After posting yesterday about Partnering with the Business Unit, I received an e-mail from Kevin Oakes, President of SumTotal, Chair elect of ASTD, my former boss, and all around good guy. He sent me his recent article, The Enterprise from the 2005 T&D magazine. As it turns out, I am one of the few in the industry that didn’t read the original Fast Company article.
Kevin does a great job reviewing both the article and even some of the many comments posted on the Fast Company website. He also quotes an interesting Accenture study titled “The High Performance Learning Organization” that says
Only 2 percent of learning executives in our study are measured or evaluated according to how successfully they align the learning function to strategic goals of their company or agency.
Kevin then goes on to talk about the lack of business strategy in the L & D groups.
Understanding the business, and measuring the right things has been cited many times as critical to the success of the workplace learning professional.
Finally, when discussing the current trend to outsource HR and with it the training and development group he references a list from a 2004 SHRM human resources survey report that lists the top seven reasons for outsourcing this function
If the HR and training and development functions were seen as strategic to the organization in the first place, much of what’s on this list wouldn’t be considered.
And he is right. If the training and development group can’t show solid business cases for their initiatives and prove to the business units and the executive team that they are a strategic part of the business, their future with the company is limited.