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Building a Learning Organization As interpreted by:

Building a Learning Organization As interpreted by:. Ronda Henderson Chad Wilson Naren Reddy. What is It?. A learning organization is an organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge, and at modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insight

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Building a Learning Organization As interpreted by:

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  1. Building a Learning OrganizationAs interpreted by: Ronda Henderson Chad Wilson Naren Reddy

  2. What is It? • A learning organization is an organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge, and at modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insight • New ideas are essential if learning is to take place • Without accompanying changes, only the potential for improvement exists

  3. Why Important? • To ensure that learning takes place • For continuous improvement • Without learning, old practices are repeated • Change remains cosmetic and short-lived • To provide a linkage between learning and continuous improvement

  4. How To Build It? • Five Key Building Blocks • Systematic Problem Solving • Experimentation • Learning from Past Experience • Learning from Others • Transferring Knowledge

  5. Systematic Problem Solving • Relies on the scientific method, rather than guesswork • Insists on data, rather than assumptions • Uses simple statistical tools to organize data and draw inferences

  6. Step Question to be answered Expansion/ divergence Contraction/ convergence What’s needed to go to the next step 1. Identify and select problem What do we want to change? Lots of problems for consideration One problem statement, one “desired state” agreed upon Identification of the gap “Desired state” described in observable terms 2. Analyze problem What’s preventing us from reaching the “desired state”? Lots of potential causes identified Key cause(s) identified and verified Key cause(s) documented and ranked 3. Generate potential solutions How could we make the change? Lots of ideas on how to solve the problem Potential solutions clarified Solution list Xerox’s Problem-Solving Process

  7. Step Question to be answered Expansion/ divergence Contraction/ convergence What’s needed to go to the next step 4. Select and plan the solution What’s the best way to do it? Lots of criteria for evaluating potential solutions Lots of ideas on how to implement and evaluate the selected solution Criteria to use for evaluating solution agreed upon Implementation and evaluation plans agreed upon Plan for making and monitoring the change Measurement criteria to evaluate solution effectiveness 5. Implement the solution Are we following the plan? Implementation of agreed-on contingency plans (if necessary) Solution in place 6. Evaluate the solution How well did it work? Effectiveness of solution agreed upon Continuing problems (if any) identified Verification that the problem is solved, or Agreement to address continuing problems Xerox’s Problem-Solving Process

  8. Experimentation • The systematic search and test of new knowledge • Usually motivated by opportunity, not by problems • Two main forms: • Ongoing programs • Demonstration projects

  9. Successful Ongoing Programs • Series of small experiments, designed to produce incremental gains in knowledge • New ideas are often imported from outside the organization • Requires incentive system that favors risk taking • Managers that have skills required to perform and evaluate experiments

  10. Demonstration Projects • Involve holistic, system wide changes • Embodies principles and approaches that may be adopted later on larger scale • Establishes policy guidelines and decision rules for later projects • May be encounter with resistance • Developed by multifunctional teams that report directly to senior management • If not accompanied by strategies for transfer of learning, will have limited impact

  11. Learning from Past Experience • Companies must review their success and failures, assess them systematically, and record the lessons in a form that employees find open and accessible. • Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. • The knowledge gained from failures often instrumental in achieving subsequent success… • IBM’s 360, was based on technology of Stretch computer • Boeing 757 & 777 success was from experiences from 737 & 747 difficulties.

  12. Learning from Past Experience • It is the mind-set that enables companies to recognize the value of productive failure as contrasted with unproductive success. • A productive failure is one that leads to insight, understanding, and thus an addition to the commonly held wisdom of the organization. • An unproductive success occurs when something goes well, but no body knows how or why.

  13. Learning from Others • Not all learning comes from reflection and self-analysis. Sometimes the most powerful insights comes from looking outside one’s immediate environment to gain new perspective. • Enlightened managers know that even companies in completely different businesses can be fertile source of ideas and catalysts for creative thinking. • Benchmarking is an ongoing investigation and learning experience that ensures that best industry practices are uncovered, analyzed, adopted, and implemented.

  14. Learning from Others • Benchmarking is not “industrial tourism”, a series of ad hoc visits to companies that have received favorable publicity or won quality awards. • Benchmarking is one way of gaining an outside perspective. • Conversations with customers invariably stimulate learning; • Contextual inquiry – on spot inquiries in contexts.

  15. Transferring Knowledge • Ideas carry maximum impact when they are shared broadly rather than held in few hands – This can be written, oral, visual reports, site visits and tours, personal rotation programs, education and training programs. • Absorbing facts by reading them or seeing them demonstrated is one thing. • Personal rotation programs are one of the most powerful methods of transferring knowledge.

  16. Transferring Knowledge • Line to staff transfers are another option. • Education and training programs are powerful tools for transferring knowledge. • Personal rotation programs are one of the most powerful methods of transferring knowledge. • Competitive edge programs – for teams reporting to managers and presidents • Knowledge is more likely to be transferred effectively when the right incentives are in place.

  17. Measuring Learning • If you can measure it you can manage it • Knowledge Management (KM) • What is Knowledge? • Familiarity, awareness, or understanding gained through experience or study. (dictionary.com) • How do you measure it? • Learning Curves • Experience Curves • Half-Life Curve

  18. Learning Curve • Conceptualized in the 1920’s • As manufactures learned they could produce more. • The costs of manufacturing fell predictably with increases in productivity. • Learning rates typically ranged 80-85% • A doubling of cumulative production yields a reduction in cost to 80-85% of previous level

  19. Experience Curve • Boston Consulting Group c.1970 • As industries learned they could produce more • Costs and prices fall by predictable amounts as total production of a given industry increases

  20. The trouble with Learning/Experience Curves • Provide an incomplete view of the organization • Only measure one output (cost or price) • Ignore quality, delivery, new product introductions, etc. • Focus on growth industries only where total production volumes are on the rise • What about mature industries?

  21. Half-Life Curve • Measures the time it takes to achieve a 50% improvement in a specified performance measure. • Depicted Graphically • Performance measure on vertical axis • Time on horizontal axis • Companies, divisions, or departments that take less time to improve must be learning faster than their peers. • Short learning cycles → superior performance

  22. Half-Life Curve

  23. Other Measures • The half-life curve is based solely on results • Some types of knowledge take years to digest • Therefore, short term learning may be over looked • Stages of Organizational Learning • Cognitive • Behavioral • Performance Improvement

  24. Assessing each Stage • Cognitive • Surveys, questionnaires, and interviews • Focus on attitudes and depth of understanding • Behavioral • Surveys, questionnaires, direct observation • Mystery shoppers • Performance • Learning audit, half life curves

  25. First Steps • Foster an environment that is conducive to learning • Create space to learn!!! • Open up boundaries and stimulate the exchange of ideas • Jack Welch “boundary-lessness” • Create Learning Forums • Programs designed with explicit learning goals in mind

  26. Summary • Systematic Problem Solving • Experimentation • Learning from Past Experience • Learning from Others • Transferring Knowledge

  27. Questions???

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