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High-Impact Learning Culture

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High-Impact Learning Culture

The 40 Best Practices for Creating an Empowered Enterprise

Bersin & Associates,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Text available

What's inside?

To make your firm a market leader, integrate learning into your organizational culture. Here are 40 ways to lead your culture.


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

David Mallon, principal analyst for Bersin & Associates, develops major industry studies on core learning and development issues. This comprehensive report covers the crucial importance of an organizational learning culture and explains 40 best practices and seven strategies firms can use to permeate their operations with learning. Bersin’s extensive library of research on corporate learning and talent management provides executives, learning officers and human resources professionals with many reports like this one. getAbstract recommends this data-driven report, with its specific, practical “actionable solutions” to HR and learning-and-development managers, and to CEOs and other executives who know performance and learning are flip sides of one coin.

Summary

Is Learning Part of Your Corporate Culture?

Leading companies value and encourage learning as an integral component of their corporate cultures. These firms create and sustain a learning culture – that is, a “collective set of organizational values, conventions, processes and practices” that continuously impels organizations and individuals to build “knowledge, competence and performance.” Leaders of high-performance firms consider such “strategic capability development” and information exchange to be absolutely necessary.

For example, Qualcomm uses a 52-week storytelling program to educate new employees about the company’s tradition of innovation. Throughout their first year, new hires receive weekly emails with stories explaining why the firm is special, how it operates and what drives its mission and values. These knowledge-sharing tales are pivotal to Qualcomm’s learning culture.

Such a culture creates – and relies on – trust. It empowers workers by building their capabilities and encouraging reflection and analysis. Leaders must constantly reinforce such learning. Because the most effective learning is informal, managers should use “stretch goals and stretch...

About the Author

David Mallon is a principal analyst for Bersin & Associates, a research and consulting firm, in Oakland, California. Mallon is a frequent presenter at ASTD and eLearning Guild events.


Comment on this summary

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    J. H. 1 decade ago
    “A culture of learning and a culture of high performance are significantly linked.”
  • Avatar
    D. C. getAbstract 1 decade ago
    Dear customers,

    Please note that the hard copy of "High-Impact Learning Culture" is not available to buy on Amazon.com or Barnesandnoble.com, but you can purchase it as a PDF or a book at this link: http://www.bersin.com/Store/Details.aspx?docid=103312171.

    Kind regards,
    Deirdre Cody
    Editor at getAbstract
    • Avatar
      getAbstract 1 decade ago
      Hi Deirdre,

      I'm interested in purchasing the PDF or book. However, I'm having challenges with Bersin's website/links. I've left a message with some to help me. Hopefully, I will hear from someone soon. Thank you.
    • Avatar
      getAbstract 1 decade ago
      Dear John,

      Thanks for your question. As far as I can see, Bersin's website works pretty similar to Amazon. If you copy and paste the link above into your address bar, it will lead you to the page where you can buy the PDF ($795) or a hardcopy of the book ($895). Click on your selected preference, then click on Add to Cart. A pop-up will appear asking you if you want to Proceed to Checkout or Continue Shopping. To pay for your selection, click Proceed to Checkout. Then, like Amazon, you should be asked to fill out some forms - name, address, credit card details, and so on.

      I hope this helps. Let me know if you have any questions.
      Kind regards,
      Deirdre