Episodes

  • Hey listeners! No new episode this week, but we wanted to revisit this 2022 classic with Jane Bozarth because we thought it paired nicely with the latest edition of our L&D Dispatch newsletter.

    Do check out the newsletter Ross G discussed on our L&D Dispatch page, 'Four papers that will make you laugh (then make you think)'.

    Regular show notes below.

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    In learning science, there are certain ideas that have leapt the fences of academia and seeped into the public consciousness. Often, these ideas gain traction because they feel intuitively true. But what does the data say? And how should we apply these ideas as learning professionals?

    This week on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross Garner and Ross Dickie are joined by Jane Bozarth, Director of Research for the Learning Guild, to discuss three research papers that challenge the received wisdom. We cover:

    Generational difference Learning styles The “Marshmallow Test”.

    The three papers we discussed were:

    'Generational Differences in Work-Related Attitudes: A Meta-analysis', published in 2012 in the Journal of Business and Psychology. 'Another Nail in the Coffin for Learning Styles? Disparities among Undergraduate Anatomy Students’ Study Strategies, Class Performance, and Reported VARK Learning Styles', published in 2018 in Anatomical Sciences Education. 'Revisiting the Marshmallow Test: A Conceptual Replication Investigating Links Between Early Delay of Gratification and Later Outcomes', published in Psychological Science in 2018.

    The Atlantic did a good write-up of the controversy surrounding the 'Marshmallow Experiment'. See here: https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2018/06/marshmallow-test/561779/

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross Garner mentioned a Twitter thread from Aaron Berman, in which he shares writing tips from his time as editor of the US President’s daily brief: https://twitter.com/aarondberman/status/1541576231891525633?s=21&t=1_oHB0tqjbt4VXZXmTMnXQ

    Jane spoke about Kate the Chemist’s recent session at DevLearn. To find out more about Kate, visit her website: https://www.katethechemist.com/

    Ross Dickie recommended the technology podcast ‘Hard Fork’ from the New York Times. You can find it wherever you get your podcasts, or through the NYT website: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/04/podcasts/hard-fork-technology.html

    To find out more about Jane’s work at the Learning Guild, see: https://www.learningguild.com/

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtoolsbusiness.com. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Connect with our speakers   

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with our speakers on Twitter:    

    Ross Garner - @RossGarnerMT Ross Dickie - @RossDickieMT Dr Jane Bozarth - @JaneBozarth
  • This week on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross G and Owen are diving into their L&D mailbag to answer your questions.

    We discuss:

    · Will there be more or less opportunity to make a meaningful living in L&D over the next five years? (via JD Dillon)

    · If we think of L&D as a product, what would you sunset and what would the top three candidates look like for development? (via Sean Brown)

    · What's more important to a Learning strategy and approach... Speed or Efficacy? (via Marc Steven Ramos)

    · What's your best ROI story? (via Marc Zao-Sanders)

    During the discussion, Ross referenced Benedict Evans article ‘The AI Summer’.

    Ross also referenced an example of work our behavioral scientists completed for an ESG project.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Owen Ferguson

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  • This week on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, we're putting the ‘people’ back into People Development and the ‘human’ back into ‘Human Resources, as we explore Natal Dank's book Agile L&D.

    Natal is the co-owner and director of PXO Culture, a consultancy firm on a mission to make HR, culture and change about humans.

    And her book, Agile L&D, is a follow-up to Agile HR.

    We discuss:

    Problems with a ‘traditional’ approach to L&D

    Tools and methods for prioritizing and organizing workloads

    Whether ‘agile’ has just become another corporate buzzword

    To find out more about Natal, and the book, visit pxoculture.com

    During the discussion, Natal referenced the books The Build Trap by Melissa Perri and Embracing Uncertainty by Margaret Heffernan.

    For more on Taylorism, see ‘scientific management’.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross Garner discussed Yuval Noah Harari’s bleak take on the future of AI and government.

    Nahdia discussed digital twins.

    Natal discussed Meditations for Mortals.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.  

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer. 

    Connect with our speakers   

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Garner

    Nahdia Khan

    Natal Dank

  • Technical professionals have a high level of expertise, but translating that expertise for non-technical colleagues isn’t always straightforward. Whether you’re an engineer, a researcher, or even an L&D professional, how can you communicate in a way that resonates with your audience?

    This week on the Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross D and Owen are joined by Neil Thompson, founder of Teach The Geek, to discuss:

    why good communication skills are important for technical professionals;

    the specific challenges associated with technical communication;

    how L&D can support technical professionals to become better communicators.

    To find out more about Neil’s work, visit www.teachthegeek.com

    The very geeky meta-meta-analysis that Owen mentioned in ‘What I Learned This Week’ can be found at: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41746-024-01172-y

    You can read the Verge article that Ross D referenced at: https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/18/24223160/waymo-honking-san-francisco-parking-lot-depot-fix-not-working

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.  

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer. 

    Connect with our speakers   

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Dickie

    Owen Ferguson

    Neil Thompson

  • This week we’re revisiting an old adage: The employer who says, ‘What if we train our people and they leave?’ And the trainer who says, ‘What if we don't and they stay?’

    As Talent Development Manager for Kew Green Hotels, Clare Sheppard knows all about this. She’s responsible for helping those who want to stay progress in their careers, while giving those who leave a great experience that they can carry with them into their next role.

    We discuss:

    · the types of colleague who fall into the ‘Early Careers’ bucket (it’s broader than you might think!)

    · how to identify high potential colleagues

    · the role of managers in supporting Early Careers professionals.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Clare discussed the likelihood of it raining, and what that means.

    Ross recommended (sort of) an old episode of The Magic Roundabout.

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Clare Sheppard

  • Last week on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross G and Owen explored how the 70:20:10 model is being applied by three L&D Practitioners: Ceri Sharples, Cath Addis, and Carl Akintola-Davis. Today, we wanted to follow up on some of the challenges posed during that discussion with The 70:20:10 Institute’s Charles Jennings.

    What does it really mean to 'integrate learning into the workflow', and how does 70:20:10 move us towards a performance focus?

    We discuss:

    · Where the numbers ‘70’, ‘20’ and ‘10’ come from

    · How a focus on ‘learning’ tends to lead to a ‘10+’ approach

    · Examples of interventions that have focused on supporting performance, rather than formal learning.

    For more on the origins of 70:20:10, see this blog post from Charles.

    See also The Center for Creative Leadership’s chapter ‘Learning Through Experience’.

    Mind Tools offers a summary of Informal Learning, by Jay Cross.

    Joseph Stiglitz book is Creating a Learning Culture.

    Find out more about Dr Edwards Deming.

    For more from Charles and his team, see 702010institute.com.

    The case study Charles wrote with Brian Murphy from Citi bank was: ‘From Courses to Campaigns: Citi’s Journey to a Culture of Continuous Learning’.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Owen recommended (again) Lenny’s Newsletter, in particular a recent edition on pricing for AI features.

    Ross discussed a post from Ben Evans on how users are interacting with ChatGPT.

    Charles recommended the podcast The Infinite Monkey Cage.

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Owen Ferguson

    · Charles Jennings

  • Depending how you count it, 70:20:10 is almost 40 years old. The model provides a high-level outline of how we learn at work: 10% through formal learning, 20% through working with others, 70% through doing the work.

    The numbers get criticised, but this insight is widely accepted: Most of what we learn does not come from formal training. But how then should L&D practitioners apply the model to the work that they do? Is it still a useful concept after all this time?

    In the first of this two-part series, Ross Garner and Owen explore these questions with three practitioners: Ceri Sharples, Learning and Development manager at Somerset Bridge Group; Cath Addis, L&D manager at Ascential; and return guest Carl Akintola-Davis, Head of Leadership Development at Phoenix Group.

    We discuss:

    · The history and criticisms of 70:20:10

    · How useful the concept is for discussing workplace learning with stakeholders

    · How to think about the ‘70’, the ‘20’, and the ‘10’ when designing learning programs.

    For more on the origins of 70:20:10, see this blog post from Charles Jennings of The 702010 Institute, who is joining us next week on the show.

    Carl’s acronym for workplace learning was ‘Performance RECIPES: Reflection, Experimentation, Connection, Information, Practice, Environment and Support’.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Owen discussed a new paper from Nature, which didn’t really impress him: Bloom, N., Han, R., & Liang, J. (2024). Hybrid working from home improves retention without damaging performance. Nature, 1-6.

    Ross learned the unfortunate fate of 440 squirrels.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Owen Ferguson

    · Ceri Sharples

    · Cath Addis

    · Carl Akintola-Davis

  • A summer holiday holds the potential for distraction-free reading. With that in mind, in this week’s episode our podcast team suggest books that hold lessons for L&D practitioners. Which might you take on holiday this summer?

    Book list

    Right Kind of Wrong. Why Learning to Fail Can Teach Us to Thrive (2023) by Amy Edmondson

    www.amazon.co.uk/Right-Kind-Wrong-Learning-Thrive

    Counter-Intelligence: What the secret world can teach us about problem-solving and creativity (2024) by Robert Hannigan

    https://www.roberthannigan.com/

    The Tyranny of Metrics (2018) by Jerry J. Muller

    www.amazon.co.uk/Tyranny-Metrics-Jerry-Z-Muller

    How big things get done. The surprising factors behind every successful project (2023) by Brent Flyberg and Dan Gardner

    www.amazon.co.uk/How-Big-Things-Get-Done

    A history of the world in twelve shipwrecks (2024) by David Gibbons

    www.amazon.co.uk/History-World-Twelve-Shipwrecks

    Performance-focused learner surveys (2022) by Will Thalheimer

    www.amazon.co.uk/Performance-Focused-Learner-Surveys-Distinctive-Effectiveness

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Nahdia spoke about how former PM Harold Wilson funded his Alzheimer’s care www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/23/former-pm-harold-wilson-sold-private-papers-fund-care-alzheimers

    Ross Dickie also mentioned the traditional Greek bagpipe, known as the ‘tsampouna’, which he discovered during a recent holiday on Santorini.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Nahdia Khan

    · Owen Ferguson

    · Ross Dickie

  • According to a recent study from Ipsos, and commissioned by Amazon, 86% of respondents said that career development is essential, very or fairly important to them. But, in our experience, it tends to become a lot less important when the day-to-day demands of work crop up.

    So, in this week’s episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, return guest Neil John Cunningham from Align Learn Do joins Ross G to ask why this is, and what to do about it.

    We discuss:

    How to build the credibility of your L&D function

    The extent to which marketing L&D works

    What to do about a ‘disjointed’ L&D offering.

    You can read Amazon’s study online.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross discussed the Lokiceratops Rangiformis.

    For more from Neil, including his book Narratives and Numbers, see alignlearndo.com.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers   

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Garner

    Neil John Cunningham

  • In part three of our #BuildingBetterManagers series, Ross Garner and Nahdia Khan are joined for one last time by Dr Anna Barnett from the Mind Tools Insights team. If you’ve been listening along recently, we’ve already covered the capabilities that make a ‘good’ manager, and how we can develop them. In this week’s episode, we’re looking at how we support more experienced managers.

    We discuss:

    The long-term impact of early management training

    Differences (and similarities) between new and experienced managers

    How we can provide constant ongoing support to more experienced managers.

    During the discussion, Nahdia referenced our podcast with Georgie Rudd on listening.

    You can read our report, ‘Building Better Managers’, now.

    If you need helping building better managers, we can help you measure and improve capability no matter your context. Email [email protected] or visit mindtools.com/business/poducts/mind-tools-insights to book a meeting.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Anna discussed scenario-based learning. See Episode 356 of this podcast for more on that.

    Ross G discussed research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on the ‘power of proximity’.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers   

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Garner

    Dr Anna Barnett

    Nahdia Khan

  • Last week, we kicked off our three-part #BuildingBetterManagers series with an overview of the 12 capabilities that we know make a difference to performance. Now we’re asking: How do we help managers build those capabilities?

    To answer this question, Ross G and Ross D are joined once again by Dr Anna Barnett, from the Mind Tools Insights team, to discuss her recommendations from our latest report: ‘Building Better Managers’.

    We discuss:

    Evidence-based approaches to improving manager capability How Mind Tools factored this evidence into our product design An example of a custom management programme that made a measurable difference to manager capabilities.

    If you need help building better managers, we can help you measure and improve capability no matter your context. Email [email protected] or visit mindtools.com/business/products/mind-tools-insights to book a meeting.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross D discussed the film Tony Hawk: Until The Wheels Fall Off, about the career of Tony Hawk.

    Anna discussed the book The Migraine Brain by Carolyn Bernstein.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support Content Library, our Off-the-Shelf e-learning, and our Custom work. 

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers   

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Garner

    Dr Anna Barnett

    Ross Dickie

  • What does good management look like? What skills and capabilities does a manager need? Are you a good manager?

    In this week’s episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross Garner and Owen Ferguson are joined by Dr Anna Barnett, from our own in-house Insights team, to discuss the findings of our latest report: ‘Building Better Managers’.

    In the first of three episodes exploring how we can improve management capability for our people and organizations, we discuss:

    · How we define a ‘good’ manager

    · The capabilities all managers need to perform, no matter their industry

    · How to measure manager capability.

    We’ve used the results of Anna’s research to develop our own manager skills assessment. It can help your managers identify skill gaps, while also giving L&D leaders an insight into critical development areas that exist across their organisations.

    To speak to us about running our management skills assessment with your people, get in touch! Email [email protected] or visit mindtools.com/business/poducts/mind-tools-insights to book a meeting.

    During the discussion, Anna referenced the following papers:

    Baron-Cohen, S., Wheelwright, S., Hill, J., Raste, Y., & Plumb, I. (2001). The “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” Test revised version: a study with normal adults, and adults with Asperger syndrome or high-functioning autism. The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 42(2), 241-251.

    Carmeli, A., Reiter-Palmon, R., & Ziv, E. (2010). Inclusive leadership and employee involvement in creative tasks in the workplace: The mediating role of psychological safety. Creativity Research Journal, 22(3), 250-260.

    Our report, ‘Building Better Managers’, will be released on July 9.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Owen shared how disagreement is often mistaken for bad listening.

    Ross discussed the app Finch, for motivating behavior change.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Owen Ferguson

    · Dr Anna Barnett

  • For eight years, the team here on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast (formerly The GoodPractice Podcast) have been chatting work, performance and learning with some of the brightest minds in learning and development.

    This week, to celebrate the release of our 400th episode, our friends Phil Willcox from Emotion at Work and Ady Howes from Digital Skills People have pulled together a tribute episode for us.

    We discuss:

    · the Mind Tools team’s favourite episodes

    · what we learned from 400 episodes of podcasting

    · what others think of the podcast.

    During the discussion, Ross Garner referenced his favourite episode: 279 — Why work is the ideal place to talk about race.

    Margaret Greenberg and Gina Greenlee’s book is The Business of Race: How to Create and Sustain an Antiracist Workplace and Why It's Actually Good for Business (published by McGraw-Hill). The coauthors work with organizations to embed racial equity into their business strategy. For more information go to their website BusinessofRace.com and click on the Work with Us tab.

    Ross D’s favourite episode was Don Taylor’s regular Global Sentiment Survey appearances.

    Nahdia picked: 382 — You don’t have to talk to add value, with Georgie Rudd.

    Owen picked: 323 — Making decisions with data and intuition, with Oded Netzer.

    Gemma picked: 300 — Celebrating live from London!, with Phil Willcox and Julie Dirksen.

    Thanks to David Hayden, Sukh Pabial, Michelle Parry-Slater, Dan Wiseman and ChatGPT for their contributions.

    Ross G’s novel, Centauri’s Shadow, is available now from Amazon UK and Amazon US.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Phil Willcox

    · Ady Howes

    · Ross Garner

    · Ross Dickie

    · Nahdia Khan

    · Gemma Towersey

    · Owen Ferguson

  • Digital learning content offers a scalable, always-on option to help your people build their skills and overcome workplace challenges. But often these libraries get dusty, bogged down by out-of-date content with little relevance, or hidden away in a dark corner of the intranet where no one can find them.

    So in this episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Virgin Money’s Martin Ritchie, Digital Learning Manager, joins Ross Garner and Lara to share:

    How Virgin Money raise awareness of their Mind Tools content library

    Techniques for promoting a proactive learning mindset

    ‘Push’ vs ‘pull’ learning.

    During the discussion, Ross referenced a recent academic paper: Albarracín, D., Fayaz-Farkhad, B., & Granados Samayoa, J. A. (2024). Determinants of behaviour and their efficacy as targets of behavioural change interventions. Nature Reviews Psychology, 1-16.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross discussed ‘pebbling’, as covered by The Guardian.

    For more on how Mind Tools work with Virgin Money, see our case study.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com and use the offer code PODCAST15 for 15% off an individual subscription. This offer is for new subscribers only and can’t be used with any other offer.

    Connect with our speakers

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Garner

    Lara Kidd

    Martin Ritchie

  • In ‘Measure of a Man', episode nine of the second season of Star Trek: The Next Generation, the Enterprise crew debate whether their robot companion, Data, is truly alive. More interesting for us, though, is the way they interact with artificial intelligence (AI) in general. Not just for what it tells us about how AI tools might evolve, but also for how we humans work with them.

    So in this special episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross Ganer, Claire, Ross Dick and Nahdia discuss:

    · How closely the Enterprise computer reflects current tools like ChatGPT,

    · Whether we want robots to work alongside us,

    · Whether the Turing Test still has relevance.

    During the discussion, Ross Garner talked about how Moderna is using ChatGPT, how ELIZA passed the Turing Test, and the ongoing discussion around whether ChatGPT’s new voice is too similar to Scarlett Johansson’s.

    Ross D discussed Microsoft’s Copilot+ PCs, Brian Christian’s book The Alignment Problem, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s views on neural networks.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Nahdia recommended the movie Atlas, available on Netflix.

    Ross Garner recommended following visual effects artist Todd Vaziri.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Nahdia Khan

    · Ross Dickie

    · Claire Gibson

  • We humans are social creatures. We form organic communities wherever we go, based on shared interests, passions and needs.

    But when we try to impose top-down learning communities on an employee population, things get more difficult. Is it possible for L&D to create a flourishing community?

    In this week’s episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross Garner and Nahdia Khan are joined by Andy Lancaster, author of Organizational Learning Communities, who offers a framework that can help.

    We discuss:

    · Types of workplace learning community

    · The key characteristics of successful communities

    · A framework that you can use to establish an effective community

    Andy’s book is available now from Kogan Page.

    During the discussion, Ross mentioned our podcast with JD Dillon and his book The Modern Learning Ecosystem.

    Ross also referenced our podcast on Working Out Loud Circles, from way back in 2017.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Nahdia recommended the ‘Women in Learning’ community.

    Ross discussed the weird way language affects our sense of space and time.

    For more from Andy, visit reminaginepeopledevelopment.com

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com

    Finally, it wouldn’t be appropriate to plug Ross G’s critically acclaimed debut novel Centauri’s Shadow on a regular basis but, since Andy brought it up, it’s available from Amazon US and Amazon UK. It has 4.8 stars out of 5, by the way.

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Nahdia Khan

    · Andy Lancaster

  • In learning and development, we typically want people to do something that they are currently not doing, or to stop doing something that they shouldn't be. One obvious approach is training, but there are in fact a broad spectrum of interventions that we can deploy.

    In this week’s episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross and Owen are joined by Wil Procter, Strategy and Innovation Director at Nazaré, and by Jessica Holt, Senior Behavioural Science Consultant at Inizio Engage XD.

    We explore:

    · What behavioral science is,

    · What interventions can help change people’s behavior,

    · How the COM-B model can help structure discovery conversations.

    To find out more about the COM-B model, see behaviourchangewheel.com

    The book that Owen referenced was Coaching for Improved Work Performance by Ferdinand F. Fournies.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Jess discussed a new meta-analysis of behavior change interventions: Albarracín, D., Fayaz-Farkhad, B., & Granados Samayoa, J. A. (2024). Determinants of behaviour and their efficacy as targets of behavioural change interventions. Nature Reviews Psychology, 1-16.

    Ross asked and answered a dumb question about birds. New Scientist explains why there are not dead birds everywhere.

    For more from Wil, see: nazarelearning.com

    For more from Jess, see: xd.inizioengage.com

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work.

    Or become a member to support our show! Visit mindtools.com

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Owen Ferguson

    · Wil Procter

    · Jessica Holt

  • As professionals, we want to know if our work has had the impact we originally intended and to tell others about it. This means getting comfortable with data and crafting compelling data stories.

    On this episode of The Mind Tools L&D Podcast, Ross G is joined by Neil Cunningham, founder of Align | Learn | Do and author of Narratives and Numbers, to discuss practical and mindset shifts L&D can take.

    We explore:

    why people think it’s too difficult to measure the ROI of learning how to get stakeholder buy-in to measuring and evaluating learning how to craft credible L&D data stories.

    You can get a copy of Neil’s book, Narratives and Numbers, from the Align | Learn | Do website. Use the offer code mt10 at checkout for a 10% discount.

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross discovers the many reasons why lorry drivers might accidentally crash into a bridge via this curiously fascinating X thread.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    Ross Garner Neil Cunningham
  • You’ve got a brilliant idea for the next big thing in tech and have gathered the smartest engineers and designers to build it (plus the cash to pay them). Will it end up being a success? You’ve got the best team to deliver it, so why wouldn’t it be? Well…

    Gemma, Ross and Martin Gonzalez, Google’s Effective Founders Project founder and author, discuss this situation on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast.

    We explore:

    · how and why it’s people issues that often lead to (startup) business failure

    · the balances that need to be struck by those creating and working in teams

    · the uncomfortable “bullsh*t circle” exercise, as a step towards fixing people issues.

    During the episode, Martin talks about how the “hiding hand principle” is critical for some projects to get going: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiding_hand_principle

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Martin references Gary P. Pisano’s Creative Construction: The DNA of Sustained Innovation

    Find out more about Martin and Josh's book The Bonfire Moment by visiting bonfiremoment.com

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Gemma Towersey

    · Martin Gonzalez

  • If you’re thinking, isn’t positive psychology a bit ‘woo woo’, and a bit like forcing yourself to take a sunny outlook, then this episode is for you. As an approach to a happier, more balanced inner and outer life, positive psychology is not woo – it has a solid scientific foundation with practical methodologies.

    Gemma, Ross Garner and their guest, Leadership coach Sandra Berko, discuss these very points this week on The Mind Tools L&D Podcast.

    We explore:

    · what positive psychology is and isn’t

    · what the science suggests we do to find balance

    · how you can help others to use positive psychology.

    Ross mentioned an earlier episode of the podcast on job crafting. You can listen to Episode 271 – Jobcraft Country wherever you get your podcasts, or on our website: podcast.mindtoolsbusiness.com/271-jobcraft-country

    In ‘What I Learned This Week’, Ross recommended the “Great Minds on Learning” podcast episode on Generative AI Theorists with Donald Clark.

    Sandra spoke about emotion codes, which feature in a course she’s currently enrolled in. Emotion codes are based on theories developed by Dr Bradley Nelson.

    For more from us, including access to our back catalogue of podcasts, visit mindtools.com/business. There, you'll also find details of our award-winning performance support toolkit, our off-the-shelf e-learning, and our custom work. 

    Connect with our speakers 

    If you'd like to share your thoughts on this episode, connect with us on LinkedIn:

    · Ross Garner

    · Gemma Towersey

    · Sandra Berko