• MDI
  • German version
  • Contact us
MDI Management Development
  • Agile leadership
  • Lateral Leadership
  • Leadership Impact
  • Leadership Development
Select Page
Learning in the agile age: waterfall or cycle?

Learning in the agile age: waterfall or cycle?

by Dominik Etzl | Jun 28, 2022 | Agile Leadership, Best Practice, MDI Inside | 0 comments

What is the reality of learning in large companies today?

We often see in a wide variety of companies that there is a department that is single-handedly responsible for designing training programs, then planning them through from A to Z in advance, with a strong focus on teaching abstract models.

What’s the problem with that? Firstly, the work context is too complex for any department to know what the employees’ real-world challenges are. Secondly, the pace of change is now too fast for training to be valid over time. And thirdly: Us humans are not purely rational beings who learn on the basis of theoretical models, but also need “heart” and “hand” to change.

About the author

​Dominik Etzl is Solution Development Manager and Trainer at MDI Management Development GmbH and Managing Director of Metaforum International. His focus is on topics of digital transformation, as well as OKR (Objectives & Key Results), agile leadership and lateral leadership. His goal is to support managers in leading a valuable contribution to their environment: on an individual, corporate and societal level.

Waterfall vs. cycle

It seems obvious: If employees are inefficient somewhere, we choose an expert on learning who is qualified by his long-time expertise to create the perfect learning program with the appropriate content.

Although this seems very obvious at first glance, this approach belongs to the outdated mindset of taylorism. This sees people as machines working on an assembly line, for which all that is needed is an engineer who knows which update will increase efficiency. Learning here resembles a waterfall, where from start to finish one thing leads causally to the next.

In theory, it looks like this:

  1. Pre-reading X leads to
  2. Aha-experience, leads to
  3. Interest in more, leads to
  4. Active involvement in the seminar, leads to
  5. Trying out in everyday life, leads to
  6. Better business results, …

Is learning even plannable?

This approach cannot be dismissed completely. After all, looking back on a learning experience, correlations can be seen! Entire models and companies have specialized in optimizing this approach. For example, Dr. Donald Kirkpatrick has made the valuable contributions with the “New World Model” that a training program must be designed “back to front”. One must derive the necessary behaviors etc. from the desired goal and not vice versa.

This has its merits. Nevertheless, these approaches are built on an assumption: Learning could be planned.

Thought exercise

But is it? Please think of one thing in which you have achieved mastery. Would your personal path to mastery, as it happened, have been predictable? Could an expert have given you a coherent chain of experiences that you just had to follow blindly to get really good at? Of course not. Nevertheless, in practice we see far too often that people compulsively try to understand learning as a complicated, i.e. mechanically transparent problem.

Learning is a profoundly complex problem

However, it is true that learning is a deeply complex problem and thus cannot be planned. Whenever we deal with people, especially knowledge workers, we find ourselves in the complex cynefin quadrant. Thus, the expert loses its validity. There are no more “good practices” to follow, only “emergent practices.” This means it takes an iterative, collaborative, and holistic approach to learning. So the metaphor for learning – especially in the digitized 21st century – is not the waterfall, but the circle.

The 3×3 Rule

In what follows, we don’t invent anything new, but let the effective laws of learning work for themselves. What we are doing is bringing 3 elements of agile learning, which have mostly been seen separately, into a coherent picture.

Element 1: 3 process steps

Agile has defined – in complex situations – iteration as the most efficient way to reach the goal. The mantra is: long planning is a waste of time because the context is in flux. It is more efficient to take small steps and to refocus on the goal at regular intervals. This applies to project management (e.g., SCRUM) or product development (e.g., design thinking) just as it does to learning: “What small learning iteration do I need right now to master tomorrow’s deadline better than yesterdays?”

Big Picture

At the same time, it’s important not to lose sight of the big picture in learning either. Similar to business strategies, there needs to be some sort of vision or north star to follow. This can also be questioned at regular intervals. In this way, short-term and long-term goals form a symbiosis that optimally supports the learner in the learning journey.

Thought Exercise

Join in: What’s a skill you’re proud of? How did you learn it? – Think through the process: Whatever you learned, at some early point you had at least a rough idea of what you wanted to learn next (planning). Then you jumped into the more or less deep end (acting). Finally, you were either happy because you managed one more pace in the water, or you pulled yourself out of the water exhausted and analyzed what could be better (evaluating). Then the cycle starts all over again.

Let’s take a figurative look at this – indeed, deeply human – movement: These 3 process steps form the outer framework of the MDI learning circle: plan, act & evaluate. They are the skeleton that gives the learning process its shape:

Element 2: 3 levels of action

Running in circles does not automatically make you better. Us humans are living beings and need stimulation on 3 levels, which only as a coherent whole results in change.

Mostly unconscious, but nevertheless present in every learning process, are these 3 effect levels of learning:

  1. Brain: understanding why and how something works
  2. Heart: feeling that the current situation is not good, or that another one would be better
  3. Hand: trying – only by doing the world changes

Learning can start at any point

Tip: The 3 levels of impact are not chronological, but learning can start at any point. What is important is not when, but that all 3 are stimulated. Think of a 3-legged stool: If one leg is missing – no matter which one – the stool tilts. Three of them create stability.

What happens if one of the three “legs” is missing?

  • A learner without “brain” (cognitive insight) is at best a “blind benefactor” – and at worst wasted potential because he does not see when, how and why action should be taken.
  • A learner without “heart” (emotional responsiveness) is at best a “rational optimizer” and at worst a narcissistic manipulator.
  • A learner without “hand” (practical experience) is at best a “benevolent theorist” and at worst an “aloof know-it-all”.

These three types are extreme expressions to illustrate the co-dependency of the 3 levels of effectiveness. In practice you will find these types in a weakened and mixed form. Do you recognize someone?

Example

But let’s also look at a positive example. For example, on the topic of giving feedback:
Giving critical feedback in such a way that the other person receives it as a gift is an art. It has to be learned. Are you good at it? If so, please recall a specific feedback situation. (If not: Choose another skill you have mastered.) – If you are a master of feedback, you have certainly given and received critical feedback frequently (hand). – You’ve felt at several moments how it works, how good authentic feedback feels, and how painful hidden or unfair criticism is (heart). And you cognitively understood that critical feedback is a value-add that moves you and your colleagues forward, even if it’s not always pleasant (brain).

Note: Often it’s not stand-alone learning moments, but many small “AHAs” that lead to the big “eureka.”

Element 3: 3 Stakeholders

The third part of the 3×3 rule is about stakeholders. Why? Learning success in business is proven to be a collaborative success. It takes several to pull together and make their respective contributions. Who is that specifically? Learning research clearly shows that 3 stakeholders in organizations are crucial for learning to actually work (cf. Weinbauer-Heidel, Ibeschitz-Manderbach):

  1. Learner
  2. Organization (especially HR & leadership)
  3. Trainer

The learner
he learner naturally bears a main responsibility for the interplay of learning and applying. What matters most is the learner’s own will and confidence to apply the content in the short and long term.

The organization
The organization’s learning lever lies primarily in providing a system for defining and evaluating short- and long-term learning objectives that learners can use as a guide.

The Trainer
The biggest levers to learning success on the trainer side are clearly communicating expectations, teaching relevant content, allowing active practice in the seminar and conducting implementation planning for applying what is learned in the work context.

Similar to the 3 levels of impact, all 3 stakeholders play essential roles in the success of learning in continuing education. If one of the 3 stakeholders does not fulfill his task, potentials remain unused and in the worst case the learning construct collapses like a house of cards.

The MDI Learning Circle

Finally, let’s take a step back and widen our view again from the individual element to the big picture. What does the 3×3 rule tell us? It sums up how learning works in an agile environment. Here you can find everything summarized in one picture:

  • The 3 process steps: plan, act, evaluate.
  • The 3 levels of action: Brain, Heart, Hand
  • The 3 stakeholders: Learner, Organization, Trainer

Take all 3 elements into account and you can be sure that the learning success in your organization will increase!  Note: This article addresses almost exclusively your brain – not your heart or your hand! ? So consider: what concrete next steps can you take to establish a more agile learning culture in your organization?

What serves you next?

Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions

by Anita Berger | 14. April 2025 | Impuls series, Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions Change processes often involve challenges....
Read More

4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader

by Anita Berger | 3. April 2025 | Impuls series, Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader Imagine a dynamic network of paths that is constantly changing. While...
Read More

Mastering Communication: The Why, How, and What

by Marcin Swierkocki | 14. January 2025 | Agile Leadership, Leadership Tips, Short Knowledge Bits | 0 Comments

Mastering Communication: The Why, How, and What Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version!Mastering Communication: The Why, How, and What Have you ever heard an employee say something like, "I won't be able to meet...
Read More

Successful Team Building for Boehringer Ingelheim RCV

by Anita Berger | 29. March 2024 | Customer Story, International leadership development, MDI Inside | 0 Comments

Successful Team Building for Boehringer Ingelheim RCV Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:Successful Team Building for Boehringer Ingelheim RCV In the interview with our MDI trainer and partner, Anita Berger On...
Read More

Organize Your Team in a Hybrid Workplace

by Peter Grabuschnig | 14. March 2024 | Impuls series, International leadership development, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

Organize Your Team in a Hybrid Workplace Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling.Organize Your Team in a Hybrid Workplace In his new Rise Course, our MDI trainer and...
Read More

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles – an experiment by a CEO

by Gunther Fürstberger | 14. November 2023 | International leadership development, Leadership and AI, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles: Learn more about the ongoing ChatGPT experiment by MDI CEO Gunther Fürstberger Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated version. Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership...
Read More

AI as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development

by Gunther Fürstberger | 14. November 2023 | Impuls series, International leadership development, Leadership and AI | 0 Comments

Artificial Intelligence as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development Do you prefer to listen to this blog article? Click below to access our AI-generated version. Artificial Intelligence as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development In a world that is constantly evolving, we...
Read More

Recap: This was the L&D Summer at MDI

by Iris Burner | 3. October 2023 | Leadership Impact, MDI Inside, Short Knowledge Bits | 0 Comments

Recap: This was the L&D summer at MDI Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling. Recap: This was the L&D summer at MDI Summer at MDI is not only the time to...
Read More

Promoting Cohesion and Retaining Talent: Leadership in Focus

by Peter Grabuschnig | 17. August 2023 | International leadership development, Leadership in the digital transformation, training new leader | 0 Comments

Promoting Cohesion and Retaining Talent: Leadership in Focus Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling.Promoting Cohesion and Retaining Talent: Leadership in Focus In...
Read More

What Leaders Should Consider When Implementing AI

by Jana Wölfl | 26. July 2023 | Agile Leadership, eLearning, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

What Leaders Should Consider When Implementing AI A New Step into the World of Technologies - Artificial Intelligence for Leaders Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep...
Read More

Five Characteristics of Agile Leadership Development

Five Characteristics of Agile Leadership Development

by Gunther Fürstberger | Jun 22, 2021 | Agile Leadership, International leadership development, learning effectiveness | 0 comments

What does the future of agile Leadership Development look like?

MDI CEO Gunther Fürstberger has answers and shows you five helpful Characteristics.

In the past, leadership development was mainly carried out in the classic mindset of project management. To achieve specific goals, a project team led by the Learning & Development department defined multi-modular development programs and educational catalogs.

Lifelong learning

With the spread of e-learning, development programs were enriched with blended learning elements. With home offices, learning experience platforms and the need for lifelong learning, it is time for an agile mindset and toolset to take hold in leadership development as well.

Starting from the learner

L&D-driven training programs with a transfer concept will continue to exist, but no longer as a core component, but as a supplement to a development concept starting from the learner. The transfer of learning, which is at least theoretically held in high regard, is also part of the ‘waterfall view’ of traditional project management.

Learning that is demand-driven, tailored and up-to-date

In the meantime, Youtube, Netflix, etc. have enabled demand-driven, tailored and up-to-date learning. For example, if you want to learn to change the wheel of a micro-scooter, you can get immediately actionable offers on the Internet. Many programs learn as they go and suggest to learners, with AI support, what they will need next. Agile leadership development means enabling timely, appropriate learning experiences for ongoing leadership learning needs and is driven by five characteristics:

5 Characteristics of Agile Leadership Development:

  • Iteration
  • Empowerment
  • Purposeful learning motivation
  • Effective, transparent learning process
  • Use of current learning technology

1. Iteration

Agile methods such as Scrum or OKR are based on the principle of checking in regular, rather shorter intervals: “Where do we stand and where do we want to go?” The same principle makes sense in L&D: For example, reviewing once per quarter based on target competencies and results:

  • Where do we stand? (Review)
  • How was the learning process? (Retrospective)
  • What do we want to have learned in the coming quarter? (Goal setting)
  • During the quarter, we work towards the goals. Regular check-ins, e.g., weekly, are used to review learning progress, set next learning activities, and ensure that the importance of learning can prevail over the urgency of day-to-day business.

2. Empowerment

The learner as designer: in the past, companies mainly saw the L&D department as primarily responsible for operational learning. Today, it proves to be more efficient if the learners themselves take the main responsibility. L&D can support by making particularly attractive parts of the “learning ocean” accessible through research and negotiation with learning providers and can also ensure that the corporate culture and strategy are supported through pre-selection of content.

Planned training programs with consistent participants fit less in the agile learning world than in traditional learning environments. And in the trainings, the methodology also changes towards

  • Working with practical cases from the participants
  • More coaching orientation than teaching
  • Accompanying learners in practical applications through shadowing.

The consistent orientation towards the learner and the intensive involvement in the design of the learning process also increases commitment.

3. Meaningful learning motivation

Learners are no longer sent to seminars. The focus is on intrinsic motivation. In other words, learners know why they are learning something at a particular time in a particular way. Usually because they themselves have identified a challenge that they now want to overcome.

When the L&D department wants to promote a learning project, it focuses primarily on the “why.” What are the opportunities, what is the benefit of what has been learned? If employees understand for themselves that an agile learning culture brings more advantages than disadvantages for them, then the ball will keep rolling. In this way, a sustainable, agile learning culture can be built that is not lived by push from the outside, but pull from within.

4. Effective, transparent learning process

The meaningfulness of lifelong learning for leaders means that no quarter goes by without a need to learn. As a result, learning is a process in which 3 sub-steps are repeated on a regular basis:

Step 1

Define target competencies and learning outcomes: Learners define the target competencies together with their own leaders, L&D and, in some cases, colleagues and customers. A distinction can be made between two time horizons:

Long-term: this is a set of competencies valid for e.g. 2 years for the current function description. This long-term set of competencies is adjusted once a year for the next two years.

Short-term: effectiveness is increased by focusing on only a few competencies and expected learning outcomes within a quarter, e.g., 3 in total.

Learning objectives are defined as either intended learning outcomes or competencies. The recommended formulation is the future completed at the end of the quarter, “I will have learned X.” This envisioned image exerts motivational traction for the learning process.

Step 2 

Learning and measuring progress during the quarter: During the quarter, learners have a variety of asynchronous and synchronous learning opportunities available to them:

Asynchronous offerings are e-learnings, learning videos, or learning audios from inside and outside the organization.

Synchronous offerings are face-to-face events and virtual measures such as webinars, master classes, etc., usually with the possibility of direct exchange among learners and with the trainer or coach.

Since learning preferences vary, it is largely up to the learner to decide which offerings, at what intensity, and at what times are best suited. Some prefer to learn via audio files while doing sports, others need personal exchange with colleagues or a trainer. Since many things are constantly changing anyway, learning is understood as a continuous process for which a certain time and financial budget is dedicated.

Those who see learning as a project could run the risk of valuable time being lost between projects and the learning projects themselves losing relevance even before they have been completed.

Measuring progress is done through check-in meetings with yourself and a learning partner. Many learning platforms offer an automatic reminder, but a recurring appointment in Outlook is also sufficient. Intermediate grading in percentages helps visualize progress, making it more present.

Step 3

Diagnose competencies at the end of the quarter, review and adjust intended learning outcomes: At the end of the quarter, learners take a final grading before the learning cycle begins again with the definition of new intended learning outcomes. Average goal attainment is less important than the process of continuous learning. It promotes motivation when the learning trend is made visible across quarters. Gamification of the entire learning journey with bonus games, treasure hunts, and continuous feedback will contribute to the joy of learning especially for younger learners.

5. Use of current learning technology

In the meantime, the use of e-learning to supplement other learning formats has become a common practice. There are hundreds of learning platforms on the market that aim to support different learning scenarios. LMS are mostly used to provide web-based learning content, track learning progress and facilitate communication.

Current developments are moving in the direction of learning experience platforms that use artificial intelligence to make learning suggestions to the learner based on his or her past queries. Internet applications such as Amazon, Booking.com, etc. observe user behavior and thus make suggestions that are as accurate as possible. AI is helping to get to know users better and better. It becomes more convenient for users because they are supported in their routines.

At the same time, atypical learning experiences should be maintained, since deeper learning involves confusion and breaking away from old concepts.

The original german article was written for Magazin Training by

Gunther Fürstberger

Gunther Fürstberger

CEO , MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, book author and CEO of MDI, a global leadership development institute and managing director of Metaforum. His core competence is leadership in the digital transformation. He gained his own leadership experience as HR manager of McDonald’s Central Europe/Central Asia, among others.

  • LinkedIn

Do you want to master the most effective tools and concepts for innovation, productivity and growth?

Then shape your path to success in digitalisation with agile leadership!

Secure a place on the course now

What might help you next?

Leadership and AI: Between Responsibility and Opportunity

by Marina Begic | 6. May 2025 | Digital Transformation, Leadership and AI, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

Leadership and AI: Between Responsibility and Opportunity Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version!Leadership and AI: Between responsibility and opportunity Artificial intelligence is no longer a pipe dream – it is...
Read More

AI Hears; Humans Listen: Become a Master of Attunement

by Hamza Khan | 18. April 2025 | Digital Transformation, Leadership and AI, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

AI Hears; Humans Listen: Become a Master of Attunement Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling.AI Hears; Humans Listen: Become a Master of Attunement Not Black...
Read More

Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions

by Anita Berger | 14. April 2025 | Impuls series, Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions Change processes often involve challenges....
Read More

Aligning Training Goals with Organizational Business Objectives

by Marcin Swierkocki | 10. April 2025 | eLearning, Learning Transfer, Short Knowledge Bits | 0 Comments

Aligning Training Goals with Organizational Business Objectives Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version! Aligning Training Goals with Organizational Business Objectives In my experience, aligning training with...
Read More

4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader

by Anita Berger | 3. April 2025 | Impuls series, Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader Imagine a dynamic network of paths that is constantly changing. While...
Read More

MDI’s Leadership Lab: Unlocking the Future of Leadership Training

by Florian Biedermann | 25. March 2025 | Leadership and AI, Leadership in the digital transformation, MDI Inside | 0 Comments

MDI's Leadership Lab: Unlocking the Future of Leadership Training Would you like to listen to this article?  Click here to access our AI-generated audio version! Have fun listening ;)MDI's Leadership Lab: Unlocking the Future of Leadership Training The world of...
Read More

AI Transformation: How Companies Need to Adapt

by Gunther Fürstberger | 12. February 2025 | Digital Transformation, Leadership and AI, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

AI transformation: how companies and leaders need to adapt Economic history repeatedly shows how technological leaps revolutionize entire industries. 150 years ago, sailing ships dominated world trade, while steamships were only used on lakes and rivers. But within 30...
Read More

No Success Without Diversity: Why It Matters

by ARS Academy, MDI | 5. February 2025 | Best Practice, Leadership and AI, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

No Success without Diversity: Why it Matters Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version! No Success without Diversity: Why it Matters The world of work is facing major challenges – from economic uncertainty and the...
Read More

Challenges and Solutions for Leadership in 2025

by MDI & ARS Academy | 14. January 2025 | Best Practice, Leadership in the digital transformation, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

Challenges and Solutions for Leadership in 2025 Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version!Leadership challenges and solutions in 2025 In an increasingly complex and uncertain world, companies and their leaders face...
Read More

Mastering Communication: The Why, How, and What

by Marcin Swierkocki | 14. January 2025 | Agile Leadership, Leadership Tips, Short Knowledge Bits | 0 Comments

Mastering Communication: The Why, How, and What Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version!Mastering Communication: The Why, How, and What Have you ever heard an employee say something like, "I won't be able to meet...
Read More
The Future of Workplace Learning – Digitization Boost

The Future of Workplace Learning – Digitization Boost

by Marina Begic | Apr 13, 2021 | Agile Leadership, eLearning, Impuls series, learning effectiveness | 0 comments

Impuls Series - The Future of Workplace Learning

Part 1 with Marina Begic: Digital Business Development Expert and Senior L&D Consultant

Our Digital Business Development Expert and Senior L&D Consultant Marina Begic is currently focusing intensively on “The Future of Workplace Learning”.

Fast and targeted learning, especially for leaders, is becoming increasingly important in an intensifying digital and agile world. Therefore, Marina shares her personal learnings with us. Let’s get started with the topic “Digitization Boost”.

By the way, we’ll soon continue with our second part: “Why you can do without Learning managment systems? (LMS)” We’re looking forward to it already!

Hey, Marina is a member of our LinkedIn expert group

If you would like to exchange thoughts and ideas about “Agile Leadership Development”, please send us a request. We are looking forward to you and your valuable impulses!

Join us now!

The Future of Workplace Learning

“friendly reminder”

Who doesn’t know this or a similar situation? The newly announced learning platform, which has been around for 2 years now, “will change the learning culture in the company in the long term, teach us innovative things and save us a lot of time”. Finally it comes out with the first two e-learnings: Fire Protection Ordinance and Compliance…

While you read the bubble text about “maintaining a safe distance from machines in production”, you can visibly see that a lot of effort has been made to maintain the corporate design and the new diversity policy, right down to the avatar named Lucy. After successfully completing the first two courses (there is no other way, since you can click around, until you find the right answer in the final quiz), the third one comes out 3 months later…

After resetting the access data of the e-learning platform (for the 7th company internal tool),

by finding the announcement mail with the link to the platform, one looks with joyful expectation and sees the only new e-learning course is on the topic of “IT security”. The deadline for completion is by the end of the quarter, so there is still enough time. We quickly close the program again. However, this time we set our favorites, so that the next time we do not have to look trough all our mails. In addition our e-mails do not become less and there is still so much to do for the upcoming presentation of a new project this week…

Three days after the end of the quarter comes the third “friendly reminder” from the supervisor, this time in red and capital letters. It tells us to complete the e-learning course “IT Security”, otherwise the quarterly commission cannot be paid on time if the learning objectives have not been achieved.

It’s hard to set priorities here, isn’t it?

The Future of Workplace Learning – Digitization Boost

Current developments

In the 21st-century-skills (P21) the following 4 skills were defined in the area of learning to be able to participate in modern working life:

  • critical thinking
  • creativity
  • collaboration
  • communication

The model has been extended, discussed and modified many times, but it is remarkable that the active and interpersonal part has always remained. Experts agree that learning alone is no longer sustainable in the 21st century.

Technical innovations have redefined teaching and learning

With the breaking down of technical barriers thanks to cloud solutions, more stable and faster internet, learning management systems (LMS) have become increasingly popular. The Corona pandemic gave the perceived need for LMSs another boost.

Face-to-face training sessions have had to be cancelled from one day to the next, and to ensure that learning doesn’t stop, numerous programs have helped to ensure that knowledge building, training and skills transfer can still take place. In other words, synchronous or asynchronous formats were put in place.

In Jane Hart’s annual international study of the “Top Tools for Learning” in over 45 countries, it can be seen that learning in the workplace does not happen only or only to a small extent via LMS.

The majority of learning does not take place via formal tools, but via informal and, in particular, via active tools, i.e. by trying things out for oneself and talking about them or sharing them!

Top Tools for Learning 2020 (Hart, 2020) 

Since the introduction of e-learnings, the decline of face-to-face training has been prophesied.

Despite many proven advantages such as cost savings, increased learning transfer, more flexible learning through location and time-independent learning, it was only the Corona pandemic that made the necessity of digital learning formats apparent to even the very last companies.

It has become clear that there will be no return to the old ways.

Two-thirds of companies are planning to move employees to remote working in the long term. It is now known that the half-life of knowledge is decreasing insanely fast and that one must continue to learn continuously in one’s working life.

A century ago, it took about 35 years to correct or replace half the knowledge an engineer learned in college. New estimates put the half-life of an engineering degree between 2.5 and five years. The basics remain, but other things evolve.

“Those who don’t evolve with the times will soon no longer be able to do their jobs.” (Jane Hart 2020)

Marina Begic

Marina Begic

Digital Business Development Expertin und Senior L&D Consultant

Marina has been working on new, effective learning methods and the future of corporate learning for over 15 years. In her current role, she is responsible for Digital Business Development at MDI, where her focus is not driven by the current buzzwords, but primarily on the feasibility of digital transformation for clients such as Erste Group, Lenzing, Semperit, Deutsche Bahn, Andritz AG, Uniqa, Mayr-Melnhof, Frequentis, RHIM. Her greatest strength is bringing loose ends together, which she impressively demonstrates time and time again with her big picture view and multi-dimensional approach. Her greatest passion is to provide learners not only with an experience, but also with real, lasting value for their real challenges.

  • LinkedIn

Digital training formats for leadership development

We help make leadership development more agile with our digital training formats:

  • E-learnings
  • e-consulting
  • Blended Learning Journeys
  • Virtual Leadership
  • virtual reality
  • digital learning transfer

– we have just the right thing for your needs!

Explore now!

What serves you next?

Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions

by Anita Berger | 14. April 2025 | Impuls series, Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:Success Through Change: How to Stay Oriented During Transitions Change processes often involve challenges....
Read More

4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader

by Anita Berger | 3. April 2025 | Impuls series, Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips | 0 Comments

4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:4 Tips on How to Shape Change Processes as a Leader Imagine a dynamic network of paths that is constantly changing. While...
Read More

Successful Team Building for Boehringer Ingelheim RCV

by Anita Berger | 29. March 2024 | Customer Story, International leadership development, MDI Inside | 0 Comments

Successful Team Building for Boehringer Ingelheim RCV Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated audio version:Successful Team Building for Boehringer Ingelheim RCV In the interview with our MDI trainer and partner, Anita Berger On...
Read More

Organize Your Team in a Hybrid Workplace

by Peter Grabuschnig | 14. March 2024 | Impuls series, International leadership development, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

Organize Your Team in a Hybrid Workplace Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling.Organize Your Team in a Hybrid Workplace In his new Rise Course, our MDI trainer and...
Read More

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles – an experiment by a CEO

by Gunther Fürstberger | 14. November 2023 | International leadership development, Leadership and AI, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles: Learn more about the ongoing ChatGPT experiment by MDI CEO Gunther Fürstberger Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated version. Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership...
Read More

AI as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development

by Gunther Fürstberger | 14. November 2023 | Impuls series, International leadership development, Leadership and AI | 0 Comments

Artificial Intelligence as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development Do you prefer to listen to this blog article? Click below to access our AI-generated version. Artificial Intelligence as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development In a world that is constantly evolving, we...
Read More

Recap: This was the L&D Summer at MDI

by Iris Burner | 3. October 2023 | Leadership Impact, MDI Inside, Short Knowledge Bits | 0 Comments

Recap: This was the L&D summer at MDI Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling. Recap: This was the L&D summer at MDI Summer at MDI is not only the time to...
Read More

Promoting Cohesion and Retaining Talent: Leadership in Focus

by Peter Grabuschnig | 17. August 2023 | International leadership development, Leadership in the digital transformation, training new leader | 0 Comments

Promoting Cohesion and Retaining Talent: Leadership in Focus Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling.Promoting Cohesion and Retaining Talent: Leadership in Focus In...
Read More

What is Sustainable Individualization in Leadership?

by Iris Burner | 28. June 2023 | Digital Transformation, Leadership Impact, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 Comments

Sustainable individualization in leadership - pious hope or real alternative? In line with the last blog post on our MDI website "Inner Development Goals For a Better Leadership World", this time we dedicate ourselves to the megatrend topic of individualization and...
Read More

Why Should We Lead More Sustainably?

by Aline Depoorter, Jana Wölfl | 26. June 2023 | Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips, MDI Inside | 0 Comments

Why Should We Lead More Sustainably? It is hard to imagine most companies today without the concept of "sustainable leadership." Leaders are not only becoming more privately aware of the impact of climate change but also want to fight it on a corporate level. In this...
Read More

Information

  • Imprint
  • MDI company website

Social Media

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • LinkedIn

© MDI Management Development Institute, 2020