2025 was the year L&D stopped hiding in the phone booth.
AI moved from experiment to expectation, skills became currency, and learning teams were asked to prove their worth.
In the same year, the new Superman movie gave us more than nostalgia. It provided a metaphor for what the next generation of learning leaders must become: strategic, brave and unmistakably visible.
From mild-mannered learning to organisational heroics
For too long, L&D has been the Clark Kent of the business world: hardworking, intelligent, often underestimated, and occasionally pushed around by louder departments.
We’ve hidden our capability behind jargon, acronyms and compliance metrics. We’ve delivered solid learning programmes, quietly taking satisfaction in completion rates and survey feedback while the real power sat unused.
But 2025 changed that as AI became mainstream. Skills data started flowing into boardrooms. CEOs began asking how learning could fuel productivity, innovation, and retention. Suddenly, our glasses weren’t fooling anyone. The world could see that beneath the surface, we were sitting on real superpowers: the ability to reskill, reengage, and reimagine the workforce faster than any other function.
And just like Clark Kent realising his strength, the L&D profession had a choice this year: keep the tie straight and the head down or put on the cape.
Flight: Rising above the noise
In Superman (2025), our hero learns that flight isn’t about power; it’s about perspective. It’s the moment he literally and figuratively rises above the chaos to see the bigger picture.
That’s the first lesson for learning leaders heading into 2026.
Too many L&D teams still fly at ground level, responding to requests like “we need a course on resilience” or “let’s roll out management training.” The real superheroes step back and ask why. They see how skills link to business strategy, how culture influences capability and how technology can amplify, not replace, human learning.
Flight is about vision. It’s moving beyond ‘learning as delivery’ and stepping into ‘learning as strategy’. The best L&D teams in 2025 earned their seat at the table not by shouting louder, but by showing leaders how capability powers competitive advantage.
Super strength: Building capabilities that matter
Superman doesn’t flex for fun; he lifts what no one else can. For L&D, strength isn’t about volume of courses or size of catalogue; it’s about impact at scale.
2025 was the year capability frameworks came back with purpose in the style of skills intelligence. Not the old dusty matrices that sat in SharePoint folders, but living ecosystems mapping real-time skills across the organisation. AI tools helped identify where the cracks were and how to close them quickly.
Strength, in learning terms, is being able to:
- Diagnose the critical skills gaps that hold the business back
- Build targeted, adaptive pathways that actually close those gaps
- Deliver that experience at scale, without burning out your team
The strongest L&D functions are no longer internal suppliers. They’re capability architects who design infrastructure that lets people continuously learn, unlearn, and rebuild.
X-ray vision: Seeing beyond the obvious
Superman sees through walls. L&D needs to do the same, but the walls we face aren’t made of brick; they’re made of assumptions.
2025 started to give learning leaders the tools to see what’s really happening in their organisations. Skills analytics revealed what talent data never did: who’s ready to move, who’s quietly disengaging, who’s learning in the shadows.
Yet many teams still don’t look deeply enough. They rely on anecdotes and instinct when data could give them laser precision.
X-Ray vision for L&D means:
- Knowing what capabilities drive future success, not just past performance
- Using insight to guide investment and saying no when something won’t deliver ROI
- Bringing evidence to conversations with senior leaders, not opinion
When you can see through the noise, you stop reacting and start leading.
Heat vision: Focused, targeted, relentless
Superman’s heat vision is the ultimate metaphor for focus. When he directs it, he changes outcomes instantly.
In 2025, focus became a survival skill for L&D. Budgets didn’t suddenly inflate. Teams were leaner, expectations higher, and distractions everywhere. AI tools promised the world, but leaders quickly realised that not every shiny platform could save the day.
The smartest learning functions channelled their energy into a few strategic priorities: aligning with the business, experimenting where impact was visible and cutting the clutter.
Focus means saying no to vanity projects, irrelevant courses, and “tick-box” learning. It means channelling resources where they matter most, such as onboarding, leadership, digital literacy and future skills.
Moral compass: Humanity at the core
What makes Superman heroic isn’t his power; it’s his restraint. His strength means nothing without compassion. He is, after all, our Big Blue Boy scout.
For L&D, that’s the lesson we can’t afford to forget.
As AI and automation reshape work, the temptation is to chase efficiency and scalability. But the best learning professionals in 2025 doubled down on humanity. They designed inclusive, accessible experiences. They taught AI ethics alongside AI literacy and made time to engage hearts and minds. They made wellbeing part of performance.
The future of learning is deeply human.
As we move into 2026, our moral compass must stay fixed on equity, empathy and empowerment. What Superman teaches us is that power without purpose is just destruction.
I’m as human as anyone. I love, I get scared. I wake up every morning and despite not knowing what to do, I put one foot in front of the other and I try to make the best choices I can. I screw up all the time, but that is being human. And that’s my greatest strength.
Superman 2025
In the learning world, we’re often asked to be infallible, but our real power comes from being human, adapting, learning, leading.
The villains of 2025
No hero story works without its villains, and this year, L&D faced plenty.
- Legacy systems: Clunky LMS platforms and outdated processes still drain time and morale.
- Data illiteracy: Too many teams still fear the numbers that could save them.
- Skills debt: The gap between what employees can do and what’s needed is widening, not shrinking.
- AI hype: Tools are being adopted faster than capability, leading to confusion and mistrust.
- Business misalignment: Some learning teams still can’t answer the simple question: “How does this training make us money or save us risk?”
The truth is, every L&D team knows its own Lex Luthor. That internal force pulling focus away from impact.
The difference between survival and success is whether you confront it head-on or pretend it’s someone else’s problem.
Final reflection: The hero we need next
2026 will belong to the learning leaders who:
- Think like strategists, not order takers.
- Use AI and suppliers as allies, not threats.
- Build learning cultures that outlast tools, trends and titles.
As you look back on 2025, ask yourself: are you still hiding behind the desk, or are you ready to fly?


