Not enough time for reflection at work? Ian Helps agrees with you.
“This project represents my first ever critical self-reflection in eight years of working for [my company]”
This quotation captures the tragic waste of human capital prevalent in many companies today. By encouraging staff to 'execute and not think', companies expect high performance. What they increasingly get is obedience, low performance and an organisational inability to adapt fast enough. In this article I would like to demonstrate that there is a better way; one that is in tune with today’s relentlessly changing marketplace.
By critically self-reflecting and immediately applying new insights into business projects for his team, the student quoted above went on to develop a whole new set of opportunities for both himself and his company. He was clear that the old pattern of unquestioningly following old habits would not have brought this success and this matches recent research at Harvard Business School and HEC Paris showing that reflective practice increases performance by over 20%.
The imperative of disruptive change
Digitisation and Big Data is reaching ever further into our lives and the services that we buy, accelerating the pace of change in any industry it touches; think of Amazon and the traditional bookstores or, more recently, Uber and taxis.Technology and telecommunications B2B markets are also at the forefront of disruptive change: SAP moving its services to the cloud; Sony Mobile as it moves to content-rich offerings and Toshiba Tec moving new service-based document management offerings. They are all choosing a different way to learn because, as more markets move at digital speeds, today’s traditional approaches to learning are not fit for purpose.
Today’s best practice is often out of date before it can be codified and, when it is trained, it rarely meets the specific market reality of the learners. And simply going online with training doesn’t solve this basic flaw. A global head of sales enablement summarised his quandary as 'trying to download 300 days worth of information into two days of enablement per quarter.' And it’s going to get worse.
Developing the reflective practitioner
To stay relevant, professionals must develop greater learning agility through thinking and adapting for themselves. By providing an environment which makes the learner think, reflect and challenge their own ways of working they can find new and original answers that can be rapidly deployed to the business front line. The resulting practices work because they have been honed by the people that are using them and, through working collaboratively with their employers, a learning system can be provided based on a number of core principles:
The participant experience drives everything
Follow academically verified best practices for successful adult learning
Provide leading-edge, business-relevant material that radically challenges students’ existing worldviews and triggers them to seek new answers
Students immediately apply the new learnings to a business-relevant project
Use reflective practice and individual, peer-to-peer coaching and virtual collaboration to encourage real learning
Place this in a formal academic framework that ensures quality standards of education and a goal. (For instance, Masters degrees in Transforming Sales or Transforming Sales Leadership that provide student ‘pull’).
Tangible results of reflective practice
A student’s journey starts by transforming their ability to think and change and I've seen them constantly surprise themselves with the results that stem from their ability to transform their practices and those of their teams. Seeing them re-ignite their passion for learning and watching them become much more agile learners than before is like watching Rocky getting back into shape after years out of the boxing ring. They also become thought leaders for their areas of business as they seek new ideas and information to keep them one step ahead. The benefits for their employers are just as significant as they get to retain their top talent and test their best and brightest; many of whom I've seen get promoted off the back of their transformed perspectives.
I firmly believe that this reflective practice approach that focuses on the learning agility of students is a blueprint for learning that can outpace the needs of the market in any profession. And what business can afford to ignore that?
Ian Helps is a director of Consalia, a global sales performance improvement consultancy and a member of Cranfield University’s Practice Advisory Board