Learning to Succeed: Rethinking Corporate Education in a World of Unrelenting Change

  • 2h 25m
  • Jason Wingard
  • AMACOM
  • 2015

Frequent market shifts...The rapid pace of technological change...We're all familiar with the old saying, "the only constant is change," but this has never been as true for business as it is today--nor have the penalties for companies who fail to learn and adapt been as high.

Learning to Succeed insists that an integrated model for corporate education--one that links development programs with strategic goals--is critical to building agile and resilient learning organizations that will survive in our fast-evolving business landscape.

Companies need to continually assess where they need to go in relation to where they are now--and use training to bridge the gap. As these new education initiatives are designed to advance concrete corporate goals, participants become active learners. Instead of merely listening to lectures--they work on strategic plans and action projects tied to key objectives. Learning is reinforced and ROI is optimized.

For companies ready to embrace what it means to be a learning organization, to welcome the CLO to the C-Suite, to tightly and continuously weave strategy and learning into the fabric of their businesses, the opportunities are limitless. Complete with practical guidelines and illuminating case studies, this pioneering book puts them on the path to long-term success.

About the Author

JASON WINGARD, PH.D is Managing Director and Chief Learning Officer at Goldman Sachs. He was previously Vice Dean of Executive Education and adjunct Professor of Management at the Wharton School.

In this Book

  • Learning to Succeed—Rethinking Corporate Education in a World of Unrelenting Change
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • The New Normal
  • An Integration Formula
  • A Programming Framework
  • Understanding Barriers to Change
  • ROL: Return on Learning
  • The Competitive Edge
  • Integration in Practice: Comcast and Sears
  • Appendix—Executive Perspectives—Deloitte and Procter & Gamble
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