Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Lessons Learned from the PGA

Shame on me for not keeping up with these posts. I truly enjoy doing it but when I finally landed a new job I let this fall to the bottom of the priority list. I’ll work harder to keep up.

Today my thoughts turn to the PGA Championship. For those of you who are not golf fans, the number one player in the world, Tiger Woods, was upset by the number 110 player, Y.E. Yang. It was a stunning round of golf and pointed out that anything can happen.

You’re likely thinking, “Great news recap buddy, what’s the point? What does that have to do with training?” I’m glad you asked. I think it forces us to ask ourselves if we have assumed too much. Everyone assumed that Tiger would win the tournament. After all, he had won 14 of 14 when he had the lead after 54 holes. He had led the entire tournament. He was on a roll, having won the previous week. Who bets against that?

Sometimes, Learning and Development organizations find themselves rolling along quite safely in the larger organization. They produce solid products that meet the need of clients and stakeholders. They have a seat at the operations table. They have aligned curriculum around performance and organizational competencies.

I would challenge the leader of that organization to look around and see who the upstarts are. Examine the market place and even their organization for new ideas. I’m not suggesting sweeping changes every few months. I am suggesting that success can be the mother of complacency and while there is still spoken homage to the bottom line and ROI, there might be a lack of innovation.

In the world of golf, no one is going to say that Tiger is done with the game, that this somehow signals his demise. He will surely recover from this loss, and he’ll probably be a stronger player for it. The successful L&D organization will also survive a mediocre program or worse, a failure. The question is how do they recover?

I’ll suggest two things for learning leaders to consider:

1. Never stop innovating. Ask the question, are we really operating at our best? Be mindful of the design ruts into which we all find ourselves and challenge your team to get out of them. Look for the best way to deliver learning rather than deliver learning the way you work best.
2. Be prepared to fail. Failure is one of the best ways to learn. No one plans to fail. Great leaders and great learners, model behavior that acknowledges failure, owns up to it and plans forward.

Much like golf, learning and development is an occupation that requires its practitioners to be analytical, creative, knowledgeable, patient, focused and competitive. I’m sure there are more adjectives we could add. The point is that, like golf, external factors also challenge our performance and we must be constantly focused on not only improving the performance of the organization but also challenging ourselves to operate at the top of our game.