Swapping Courses For The New Corporate Brain

Swapping Courses For The New Corporate Brain
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Summary: Listen up L&D managers. It’s time to look beyond offering courses that build competence to providing knowledge that builds expertise.

Make It Easy For Your Learners To Learn

Progressive companies are flipping learning design on its head to improve KPI outcomes surrounding company performance, and the move is helping to build and maintain expertise even in a world where new knowledge needs to be consumed daily just to compete.

If you’re ready to take it on, here’s a challenge for you: Take 80% of knowledge out of your courses and put it where people need it and where they will actually access it. Design it for informal learning in the flow of work, and make it available in bite-sized sessions of a few minutes on a mobile device.

While you’re at it, design learning so that you can, for example, easily convert slides into an FAQ, or turn process flows into infographics, or break down videos into small chunks so they can be easily repurposed.

What I'm saying is, take it upon your team to make it easy for your learners to access the knowledge they need to perform in the moment.

If you want, you can leave the other 20% as formal learning experiences, but if you can get that 80% into in-flow learning and begin to transfer the understanding of skills through practice, you’ll begin to build what we at Fuse like to call "the corporate brain."

This "corporate brain," has been helping Fuse to drive some impressive results for customers such as Vodafone, Avon, Hilti, and more, for many years now.

Beyond this, it’s just gotten better. Our new Knowledge Engine is like a triple layer of icing on the cake for the corporate brain, and it’s set to deliver measurable performance benefits. If you’d like to transition and flip learning on its head to develop your own corporate brain with the added help of our Knowledge Engine, read on.

First Thing’s First: What On Earth Is A Corporate Brain?

The fact is, most L&D managers are all too aware of how ineffective courses are, and forward-thinking companies started moving away from courses some time ago. They know that course-based learning performance degrades rapidly over time, with course knowledge retention dropping from 30% to 8% over a year.

Case in point, in a 2018 MIT and Deloitte study dedicated to digital transformation (more than 4,300 executives participated), the most successful, fast-growing digital companies all had one thing in common: they'd transformed the way individuals and organizations learn.

The study found that employees at these companies were learning all the time, not just once a year. Amongst these highest-performing companies, MIT and Deloitte found that 44% of employees at these companies are updating their skills continuously.

Continuous learning is great, but we also like to emphasize "knowledge in the flow of work" because it focuses on getting bite-sized knowledge when and where you need it as well. It’s this last detail that really makes the difference between learning and the corporate brain. Think of the corporate brain as an extension of all the tacit knowledge that can be shared and consumed amongst colleagues.

We can’t claim it’s our own term; "the corporate brain" is actually a phrase coined by our client Hilti. The multinational developer and manufacturer of products for construction and building maintenance felt hindered by its course-based approach to learning. Case in point, its engineering modules took more than ten hours per course, and employee onboarding was a four-week, in-person commitment. In 2017, Hilti sought to revolutionize its learning experiences for all employees, bringing its corporate brain to life with Fuse.

So, what characterizes Hilti’s corporate brain built for optimized L&D? Here it is, in a nutshell:

  • It’s no longer classroom-based
    With Fuse, Hilti updated its content strategy in order to move away from a classroom-based approach.
  • It’s mobile
    Out of the classroom and onto mobile devices, Hilti’s engineers wanted to learn on the move.
  • It’s tacit knowledge that’s relevant to the needs they have
    Hilti didn’t want to hear from people outside of their team; they wanted to learn from Hilti experts.
  • It’s easy for Hilti experts to create the content
    Content creation doesn’t take weeks or months—it takes less than a few hours.
  • It’s democratizing learning
    Fuse is giving Hilti’s people a voice, giving everybody an opportunity to share their learnings. It's a two-way street.
  • It’s much more video-based now
    It’s real people "in the moment" demonstrating relevant things in bite-sized videos.
  • It’s little and often
    In-person onboarding programs that took anywhere from one to four weeks were changed to a model where people were onboarded by learning little bits of information every day.
  • It uses data analytics
    This helps Hilti understand and show its business results. The company doesn’t have to guess what its users want or what they will engage with.
  • Content is relevant to specific users
    The corporate brain doesn’t just rely on a content aggregator to farm out the same content to everyone. It promotes content curation via communities to make learning relevant.

From course-based learning to the corporate brain, Hilti’s achievements are impressive (and if you want to learn more about them, click here.) But today’s corporate brain is set to get even better as clients begin to use the Fuse Knowledge Engine.

The Corporate Brain Just Got Better

It’s fair to say that Google has changed the way we learn, becoming a bit of an extension of our brains by making everything accessible and more findable. We no longer have to ponder the answers to the top questions in our minds, which, in 2019, were the most asked questions put to Google, like when are the NBA playoffs, what is my IP address, what is love, when are the early signs of pregnancy, and, if you can believe it, where am I? Let’s not go over the questions people asked Google in 2020 and 2021—too depressing.

The point is, we trust Google with some pretty personal inquiries and we expect it to deliver at our point of need, as quite specifically illustrated in the "Where am I?" query. A person unclear as to their immediate location doesn’t want to be directed to a course on compass or GPS use. They just need to know how to download Google Maps to their phone.

So, it doesn’t come as much of a surprise that in the corporate environment, people are beginning to expect learning to be just as accessible, and want a knowledge engine that is an extension of their brains. They also want to be able to trust the knowledge that gets recommended to them as well as the answers that come back.

This is what we are doing at Fuse today with our new Knowledge Engine. Make no mistake, we’ve always understood how important search is to having knowledge in the flow of work. But now, we’re shrinking search time to as little as 30 seconds.

The new Knowledge Intelligence Engine crawls and analyzes internal knowledge (both tacit and explicit) in the same way that Google crawls, indexes, and categorizes external content. It’s about as far as you can get from traditional courses, and it’s supercharging the already impressive corporate brain our customers have built with Fuse.

eBook Release: Fuse
Fuse
Used by over 150 progressive organisations worldwide — including Hilti, Vodafone, Panasonic, Scandic, and Avon — Fuse sparks active engagement for deeper learning experiences that ignite your people’s performance.

Originally published at blog.fuseuniversal.com.