Letter from UK

'Little's Britain': Benefits of experience

London (UK), April 2009 - (by Bob Little)The recent eLearning Network meeting in London produced a valuable insight from Charles Jennings, recently retired as chief learning officer at Thomson Reuters and now heading up the Duntroon consultancy. Jennings revealed research results showing that the effectiveness of any learning depends primarily on what the learner's manager does before the learning intervention - such as stating what is expected of the learner and how the learner will be measured.




The next most important factor is what the tutor/ instructional designer does before the learning takes place and the third key factor is what the manager does after the learning has taken place. Jennings added: "Giving people new knowledge and skills is way down the list!"


He went on to outline the eight underpinning principles of learning strategy:

  • Volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity (VUCA) impacts all we do - and there is increasing VUCA in the world.
  • Workplace dynamics are changing - in terms of working routines, resources and behaviours.
  • Real 'adult learning' is a product of experiences, practice, conversations and reflection.
  • Learning and development strategy must align with business strategy in that it must be business driven; scaleable; innovative; effective and efficient, and cost-constrained.
  • Learning strategy must be based on 'new world' thinking and practice - moving from the world of 'push', mandated learning models to 'pull', personalised, collaborative, user-generated, flexible, new media delivered forms of learning.
  • 'Generational thinking' must be taken into account - realising that the 'boomer' generation's consumer, teacher/lecture-based, autocratic approach to learning is being replaced by Generation Y's belief in learning that is co-created, self-directed, online 24 x 7; interactive and collaborative.
  • Knowledge retention is no longer a key differentiator for knowledge workers. Indeed, 'unlearning' useless and outdated skills could be a key skill in the 21st century.
  • Access to knowledge - especially at the point of need - is now a key differentiator for knowledge workers because it provides them with a competitive edge.


For over 20 years, Bob Little has specialised in writing about, and commentating on, corporate learning - especially elearning - and technology-related subjects. His work has been published in the UK, Continental Europe, the USA and Australia.
You can contact Bob.