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Milan Kordestani
Too many companies focus on office perks like fitness memberships or standing desks over career development. However, organizational learning has a much bigger impact on adaptability, efficiency, engagement, and retention. To meet employee expectations and boost business, leaders should consider what digital learning tools and experiences are available.
Employee experience has been of concern for years now — and for good reason. It directly impacts employee engagement, and higher engagement levels often translate into increased productivity, innovation, retention rates, revenue, and a host of other benefits. However, most companies focus much of their attention on office perks. Fitness memberships, free meals, standing desks, and childcare assistance often top the list.
While each has its merits, employee experience is actually the sum of all experiences, including that of career development. Studies have shown strong organizational learning cultures influence everything from knowledge sharing and leadership development to adaptability and efficiency. In fact, companies with strong learning cultures experience 15% higher engagement rates and 30% to 50% higher retention rates.
Learning opportunities simply benefit employers and employees alike. Besides, people want professional development these days. One study found that 68% of employees would stay at a company that upskilled them, while another 52% felt they needed to learn new skills within the next year to continue in their careers.
Being in the digital age, technology has naturally become the enabler of today’s learning and development opportunities — especially when 89% of employees want access to training anytime, anywhere. They also want to choose their training schedule (85%) and believe regular training is more important than “traditional” workplace training.
With that in mind, the question is: How do learning and development leaders go about designing the right digital learning experiences that employees seek?
More importantly, digital microlearning modules can be made easily accessible. Employees can choose when and where they learn — and in the manner they prefer (i.e., desktop, laptop, mobile phone, and so on). The flexibility and convenience will improve engagement and participation rates among the team. It’s also a lower-pressure environment for those resistant to learning.
Learning can also be gamified. For instance, employees can learn and earn with Audo. The same can be said for deadlines or training courses. Try awarding employees as they complete each section and advance in the “game.” If an organization needed to hit certain KPIs, for example, learning and development leaders could create a digital leaderboard to track progress. A little healthy competition can do teams some good, and the gamification options are almost endless.
With all the digital tools now available, learning and development leaders are doing teams a disservice by not utilizing at least a few of them. Take the time to review what’s available, and then determine which options make the most sense. It’s as simple as that.
Source: ceoworld magazine
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