Remove Action Learning Remove Coaching Remove Culture Remove Organization
article thumbnail

Using Peer-to-Peer Learning to Build Collaborative Cultures

Learning Rebels

These are just a few benefits of peer-to-peer learning. Read on and discover how this dynamic approach can breathe new life into your organization’s learning strategy. What is Peer-to-Peer Learning? Peer-to-peer learning encourages the free flow of information across the organization. Engagement.

article thumbnail

Free learning & development webinars for April 2022

Limestone Learning

Chris Knowlton, a Chief Video Evangelist for Panopto, will share six actionable solutions for using asynchronous (on-demand) videos to improve training productivity and effectiveness, and three examples of when you should opt for real-time training instead. The relationship between culture and a company’s monetary success.

Free 134
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

This Is What I Believe About Learning in Organizations

The Performance Improvement Blog

As globalization increases and communities become more diverse, the competitive advantage of any organization will be its collective knowledge and its expanded expertise. But none of this is possible without learning. Companies must learn more deeply about their customers and markets. Training Is Not Learning.

article thumbnail

Eight Leader Habits of a Learning Culture

The Performance Improvement Blog

Eight leader habits are essential to a learning culture. These are behaviors ingrained in the routines and rituals of organizations that are continually learning and learning how to learn. Build trust - Employees will invest time and effort in learning if they trust their managers.

Culture 229
article thumbnail

Key Elements of a Learning Culture

The Performance Improvement Blog

A “learning culture” is a community of workers continuously and collectively seeking performance improvement through new knowledge, new skills, and new applications of knowledge and skills to achieve the goals of the organization. In a learning culture, the pursuit of learning is woven into the fabric of organizational life.

Culture 254
article thumbnail

Training Culture vs. Learning Culture

The Performance Improvement Blog

What’s the difference between a “training culture” and a “ learning culture ”? As the chart shows, in a training culture, responsibility for employee learning resides with instructors and training managers. In that kind of culture the assumption is that trainers (under the direction of a CLO) drive learning.

Culture 100
article thumbnail

Becoming a Learning Culture: Competing in an Age of Disruption

The Performance Improvement Blog

The only thing holding companies back from learning at the speed of change is their organizational culture which, for many, is a barrier to learning. Most companies have a training culture, not a learning culture. Most companies have a training culture, not a learning culture.

Culture 178