Leading Organizational Learning

(Jeff_L) #1

They intentionally use the business agenda to ground their
learning and foster the sharing of knowledge. Here are four real
examples of how this is done.



  • Strategic business dialogue.The CEO identifies a critical busi-
    ness issue (such as the future business model for the company or
    doing business in a new country) and the key questions for which
    he or she needs answers. A few key people (such as a CEO with
    extensive experience in the area, outside thinkers, consultants, or
    partners) meet face to face in a structured conversation to consider
    analyses done by participants, as well as perspectives and ideas, on
    this particular issue. This is a dialogue for learning and opening
    possibilities, not for immediate decisions.

  • Business review process.Several times during the year, CEOs
    meet with their top executives (in a functional or geographical area
    or across the company) to consider business results and future goals.
    They and their teams use these opportunities to assess their perfor-
    mance and learn from both their successes and their failures. The
    reviews keep the focus on learning at the practical level and foster
    open dialogue. CEOs use these sessions with different business units
    as a way to cross-pollinate ideas and best practices across the orga-
    nization. In addition, these best practices are documented and inte-
    grated in the training and education programs of the organization.

  • Executive or board meetings.CEOs use these opportunities to
    get continuous feedback on their performance and that of their
    organization. They also want to hear how the organization is
    perceived from the outside.

  • Regular business and project meetings.CEOs integrate a par-
    ticular focus for learning as a part of all of these meetings (for exam-
    ple, bringing a business outsider to share best practices or having a
    structured dialogue on teamwork). They also use after-action
    reviews in every possible business setting. An after-action reviewis
    a dedicated period of time at the end of every meeting in which
    teams may reflect on and discuss what they have accomplished,
    what they have learned in the process, what they could have done


164 LEADINGORGANIZATIONALLEARNING

Free download pdf