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Death
of the Corporate University
Birth of Learning Services
March,
2006
Josh
Bersin , Principal |
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In our High Impact Learning Organization®
research and workshops
we talk with training managers and directors about their challenges
in organization, management and governance. Nearly every
organization tells us the same thing: their current
organization model for corporate training is undergoing a
dramatic change. This article summarizes these changes
and what they mean for you.
The Traditional Corporate University Model
In the traditional corporate university model, developed
over the last 30 years, companies create a "place to
go" to learn. These organizations have many offerings
to choose from, they are centralized and located at corporate
headquarters, and are staffed for peak demand.
In this model the corporate training organization
develops a wide set of offerings and then markets them to
managers, directors, executives, and line employees.
Each individual business unit decides whether or not to send
their people to "be trained."
The Corporate University is funded and staffed
for "peak demand." There are a wide set of
programs, facilities, and staff to help meet any possible
demand from the organization.
Why this Model is becoming Obsolete:
A Changed Workforce
The business environment in the last 5-10 years has changed
dramatically. Today the economy is growing yet most
organizations face a talent "squeeze." A significant
number of older workers are retiring - and with them go some
of the most critical skills in the organization. Workers
no longer sit in an office next to their managers where they
can be coached and trained: they now work everywhere
and anywhere (i.e. the "flattening of the earth").
HR managers no longer speak of learning and development, they
now worry about "talent management."

These changes have led to three important demands for learning:
Learning must available "on-demand,"
it must be "job-relevant,"
and it must be "constantly changing."
These new drivers are making the corporate university model
impossible to maintain.
Consider the issues which training managers now face.
Training must be aligned, relevant, and efficient. It
is no longer possible to offer a course for year after year
with a small number of attendees. Training must be totally
aligned to today's most current business needs.

The University model breaks down. Employees can no
longer wait for the University to offer the right courses.
Employees want to be able to get information online when they
need it. New hire, management training, and other soft-skills
programs are now "blended" with online activities,
events, and reference materials.
The New Model: Learning Services
There is an entirely new approach: the Learning Services
organization. Learning Services is process-centric,
not program centric. It offers programs, content, performance
consulting, and outreach programs to help business managers
improve operational performance. The organization uses
technology to increase reach and range -- not just to save
money. Learning Services "comes to you."

The Learning Services approach differs greatly
from the traditional corporate training organization.
It manages courses and content which can be delivered anywhere.
It uses performance consultants to reach out and understand
business issues -- and delivers programs, content, resources,
references, and more. Its focus is not as a "place
to go" but rather an organization that "comes to
you."

An Analogy: Data Processing
to Information Technology
We know this transition is taking place.
Forward-thinking organizations like Lockheed Martin, IBM,
and others have made this transition already.
Consider what happened to the Data Processing
departments in the 1980s. They used to be an organization
which held "data and processing" in the basement
with the mainframe. You used to walk into the DP department
and ask for help with your data and applications. Today,
by contrast, the IT department is everywhere. They run
networks and systems which are self-service in nature.
They no longer sit in the basement -- they are everywhere
and available 24x7 when you need them.

IT, like training, is a support function.
Alone it does not generate revenue, gain market share, or
create competitive advantage. Used correctly, however,
it does all three. As the business and technology changed
so did IT. Training is going through precisely the same
transition.
What does this all mean to
you?
It has many implications. It changes
the way you are organized, how you use technology, how your
resources are allocated, and how you measure what you do.
It demands that you implement a "shared-services"
model rather than a "program-centric" model.
It forces you to build and manage a performance consulting
organization. It mandates measurement of operational
efficiency and service levels -- not just learning outcomes.
We have devoted much of our research to these
changes and strongly urge you to read our High Impact Learning
Organization® research
or attend one of our workshops.
We will be presenting more details on this topic in our research
webinar program throughout 2006.
Key
Research to Help you Understand This Area
You can purchase these studies individually become an enterprise
subscriber to our research
and advisory services. By becoming a subscriber you
have access to all our research for an entire year plus much
more. 100% of all purchases can be applied toward an annual
research subscription in the first 90 days. For more information,
please call Mike Cooke at (561) 939-6345.
Would you like to participate in one of our research studies?
There are many benefits to being part of one of our research studies. If you have an innovative or highly effective approach to training, content development, blended learning, performance management, competency management, leadership development, succession planning, HR systems, or measurement, we'd like to talk to you. For more information on being part of our ongoing research studies, click here.
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