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  • A lot of organizations are looking to break out of the straightjacket of formal, structured

  • learning, which is both inflexible and costly. And many organizations have adopted a model

  • called 70:20:10, and it's basically based on surveys and research that shows that around

  • about 70% of what people learn to do their jobs well they learn through experience and

  • practice through doing their jobs. They learn about 20% through other people, through conversations,

  • through having networks, through knowing the right people to ask the right questions at

  • the right time, and about 10% of learning in the workplace occurs formally. We've known

  • for 126 years that the human brain doesn't retain a lot in terms of memory. Hermann Ebbinghaus

  • did research back in 1885, what is now known as the Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve, that shows

  • that any one of us will forget about half of what we've been told within an hour of

  • being told it unless we have the opportunity to put that into practice within that hour;

  • and so therefore taking people out of the workplace, putting them through a formal,

  • structured class. We might even test them and assume that they know what to do because

  • they pass the test. But put them back in the workplace, and we find that actually performance

  • doesn't change. The reason that 70:20:10 has been taken up by some of the organizations

  • is that it overcomes 2 major problems with traditional training approaches. The first

  • problem is cost. The second problem is timeliness, and organizations now expect the development

  • of their people to run at the speed of business, and 70:20:10 helps organizations do just that.

  • A lot of research has been shown that learning is all about context, and if you keep people

  • in the workflow and provide them with facilities and support the learning, the learning is

  • much more effective, it's faster, it's cost effective, and efficient and effective. 70:20:10

  • requires people to think about the tools, practices, and techniques that you're going

  • to adopt outside of simply distributing information and running formal, structured courses. So

  • it requires managers to be involved in development because a lot of the 70 and 20--the experiential

  • part of learning-- has to be supported by managers in the workplace through new experiences,

  • through the opportunity to practice, through exposure to new roles, new jobs, job swaps,

  • and so on and so forth. It also opens up whole new channels for learning, so for example,

  • the use of mobile technology, which is expanding rapidly. One of the questions I'm often asked

  • is-- if you're looking at a model like 70:20:10, you're obviously going to focus a lot more

  • on what is called informal learning. And the question I'm often asked is how do we manage

  • that? And the answer to that is that that's the wrong question. You don't manage it. You

  • can facilitate it. You can support it. You can help it happen. But actually you can't

  • manage it. Basically, each of us individually manage our learning, and all we can do in

  • terms of the 70:20:10 structure, or any model that includes some sort of informal learning

  • or self-directed learning, is provide people with the right resources at the right time

  • through the right channel and allow them to get on with it. And you'll never get a learning

  • organization if you're continually pushing content at people and expecting them to learn.

  • Learning organizations only emerge once people, individuals start to pull learning when they

  • need it, where they need it, where it's going to be most effective for them, and when they've

  • got problems to solve.

A lot of organizations are looking to break out of the straightjacket of formal, structured

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