Saturday, November 25, 2023

Learning & Innovation in Organizations

 



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Introduction

Learning is an intrinsic and pervasive element of human existence, shaping our actions, interactions, and overall development. It is the cornerstone of human behavior, influencing virtually every aspect of our lives. In today's dynamic and rapidly evolving business landscape, the ability to learn continuously is paramount for organizations seeking to thrive and achieve sustainable success.

The modern workplace demands a workforce equipped with a breadth of knowledge, adaptability, and a commitment to lifelong learning. As the business environment transforms, adult learners must stay abreast of the latest trends, technologies, and market shifts to remain relevant and contribute effectively.

Business education programs must align with the evolving needs of both organizations and individuals. Curriculum design should encompass the management skills and competencies essential for navigating the complexities of the contemporary business world. By fostering a culture of continuous learning, organizations can empower their employees to adapt to change, innovate, and drive organizational growth.

The concept of the learning organization has gained significant traction as organizations recognize the importance of capturing and promoting learning at all levels – individual, team, and organizational. Embracing a learning-centric approach enables organizations to harness the collective knowledge and expertise of their workforce, fostering a culture of innovation, collaboration, and continuous improvement.

The Concept of Learning Organizations

A learning organization is a company that facilitates the learning of its members and continuously transforms itself. Examples of learning organizations: Apple, Toyota. The concept was coined through the work and research of Peter Senge and his colleagues.

Define of Learning Organizations

A learning organization is an organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge, and at modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights. Whatever their source, these ideas are the trigger for organizational improvement. But they cannot by themselves create a learning organization.

             - DA Garvin - Harvard Business Review

Learning is an essential ingredient if organizations are to survive. That learning at operational, policy & strategic levels need to be conscious, continuous & integrated. Management is responsible for creating an emotional climate in which all staff can learn continuously.

- Gavin (1993)

Key Principles of the Learning Organization

·     Learning & business strategy are closely linked

The organization consciously learns from business opportunities & threats

Individuals, groups & the whole organization is not only learning but also learning how to learn

Information systems & technology serve to support learning rather than control it

There are well defied processes for defining, creating, capturing, sharing & acting on Knowledge

Key Traits All Learning Organizations Share

·    Collaborative Learning Culture (Systems Thinking)

"Lifelong Learning" Mindset (Personal Mastery)

Room for Innovation (Mental Models)

Forward-Thinking Leadership (Shared Vision)

Knowledge Sharing (Team Learning)

Intellectual Capital - Creativity and Creative thinking

Intellectual capital management and driving creativity and creative thinking within the organization is a key characteristic seen in learning organizations. While intellectual capital management focuses on managing the knowledge flow within the organization, driving creativity and creative thinking keeps the organization fresh and innovative in a challenging business environment to keep it vibrant.

Intellectual Capital

The concept of human capital is associated with the overarching concept of intellectual capital which is defined as the stocks and flows of knowledge available to an organization. It is the intangible resources associated with people who together with the tangible resources. Significance of Intellectual Capital are;

It is clear that Knowledge, Skills & abilities of individuals create value

What is important is how individual knowledge is used, developed, captured & exchanged for organizational effectiveness

Sometimes, vital Intellectual Capital is lost to organizations because management fail to recognize its importance

·     Knowledge Management

Knowledge Management is a process or practice of creating, acquiring, capturing, sharing and using knowledge to enhance learning and performance in organizations.

Creativity and Creative Thinking

Creativity has been associated with a wide range of behavioral and mental characteristics, including associations between semantically remote ideas and contexts, application of multiple perspectives, curiosity, flexibility in thought and action, rapid generation of multiple, qualitatively different solutions. Creativity is a phenomenon whereby something somehow new and somehow valuable is formed. The created item may be intangible or a physical object. Definition of Creativity is; Creativity can be defined as the ability to produce something new or as the act of creating recombining ideas or seeing new relationships among them. It is usually defined in terms of either a process or a product and at times has also been defined in terms of a kind of personality or environmental press. These are the four Ps of creativity: process, product, person, and press.

-        Exploring Environmental Factors in Virtual Teams

·       Creativity is the reasoning that produces imaginative new ideas and new ways of looking at reality. Creativity is an individual process, arises from the idea that popped into someone’s head. Relates facts or ideas without previous relationship and is discontinuous and divergent. No creative process exists if there is no intention or purpose. The essence of the creative process is to seek new combinations.

-        Fab Labs and Makerspaces for Learning and Innovation: The Case of Arhte Program in Brazil

Types of Creativity





Source:https://www.entrepreneursdata.com/types-of-creativity-in-entrepreneurship-fully-explained/

Arne Dietrich, a professor of cognitive neuroscience, identified four different types of creativity in research he published in 2004.

Deliberate and Cognitive Creativity

Deliberate and cognitive creativity is a mental process that relies heavily on an existing body of knowledge and is something that we are consciously aware of. It allows you to sustain focused attention on a problem as well as connect information among your existing body of knowledge from different parts of your brain

Spontaneous and Cognitive Creativity

Spontaneous, cognitive creativity is an unconscious and unpredictable mental process. Spontaneous, cognitive creativity can activate when your brain stops working on something and shifts to your unconscious mind to work on it instead. Your unconscious work is done in the basal ganglia part of your brain

Deliberate and Emotional Creativity

Deliberate creativity is something that's consciously sustained, while spontaneous creativity is unexpected and unanticipated. Cognitive creativity is based in logical mindfulness, while emotional creativity relies on the heart and a person's feelings.

Spontaneous and Emotional Creativity

Spontaneous and emotional creativity takes place in the “amygdala” part of the human brain. Amygdala is responsible for all emotional type of thinking in the human brain. Spontaneous ideas and creativity happen when conscious and Prefrontal brain is resting. This type of creativity is also related to “epiphanies”.

Creative Thinking

Creative thinking is the ability to consider something in a new way. It might be a new approach to a problem, a resolution to a conflict between employees, or a new result from a data set. How do you develop creative thinking?

·       Brainstorm for ideas

·       Role-play scenarios

·       Reframe the issue

·       Make the most of creative flow

·       Stay open-minded and flexible

·       Keep your ego out of it

Why Creative Thinking Is Vital to Business Organization

Organizations today operate in a highly competitive, global environment, making creativity crucial. Creativity is what fuels big ideas, challenges employees' way of thinking, and opens the door to new business opportunities

With business creativity, you get to solve problems faster and easier than ever before. It helps you discover unique ideas that will keep your users interested and engaged, which is vital to your business success. You get to stay one step ahead by uncovering what people need before they need it

Creativity in business is a way of thinking that inspires, challenges, and helps people to find innovative solutions and create opportunities out of problems. It's the reason some companies wow us with new, amazing ideas, whilst others merely follow the beaten path. It's the source of innovation and inspiration

Creativity and innovation can be the pathways for your business to reach new heights of product value, process improvement, productivity, marketing success, and internal harmony. The creative process can lead to novel ideas and concepts.

Creating & Nurturing an Innovation Culture




Creating & Nurturing an Innovation Culture

Source: 3M Corporation

The model from 3M depicts key elements in creating and nurturing an innovation couture throughout the organization.

3M Example for Driving Creativity and Innovation:  

3M draws upon innovative technologies from its portfolio of 55,000 products to create new solutions, such as using dental technology applied to car parts. By making these uncommon connections, the company pioneers new ways of innovating. The strategies developed by 3M are meant for long-term, sustained innovation.

How to Encourage Creative Thinking Within a Business

·       Ask The Right Questions

·       Make Time and Use It Wisely

·       Celebrate While You Can

·       Promote Cross Functional Collaboration

·       Focus On Developing Your Whole Team

·       Provide Freedom and Accountability

·       Show Trust to Those Who Have Earned It

·       Let Go of Fear

·       Push The Limits of Creativity

·       Learn Happily from Your Mistakes

·       Never Stop Brainstorming

·       You Don't Need All the Answers

·       Be Honest and Open

Peter Senge's Theory on the Learning Organizations

Senge’s management theories are influential, academic theories that focus on organizations creating environments where people - both leaders and subordinates - are learning. “The Peter Senge theory of learning organizations” creates an environment where people are engaged in their work and committed to the vision of the organization.

The management theory of Peter Senge is dense with factors that include thinking intuitively and going beyond the basic framework of the organization. “A Peter Senge learning organization” requires new kinds of leadership models.

Peter Senge mental models reflect his belief that the way we process information, the way we see reality, is often wrong. This theory also suggests that we keep viewing the world the same way over and over again, when we should be responding to situations in different ways.

·       Peter Senge theories are written for practicing and aspiring managers. His work is to help managers turn their organizations into learning organizations.

·    The Peter Senge systems thinking believes that in order for organizations to excel in today’s climate, they need to be creative and self-sustaining. If organizations are consistently learning, they will be adapting to the new information and changes that are a constant in today's world

- Management theory of Peter Senge by Geraldine McGowan 02nd May 2010

Peter Senge’s Five Disciplines


Source:https://execed.schulich.yorku.ca/news/becoming-a-learning-organization-through-the-five-disciplines/

Building a Culture of Innovation

Being a truly innovative company is more than dreaming up new products and services, it requires a complete change to a company's organizational culture, where innovation is embodied in everything that gets done by everyone who works there.

- Cris Beswick (Author), Jo Geraghty (Author), Derek Bishop (Author) December 2016

Six Ways Leaders Can Build a Culture of Innovation

We often think of innovation as something that happens in brainstorming sessions about irresistible new products, where someone develops clever marketing campaigns to launch and sell the heck out of them. But take the product out of the equation for a moment and consider a multifaceted approach to innovation across your entire organization. Forbes, for example, suggests starting with the “4 P’s: profit models, processes, products, and policies.” Breaking innovation down into these factions and tackling them as individual challenges will allow you to move faster and with more operational agility.

1)     Empower Your Employees and They'll Provide Value in New Ways

2)     Understand That Failing Is OK

3)     Choose Your Approach to Innovation Metrics Wisely

4)     Don't Be Afraid to Take Action and Quickly

5)     Learn from the Past and Look to the Future

6)     The Burning House

Building a Learning Organization

Learning organizations are skilled at five main activities: systematic problem solving, experimentation with new approaches, learning from their own experience and past history, learning from the experiences and best practices of others, and transferring knowledge quickly and efficiently throughout the organization. Each is accompanied by a distinctive mind-set, tool kit, and pattern of behavior. Many companies practice these activities to some degree. But few are consistently successful because they rely largely on happenstance and isolated examples. By creating systems and processes that support these activities and integrate them into the fabric of daily operations, companies can manage their learning more effectively.

- David A. Garvin Harvard Business Review (July–August 1993)

Seven Steps for Building a Learning Organization to Improve Workplace Performance

1)     Create A Solid and Supportive L&D Infrastructure

2)     Identify In-House Experts

3)     Transform Team Leaders into Online Training Advocates

4)     Develop Measurable Performance Criteria

5)     Offer Ongoing Reinforcement and Knowledge Refreshers

6)     Encourage Self-Guided Exploration and Mistake-Driven Learning

7)     Solicit ELearning Feedback… And Act On It

Differences between Traditional & Learning Organization



References List:

David A. Garvin Harvard Business Review (July–August 1993)

Cris Beswick (Author), Jo Geraghty (Author), Derek Bishop (Author) December 2016

Role of HR in fostering innovative cultures by Glocal Thinking I Esprit Por Xavier Campus I 16th August 2017

Management theory of Peter Senge by Geraldine McGowan 02nd May 2010

Journal of European Industrial Training - ISSN: 0309-0590, Publication date: 1 February 1994





HR and the Digital Paradigm

 


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Introduction

In the dynamic realm of organizational change and transformation, the role of HR professionals emerges as a cornerstone of success. As organizations embark on digital transformation journeys, HR plays a critical role in ensuring that the human element is effectively considered, aligned, and empowered to embrace and navigate this transformative era.

Digital transformation, encompassing the pervasive integration of digital technologies into all aspects of business, has revolutionized the way organizations operate, interact with customers, and achieve their strategic objectives. However, at the heart of any successful transformation lies the human factor. It is the workforce, with their diverse skills, experiences, and perspectives, that ultimately drives innovation, adaptability, and sustainable growth.

HR professionals, as the custodians of human capital, are uniquely positioned to champion the human dimension of digital transformation. They possess a deep understanding of employee needs, motivations, and the intricacies of organizational culture. By leveraging their expertise, HR can effectively:

Digitization

Few decades ago, the digitization word became popular, the traditional analog cassette tapes became audio CDs, video tapes became VCD or DVD, handwritten documents became word processed computerized documents etc. Converting any manual or an analog file into an electronic (digital) is known as Digitization.

 

As an example, a bookshop where people have to physically visit the store or call them to find out available books, can be made convenient by introducing a website where you list your available books through the world wide web.  In your HR Department if you convert CVs received in to electronic files you have successfully digitized your CVs.

 

Digitalization

Although, the word Digitization and Digitalization sounds same, Digitalization has no process involved. When you connect some processing with your digitization then Digitalization takes place. According to Gartner’s glossary. “It is the process of moving to a digital business”. Just because you have something Digital it does not mean that you do any processing with it. Let’s look at our last example of having a website for a bookshop. 


If you can allow your customers to place their orders via your web site and you process the order, now that is digitalization. If you can use your scanned CV with an OCR and capture all information in the CVs to facilitate you to short list your candidates, may be you develop a system where the computer will automatically do the initial screening based on the qualifications and the experience, then this is digitalization

 

Advantages

  • Save space and cost in the long run.
  • Easy access.
  • Improve communication.
  • Opens new opportunities.
  • Improves Efficiency

 

Disadvantages

  • High investment cost.
  • May lead to legal issues.
  • Risk associated when information is centralized.

 

Digital Workspace Strategy

Digital workplace strategy is not only about hardware and software. There are many other important aspects especially with regards to employee experience. Digital workspace strategy boosts employee engagement and agility through consumerization of the work environment. As HR professionals it is important not to ignore employees in this journey of digitalization. Digital workplace strategy is how technology can be used to achieve further goals of the Organization.

 

  • Creating a Vision
  • Develop a Strategy
  • Use of Technology
  • Inculcating Change
  • Employee Experience
  • Processes
  • Organizational Change
  • Training

 

HR and the Digital Paradigm

Digital Culture

A proper digital transformation needs proper culture cultivated in Organization. In such competitive market, the need to create and cultivate a digital culture is an integral part of the transformation process. This change requires a work environment that not only embeds digital from the top-down but also ensures that employees are informed, engaged and most importantly empowered to help cultivate a digital mindset in-house.

 

  • Embrace Transparency
  • Encourage Collaboration
  • Offer Digital Training
  • Be Comfortable with Risk
  • Aspire to Inspire

 

https://www.aihr.com/blog/guide-hr-digital-transformation-hr-transformation/

Digital transformation of HR

To automate processes and reduce the time spent on repetitive tasks.

To maximize the employee experience.

To use free time to strategize and ultimately benefit the business bottom line

 

Use Data & Analytics

Slowly but surely, HR is starting to understand the value that data analytics can add to the business. Preselection, Learning & Development (L&D), employee engagement, you name it; there’s HR technology out there to measure every single part of the employee lifecycle. The question, however, is whether there are enough HR professionals out there yet, who can make sense out of this data.

 

Future-Proof Recruitment

A smooth mobile (application) experience, a data-driven preselection process and a personalized, AI based onboarding Program. These are just a few of the many examples of how recruitment is digitalizing.

 

Improve the Employee Experience

For 21st century employees, the line between their professional and personal lives has become blurred. Yes, they will check their social media account during office hours, but they will equally check their work emails during the weekend.

 

Offer Self-Service tools to Employees

This one is in line with an improved employee experience but focuses on the HR side of it. Just as employees like to be able to choose how and when they manage their professional emails and workload, they want to manage their HR data.

 

Be Competitive in the War for Talent

Millennials and generation Z – in other words, the (future) workforce – are constantly connected to social media and glued to their phones. Companies that use these digital technologies for various HR purposes – think sourcing, preselection and learning & development for instance – have a significant competitive advantage when it comes to seducing this demanding generation of workers.




  • Starting with HR digital transformation
  • Establish a clear goal Get everyone on board.
  • Don’t overcomplicate things.
  • Prioritize ideas.
  • Assess performance.
  • Culture is important.

 

Artificial Intelligence in Human Resource Management

Artificial Intelligence (AI) integration into human resources (HR) practices will make Organizations better because these applications can analyze, predict and diagnose to help HR teams make better decision. AI can be embedded in functions such as recruitment, training, onboarding, performance analysis, retention etc. However, a majority of Organizations are still lagging in integrating AI to its HR practices because of cost.

 

Use of AI in Recruitment and Onboarding

Once hiring Managers have found the best fit for their open positions, the onboarding process begins. With the help of AI, this process doesn’t have to be restricted to standard business hours a huge improvement over onboarding processes of the past.

 

AI in Mobility and Employee Retention

In addition to improvements to the recruitment process, HR professionals can also utilize artificial intelligence to boost internal mobility and employee retention. Through personalized feedback surveys and employee recognition systems, Human Resources departments can gauge employee engagement and job satisfaction more accurately today than ever before.

 

AI in Automation of Administrative Tasks

Smart technologies can automate processes such as the administration of benefits, pre-screening candidates, scheduling interviews, and more. Although each of these functions are important to the overall success of an organization, carrying out the tasks involved in such processes is generally time[1]consuming, and the burden of these duties often means that HR professionals have less time to contribute to serving their employees in a more impactful way.

 

Digitization in T&D

Traditional Instructor led physical classes are not outdated. With the advancement of the technology and the internet speed, online classes and virtual classes are becoming popular day by day. Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), Learning Management Systems (LMS), Mobile Learning are few new concepts that came with the digitalization.


Use of artificial intelligence and machine learning

According to the IEEE Global Study, critical technological changes in 2023 will be artificial intelligence and machine learning (21%), cloud computing (20%), and 5G (17%).


With the desire to develop the business, 66% of world business leaders and analysts agree AI will drive most innovation in almost every industry over the next 1-5 years. For example, Mark Hornung, a senior employer brand strategist at exaqueo, believes that AI and ML will help HR managers reduce their workload while improving the overall productivity of their businesses further in 2023.

Reference List:

Ulrich, Dave. HR from the Outside In: Six Competencies for the Future of Human Resources. McGraw-Hill Education, 2013.

This book by Dave Ulrich, a renowned HR expert, outlines six key competencies that HR professionals need to develop in order to succeed in the digital age. These competencies include: strategic HR leadership, HR delivery excellence, HR change leadership, employee advocacy, technology and analytics, and measurement and reporting.

Bersin, Josh. The HR Technology Handbook: A Guide for Business Leaders, HR Professionals, and Vendors. McGraw-Hill Education, 2016.

This comprehensive book by Josh Bersin provides a practical guide to HR technology for business leaders, HR professionals, and vendors. It covers everything from selecting and implementing HR technology to measuring its impact on the organization.

Rothwell, William J., and Kevin R. Werbach. Hyperconnected HR: Leveraging Social Technologies for Strategic Talent Management. SHRM, 2013.

This book by William Rothwell and Kevin Werbach explores how organizations can use social technologies to improve their HR processes. It covers topics such as social recruiting, employee engagement, and performance management.

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/future-hr-transforming-human-resources-digital-age-trisdarisa

Web: https://www.peoplematters.in/blog/hr-technology/paradigm-shift-in-hr-technology-a-key-to-drive-the-future-of-work-27748

Web: https://www.peoplematters.in/article/culture/the-recipe-of-getting-the-right-kind-of-digital-transformation-focus-on-culture-not-technology-30570

Web:https://www.aihr.com/blog/guide-hr-digital-transformation-hr-transformation/

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Learning & Innovation in Organizations

  Source:  https://ssir.org/images/jcogs_img/cache/AU-Yale-592x333_-_28de80_-_f0e877e06a923fdfe22fd7577f4f95bf2326c5ca.jpg Introduction Le...