Bringing 70:20:10 to life – report on the 2011 Future of Learning Conference

14 03 2011

Just back from Melbourne and a successful, thought-provoking conference that focused on the “70:20:10″ of learning, where 70% indicates on-the-job learning, 20% is ‘nearby learning’ in the form of coaching, mentoring etc. and 10% is learning through formal programmes.   The general concensus was that we shouldn’t get too hung up on specific numbers, and the focus for L&D professionals and business schools alike should be on the integration of these three elements of learning to maximise the effectiveness of employee development.

The conference opened with a lively panel discussion facilitated as an open dialogue by Professor Kim Taylor Thompson of New York University.  Though Kim has now returned to the discipline of Law, she is no stranger to Executive Education, having been the CEO of Duke CE until recently.  The six panel members, senior executives from a range of multinational organisations, the Dean and Director of Melbourne Business School and the President of the Australian Human Resources Institute, discussed their experience of blending the three components of learning, and shared their perspectives on what the future will look like. Employee choice and the employee-employer psychological contract; the role of technology and social media; the trend toward just-in-time, rather than just-in-case, learning and the importance of leadership for a learning culture were all emphasised.

Elaine Rumboll, Director of Executive Education at the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business, opened day 2 of the conference with her keynote on Building Learner Readiness.  She emphasised the importance of managing attention and awareness – the art of ’productive presencing’ – in a world where were are engulfed by information and the boundaries between work and home are increasingly blurred.  Elaine shared 10 ‘hacks’ with the audience on effective and practical strategies for enhancing our own and others’ preparedness for learning, such as ‘learning sprints’ - focused timed sessions where multi-tasking is banned and ‘single-tasking’ is the essence and ‘jamming sessions’ for generating creative ideas, where participants play specific roles to encourage a range of views on a topic. 

Three workshops followed, on the Role & Influence of the L&D professional, by Inge Wels and Ellen Pruyne from Ashridge, Applying Gaming Principles to Blended learning environments, by Dave Duarte from Cape Town, and a new take on the old classic of Teaching Smart People How to Learn, by Ann Whyte and Paul Lawrence from the Centre for Coaching in Organisations at Melbourne Business School.  I attended the Gaming workshop, where Dave had us all thinking about how to take some of the addictive compulsive design features that computer games designers have cleverly embedded into their games and apply them to an executive learning situation. 

Professor Eddie Blass gave the afternoon keynote, sharing insights from Ashridge research on Talent Management. She drew attention to the importance of having a flexible talent pool where people cycle in and out, rather than being labelled (or not labelled) as ‘talent’ and highlighted the problem of many recruitment and development systems that kill diversity and stifle creativity by the restricted nature of the way in which ‘talent’ is identified.

Eddie then went on to run one of the afternoon workshops, looking at Personal Inquiry as a mechanism for executive development, alongside two other workshops, one that introduced a different weighting to the 70:20:10, 50:30:20, and how this has manifest itself in a leadership development experience in the US; the other looking at two Australian models of learning and how these have accelerated learning in the workplace.

The conference dinner was followed by an entertaining talk by Rachel Lamont, leader of the 58th National Antarctic Research Expedition – only the second woman, and one of the youngest leaders – to run the annual Australian research expedition to Antarctica.  She was very candid in her admittance that it was more by luck and a following wind than a dedication to polar science that led her to the leadership position, and gave a frank and graphic description of her year living in one of the remotest parts of the world.

On the final day of the conference, Paul Kirkbride, Deputy Dean for Executive Education at Melbourne Business School, summarised the trends he sees happening in the Executive Education space, and some of the choices that providers and consumers of exec ed need to be aware of as we look to the future: The distinction between Education, Training and Development; Focus on the Individual and/or Organisation; a Pipeline versus Organisational Imperative strategy for executive development and the difference between knowledge, behaviour and culture in terms of structuring and designing development experiences.

After Paul’s keynote, we shared our learning group reflections from the conference, and spent the last couple of hours with paint, canvas and natural ‘props’ bringing together an artistic representation of a key theme from the conference.

The third conference in the partnership series will be held in South Africa from 21-23 March 2012, organised by the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business Executive Education Unit.  It promises to be an innovative and fully experiential event, and is open to exec ed clients and practitioners.  More information to follow later in the year…





Leadership for a changing technology paradigm

15 02 2011

Technology developments such as cloud computing, social networking and the environmental impacts of computing are driving how organisations are able to use technology to sell more of what they have got at lower cost, innovate faster, collaborate better, store and access data, outsource more business processes and make more informed, faster decisions in response to changes.

This comes with elaborate multi-sourced ‘eco-system’ operating models and industry changing business models, overlaid with regulatory changes that are complex, costly and forcing greater transparency in finances. Globalisation and security, post M&A integration and in some cases de-merger add to the complexity. Delivering core business technology innovation and execution can determine whether you are truly a global player (think payments or capital markets).

Add uncertainty and volatility to complexity and we are faced with some critical questions about the capacity and validity of conventional Programme and Change management approaches to deliver real value from the investments being made in technology.

In this new research projects, Stephen Moss and colleagues will bring together a group of senior leaders with responsilty for technology to explore questions including:

  • What kind of strategic conversations do technology leaders need to have and how do they make them happen in a multi-stakeholder, rapidly changing eco-system?
  • What leadership challenges are posed by this rapidly changing, shifting paradigm?

The research will start with interviews and a large group event to be held in June 2011, and continue in a second phase with interested organisations participating in an action research process over the ensuing 12 months.

Please contact Stephen Moss for more details: stephen.moss@ashridge.org.uk





Managing the Cuts

15 02 2011

How are public sector leaders responding to the pressures of severe financial constraint?  In this new research project, Judith Parsons will lead a research team to look at the choices leaders of local and central government institutions are being expected to make; how CEOs and top teams are making these choices; where they feel confident, and where they are struggling and what would help them to cope better.

The research will take place over the course of the next 12 months. It is intended to bring value to participating individuals and their organisations, as well as derive knowledge and understanding for the benefit of other public sector organisations.

To participate in the research, or find out more, please contact Judith direct:  judith.parsons@ashridge.org.uk





New grads at work

1 02 2011

We’ve just started a partnership project with the Institute of Leadership and Management looking at the interface between graduates and the organisations they join and what makes for successful, or troubled, relationships.

The project builds on the Gen Y research led by Dr. Carina Schofield and Sue Honore in 2008-9.  It will examine the expectations of graduates in their first couple of years at work, how they are perceived by line managers, and what their employing organisations expect of them and are doing to support a productive working relationship from the start.

The research will be published in summer 2011, following a rigorous review of the literature and empirical data collection.





Creating a Leadership Community

5 01 2011

The Ashridge Leadership Community of Practice is holding a strategy workshop on 7 January 2011. It’s purpose is to share leadership research that’s currently going on and discuss ideas for how to strengthen the Community and Ashridge’s leadership research footprint in 2011 and beyond. The day includes a series of ‘marketplace’ stalls, presentations and space for informal conversations with colleagues. We hope that it will result in new ideas that will be taken up and pursued by the Leadership Centre in the months ahead.

Dr. Mark Pegg, Director of the Ashridge Leadership Centre, and Dr. Eve Poole, Deputy Director, are the lead orchestrators of the day, with the support of Shirine Voller and Dr. Carina Schofield from the Research Office, and colleagues from across Ashridge.





2-4 March 2011, Future of Learning Conference, Melbourne

5 01 2011

Mt Eliza Executive Education, Melbourne, Australia, is hosting the second in a series of partnership conferences on The Future of Learning. Conference partners Ashridge and the University of Cape Town are working with Mt Eliza on a compelling programme of workshops and keynote sessions that focus on the theme of Bringing 70:20:10 to Life. 

According to the 70-20-10 model, 70 percent of learning occurs ‘on-the-job’, 20 per cent ‘near-by’ through coaching and mentoring and only 10 per cent ‘away from the job’ through formal courses. Concepts such as 70-20-10 are redefining traditional views of workplace learning, prompting us to rethink how, why, where and when employees learn – now and in the future.

The conference is targeted toward L&D and HR professionals, senior executives with an interest in the Learning agenda and executive education practitioners.

Find out more at http://www.fol2011mteliza.com.au/





Growing Knowledge at the British Library

14 12 2010

Check out the British Library’s Growing Knowledge exhibition.  I went down in person last week – means you get to play with some of the interactive screens and, although it’s all virtual, you get to access more resources than are available remotely.  On the other hand, you can check out much of it from your own work/home. 

The exhibition is both to demonstrate a range of applications that are already being used to capture and share knowledge virtually, and to gather data on how people think knowledge sharing and research practices will develop in the future. 

 There’s some fun stuff to explore, including: an online medical journal that incorporates video into peer reviewed journal papers; nature network – an online community platform for scientists including a customizable personal ‘workbench’ area; galaxy zoo – a resource being used to map galaxies by involving the public in classifying images of galaxies, 3D imaging where a number of objects have been photographed from multiple perspectives and you can view them as if scanning over them with a torch, Jane Austen manuscript digitised reconstructions… and many more.
Some may never make it beyond ‘experimental’ stage, but others are rather impressive.

The exhibition isn’t specific to business and management, but that’s the real fun of it!  It’s thought-provoking to explore resources from a range of other disciplines and prompt ideas about how we conduct our research in the future building on some great opportunities afforded by social media and web technology.








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.