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Key Employee Needs That You Must Incorporate in Your Learning Design

November 13, 2019 | By - Asha Pandey

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Employee needs in learning design

To increase the effectiveness of training and achieve a better ROI, organizations must incorporate critical employee needs into their learning designs. In this article, I show you how you can successfully meet this mandate.

In the last 2-3 years, we have seen a significant shift that is impacting the way online training must be delivered.

Modern learners are moving away from traditional and prescriptive learning. Specifically,

  1. They want the learning to be in sync with their lifestyles.
  2. The learning should be integrated seamlessly into their workday.
  3. They understand the value of “continuous learning” and expect the L&D teams to provide this environment in the workplace.
  4. The content should be searchable and must be packaged to address specific needs and trigger the desired action.
  5. They are not satisfied by the access to “learning pathways” but they need these to be highly personalized “career pathways.”
  6. The learners want learning designs and experiences to echo the way they access Google or Amazon or Netflix.
    • Essentially, they want the flexibility to get the right learning resources fast, easily and on-demand.
    • They want access to the learning content and resources on the go, on their devices, and they do not want to log on to an LMS every time they have a need.
    • Additionally, they want meaningful recommendations that keep them connected and encourage them to come back for more.

As a Learning Consultant, I see L&D teams feel challenged by this shift. As I see it, this is the new normal, and L&D teams must re-strategize to meet this mandate.

The crucial change is from a “push” based training that is mandated on an LMS to a flexible “pull” based training that aligns to learners’ lifestyle and workday.

The next gen platforms like the LXPs are leading the way in offering this learning experience wherein the learners can define their own learning path. There are many other measures that you can adopt that will help you successfully meet this mandate. Let us begin this exercise by looking at the different perspectives from key stakeholders (L&D, Business, as well as employees). From this analysis, we will identify the critical employee needs that you need to incorporate in your learning design, and then, I list the possible approaches that will enable you to create effective and high-impact training.

The L&D Team’s Perspective

From the L&D perspective, their mandate is driven by Training Needs Analysis (TNA) and typically includes:

  • Trainings for Upskilling.
  • Trainings for Reskilling.
  • Cross-functional Training.
  • Training to fix an identified gap.
  • Practice sessions to hone skills or for proficiency gain.

To support the primary training, they also need to provide for:

  • Just-in-time learning aids that are available in the learners’ workflow (so that they do not need to go to the LMS) and can be easily accessed at the time of their need.
  • Reinforcements to avoid the “Forgetting Curve” setting in.
  • Challenges that push learners and act as nudges to review, refresh, or practice.
  • Other supporting measures like Coaching and Mentoring.

Increasingly, they are adding measures that can foster a culture of continuous learning and these include:

  • Leveraging on platforms for Social or Collaborative learning.
  • Offering curated content to ensure learners explore and keep coming back for more.
  • Encouraging learners to upload content (User Generated Content).

The Business Unit’s Perspective

The Business Unit looks at the training investment as a key measure to ensure that their teams are well-equipped to meet the business goals.

They want to see the investment of time and money spent on training results in a demonstrable gain notably on:

  • Acquisition of new skills.
  • Enhanced skills (performance improvement).
  • Application of the acquired learning on the job.
  • Behavioral change.
  • Self-Directed Learning.

However, their crucial need is to see:

  • The alignment of employee skills to meet the business KPIs.
  • The ability to measure the impact of training on employee performance as well as on the business.

The Employees’ Perspective and Their Critical Needs

The employees want organizations to invest on:

  • Training on the go.
  • Training on demand.
  • Varied design formats to address the diverse expectations of today’s multi-generational workforce.
  • Providing flexibility to consume training on the device of their choice and be able to move seamlessly across devices to complete it.
  • Offering content that is sharp and focused and can be consumed in short bites.
  • Give options to “pull” content based on their needs, aspirations, or interests rather than mandated courses on an LMS.
  • Provide controls to decide the quantum of time that learners choose to invest on the training and what works best with the learners.

They want learning designs that are:

  • Accessible.
  • Available on demand.
  • Available within their workflow.
  • Motivating.
  • Engaging and immersive.
  • Relevant, relatable, and personalized.
  • Intrigue them and encourage them to explore and come back for more.
  • Challenging.
  • Rewarding.

 To meet the employee needs, you should adopt learning designs that:

  1. Boost the learner engagement.
  2. Ensure knowledge acquisition happens.
  3. Facilitate the application of the acquired learning on the job.
  4. Guarantee the desired performance gain and ROI occurs.
  5. Certify a positive ROI on training spend is established.

How Can You Accomplish This?

Here are my recommendations that will address the needs of all three stakeholders and also ensure that the critical employee needs are fully met. I have layered them into 3 steps, and you can build on from one to the next.

Step 1: Opt for training delivery approaches that help learners learn. More specifically, add approaches that enable them to apply this learning to show better performance or the desired behavioral change. These should include:

  1. Mobile Learning.
  2. Digitalization of ILT (to Blended or Fully Online).
  3. Performance Support Tools.
  4. Informal Learning.
  5. Social Learning.
  6. Self-Directed Learning.

Step 2: Leverage on Learning strategies that have a proven track record of delivering a high engagement quotient and can create a sticky learning experience. Do integrate some of the new or emerging ones too to meet your employee needs and create highly immersive learning designs.

Some of my recommendations are:

  1. Microlearning.
  2. Gamification.
  3. Video Based Learning (Videos and Interactive Videos).
  4. Mobile Apps for Learning.
  5. Personalization.
  6. Curation and User Generated Content.
  7. AR/VR and MR for Immersive Learning.

Step 3: Invest on tools and platforms to measure, enhance, and maximize the impact of their training. These could include:

  1. Learning Engagement Platforms – LXP.
  2. Learner Analytics.
  3. Big Data-Reporting and Analytics.
  4. Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Learning.

I hope this article provides useful insights on your employee’s needs and how you can incorporate them in your learning designs. My inputs will certainly help you create and deliver training that addresses the employee needs and will also help you show demonstrable gain that business units seek. The overall impact will be reflected in creating a more engaged team and you will see your ROI on training spend improve.

If you have any specific queries, do contact me or leave a comment below.

Read More

  1. 10 eLearning Strategies to Create Employee Development Training
  2. How Personalized Learning Enhances the Development of Your Employees
  3. Updated eLearning Trends in 2019 to Help You Enhance Your Learning Strategy and Maximize Returns
  4. How to Leverage mLearning to Train Your Multigenerational Workforce
  5. How to Drive Employee Performance with Microlearning

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