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LearnTrends: Reinventing Organizational Learning

Experiencing eLearning

These are my live blogged notes from Jay Cross & Clark Quinn’s LearnTrends session on Reinventing Organizational Learning. Article they wrote for CLO mag: “Become a Chief Meta-Learning Officer&#. If you don’t know the solution & need to network/collaborate to find it, that’s learning.

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Free learning & development webinars for July 2023

Limestone Learning

In this webinar, Destery Hildenbrand, XR Solution Architect at Intellezy, will explain what virtual reality is and how it fits into your learning technology landscape. You’ll explore training use cases where VR is most effective and provides the best value for learning and ROI. Tuesday, July 11, 2023, 11 a.m.–12

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Intangibles matter

Jay Cross

“Articles are included from the likes of the Harvard Business Review, Henry Mintzberg, HR Magazine, Jeffrey Pfeffer, MIT Sloan Review, Nokia, SuccessFactors and the Wall Street Journal.&# (I am proud to be among such company.). The ROI stuff is totally bogus and organizations shouldn’t waste their time on it.

Metrics 37
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How to Replace Top-Down Training with Collaborative Learning (4)

Jay Cross

My team talks about the trends that drive our business. ? We learn something from every interaction with a customer. ? Assessing the cost/benefit of experiential learning is like asking for a cost/benefit of your telephone connections. To keep things simple, we began by dividing the world into two types of businesses.

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Return on Intangibles

Jay Cross

Simply this: Because knowledge has become the single most important factor of production, managing intellectual assets has become the single most important task of business.”. Mechanically, intellectual capital is a company’s market capitalization (its value on the stock market) less its book value (the value reported on its balance sheet).

Metrics 76
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Measure what’s important

Jay Cross

The shift changed how owners value businesses. Mechanically, intellectual capital is a company’s market capitalization (its value on the stock market) less its book value (the value reported on its balance sheet). When I attended business school in the seventies, nobody had this anomaly figured out. Tom Stewart.

Metrics 59