organizational
intelligence. Expertise is often not shared, nor
is learning by individuals captured so it can be
available to all and contribute to the overall
organization.
24Summarizing Success
- Its interesting to note that there seems to be
some correlation between how well an organization
rates itself and the narrowness of their
interpretation of learning organizations. - Many educational institutions rate themselves
very highly, but at the same time focus mainly on
the testing and measurement of learning in formal
classroom settings (and teaching) and less so on
other aspects such as organizational culture and
reaching out to the extended enterprise. - The exceptions here are smaller consultancies,
where the culture of the organization is in the
hands of a few individuals.
25Success Best Practices
- Organizations struggling with broader definition
of learning organization mentioned the importance
of - Shifting emphasis from training to learning
- Leadership and organizational commitment to
learning - Buy-in and motivation for learning
- Developing a culture of learning
- Informal learning and knowledge sharing
- Linking learning to organizational performance
26Conference Board of Canada (2003)
Percentage of Organizations Classifying
themselves as Learning Organizations
- Garvins definition of an organization skilled
at creating, acquiring and transferring knowledge
and at modifying its behavior to reflect new
knowledge and insights.
27Report Card on Organizational Learning (CBC)
Majority agreement in more than 50 of
statements Majority agreement in less than 40
of statements
28Question on measurement
- Do you measure the success of being a learning
organization? - Yes
- No
- Somewhat
- Not Sure
- Please provide comments
29Learning Organization Research Results
30Comments
- The majority of comments about how measurement
was completed pointed to attendance numbers and
feedback received on evaluation forms - A few mentioned performance reviews, market
share, goodwill - Its clear that organizations are struggling to
measure the learning organization concept as no
best practices really emerged from our data
analysis
31Conference Board of Canda
32Question
- What learning organization books, tools or
processes are used in your organization? - Are these books, tools or processes linked to
overall business strategy? - Yes
- No
- Somewhat
- Question Not Applicable
33Learning Organization Research Results
34Tools and Processes used
- Majority of respondents listed types of training
they have - Next group mentioned various initiatives related
to performance reviews, balanced scorecard
approaches, QA initiatives, knowledge management
systems, and technology enhanced training
programs - Of those who mentioned anything specific to
learning organization concepts, 13 referred to
Peter Senges ideas
35Question
- As part of your overall learning organization
strategy, are you using any form of e-learning? - Yes
- No
36Learning Organization Research Results
37Conference Board of Canada
Delivery methods as a of all training time
38Conclusions
- The global scene is very similar to the Canadian
scene - Theres a particularly limited understanding of
organizational learning in the education sector - Few organizations in our study had a systematic
approach to organizational learning and its
measurement - Senges ideas still provide some guidance for
people - The use of technology continues to be important
to many organizations
39Contact Info
- Full report at http//www.calliopelearning.com/res
ources/ - Powerpoint presentation also online at the above
address - Feel free to email us at info_at_calliopelearning.com
or (250) 213-6239