Enabling digital learning and embedding it in the flow of work is essential for any organization striving to be digitally mature—and that should be every organization.
We
often hear threats of the imminent doom headed our way in the form of
artificially intelligent robots. Instead of considering robotics and cognitive
technologies as a way to reduce the need for humans, organizations should be
considering how the future of work drives complementary capacity
created by automation. HR and Learning & Development (L&D) have a
significant opportunity to help the organization transition toward structures
capable of moving faster, learning rapidly, and embracing the dynamic,
human-centered careers created as a result of digital proliferation and increased
automation.
Digital
disruption continues to compel organizations to rethink how they do almost
everything. Machines may someday make “hard” skills (e.g., coding, data
analysis) obsolete in humans, so what’s needed are skills that enable an
organization to continue to adapt, innovate, and thrive. A culture of
learning—both for the organization and the people in it—is now a critical
component of any business strategy. Organizations and individuals should learn
how to do the same things differently, learn how to do other things entirely,
and, along the way, learn how to build competitive skills to sustain themselves
over time, whether over the course of a career or the lifetime of a business.
Bersin
research reveals that a true High-Impact Learning Organization (HILO)
is always learning—the entire organization enables and supports a
culture where learning is work and work is learning. Cognitive
technologies are playing an increasing role in work, which impacts the way we
need to approach learning and careers. We like to think about cognitive
technology in terms of four levels of application ranging from robotic process
automation (RPA) to human-like processing capabilities.
RPA
is where many organizations begin, using it to streamline “labor” work. Progressing
to cognitive and AI applications is where “thought” work becomes involved. In
either case, the use of cognitive technologies creates an augmented workforce,
and organizations need to understand the unique capabilities that humans and
machines bring to bear in order to realize the full scale of business impacts.
Realign rather than replace
While
much of the discussion of machine intelligence has centered
around replacing human capabilities, its real power and potential
comes from realigning human capabilities. In the cognitive era,
human and machine intelligence are best viewed as complements rather than
substitutes. Each has distinctive capabilities that are dependent on one
another, and to realize the most from pairing human and machine, businesses should
focus on how the two interact and reinforce one another, rather than on their
individual capabilities.
Embracing L&D and HR as
strategic enablers
One
of the takeaways from the Bersin HILO research is that L&D is in
a tenuous position as learning shifts from being solely in the purview of
L&D to being deeply embedded in the fiber of the entire organization. To
evolve, L&D’s role needs to shift from owner to influencer. The learning
function and HR are uniquely positioned as strategic enablers of enterprise
adoption and use of cognitive technologies. As such, L&D and HR leaders
should think about how to leverage this position. At the same time, the C-suite
should recognize it as a business imperative.
Claiming a seat
Having
a seat at the table in terms of how the organization blends cognitive
technologies into operations is critical, and that’s more likely to occur if HR
and L&D efforts capture C-suite attention. According to
Deloitte’s 2017 Global Human Capital Trends research, even though 77
percent of surveyed global executives expect to retrain or redeploy the human
talent displaced by new forms of automation, only 17 percent say they’re ready
to manage a work¬force with people, robots, and AI working side by
side. Chances are good that some parts of your organization are thinking
about or already implementing some form of cognitive technology (for
example, finance using blockchain to create a digital ledger, or even
within HR itself), and efforts across multiple business units may be fragmented.
HR and L&D can play a role to unify efforts, breaking down silos to develop
a cohesive plan for the workforce.
Creating a culture
of always-on, embedded learning
To
maximize cognitive technologies, learning should be deeply embedded in the flow
of work. This means:
2.
Understanding the synergy of machines plus humans. To realize the most from
pairing human and machine, focus on how the two interact, rather than on their
individual capabilities. Machines are good at using and applying knowledge
(e.g., quantitative analysis, image, and text recognition, predictive
analytics, task performance), while humans excel at creating and expanding
knowledge (e.g., innovation, qualitative evaluation, contextualization,
developing definitions, rules, and structures). Both skill sets are imperative,
but neither is effective on its own.
2.
Redefining existing work processes to more efficiently and effectively use
automation and machine technologies, where appropriate, looking beyond the
obvious processes for additional candidates for automation. For example, it may
be obvious that a system should be able to automate class assignments or mass
notifications, but what about creating a customer portfolio that a sales rep
can then discuss one-on-one with the customer?
3.
Designing a learning strategy for reskilling/upskilling. To make effective use
of the melding of machines and humans at work, we have to help people shift and
adapt.
–
Reinvent learning to better equip career transitions on-the-fly
–
Employ targeted micro-learning to provide information in the appropriate format
at the right time
–
Identify mentors to invest in team members’ transitioning roles
–
Enable learning communities, encouraging collaboration, and leveraging the
power of the crowd source knowledge
–
Embed learning experiences in the flow of augmented work.
4.
Redeploying talent to capitalize on newly achieved synergies. With machines
taking over some aspects of work, humans can be redeployed to focus on their
innate strengths, as our colleagues noted in this discussion of the future
of work—curiosity, creativity, imagination, emotional intelligence—and
harnessing those to both solve problems and creatively identify new
opportunities.
A (r)evolution in work and
careers
In a world where
work, learning, and career are fully integrated, the full scope of human
potential is unlocked—that’s the revolution that cognitive
technologies and automation are helping to bring about. If, as an HR or
learning leader in your organization, you’re not part of that conversation, you
need to be. Enabling digital learning and embedding it in the flow of
work is essential for any organization striving to be digitally mature—and that
should be every organization.