In uplifting the skills profile of your workforce, use new technologies to also improve business processes. Help workers become future-fit by developing digital skills and competencies that enhance their employability and keep the business sustainable and competitive.
Understand how and why adults learn and acquire skills, to more easily diagnose performance problems, assess L&D needs and identify person-fit development strategies. L&D interventions should make learning fun while optimising learning and performance. Learning approaches that emphasise an individualised and self-directed learning strategy, and use other group members as knowledge resources, are most likely to succeed.
L&D initiatives are expensive. Following a systematic approach in outcomes-based L&D design is therefore essential. We suggest five key stages:
• Stage 1: Assess the organisation’s skills requirements and employees’ L&D needs
• Stage 2: Design need-supportive, future-fit, competency-based L&D interventions
• Stage 3: Deliver quality-assured L&D interventions that add value to stakeholders
• Stage 4: Assess and moderate learners’ achievement of competencies
• Stage 5: Quality-assure and evaluate whether the L&D intervention was effective in addressing stakeholder needs.
L&D strategy should ensure a shared vision, embrace learning systems and knowledge management, guide active, innovative and creative learning, involve employees in change initiatives and provide the digital support to enhance competence.
The relentless speed of innovation constantly demands new skills and knowledge. Enable continued employee learning and performance improvement, and apply learning models that help employees become adaptive and build skills quickly and continuously, to keep pace.
Today, changing the game in business is about adopting future-fit, quality-assured practices that create adaptive learning cultures. Such organisations harness technological innovation to ensure strategies, practices and interventions that uplift South Africa’s skills profile while remaining sustainable and globally competitive.
*These five strategies are expanded on in the book, Practising Learning and Development in South African Organisations, authored by Melinde Coetzee (Ed), Jo-Anne Botha, Jerome Kiley and Kiru Truman, experts on learning and development theory and practice.