The Lagging Learning Curves

 

It takes time to teach people, it takes time for knowledge to spread around a culture. Knowledge sometimes can not penetrate business cultures readily. Some people learn slower than do others, decision makers are not as brilliant as all team members in every area of life.

Working in R&D I am constantly reminded and focused on learning curves; my own learning curve on a variety of subjects, my team’s learning curve covering our projects, my department’s learning curve on the technology that we are developing and finally the entire corporation’s learning curve on a wide variety of technologies and markets.

We are constantly learning, and learning progresses as a rapid and as a gradual process.

Corporate learning curves are the learning curves that a team or corporation undergoes in order to execute in a market.  The corporate learning curve is not the sum of the knowledge in each team member’s mind.  Rather the corporate learning curve is the body of knowledge and wisdom about a technology that leaders use to make business decisions. The knowledge may include fundamental scientific understanding, it may include understanding about processes to competitively manufacture, it may include supply-chain connections and it may include insight into future market demand. Anything that the team uses to make business decisions is a part of the corporate learning curve.

The corporate learning curve almost always lags behind (in time) the sum of individual contributor’s learning curve on any topic unless the company is very small or if it communicates very often and very effectively.

There may be 10 scientists on a team who have an understanding of the mechanism and process in order to build the next great cell phone technology however if the management in that team or company do not have a grasp of the technology, or have knowledge of what the technology can and cannot do proper business decisions can not be made.  If the commercial team does not understand and cannot market the technology then the team overall has not advanced up the corporate learning curve and therefore cannot monetize their knowledge.

There can be a gap between what the scientists, engineers and middle management knows and what the organization can execute on in the marketplace.  Because of this, the importance of teaching cannot be over emphasized; if the informed team members cannot (or will not) communicate well to the business leaders then the company will not be able to capitalize on the knowledge.

In fact individuals in any part of the organization may be further up the curve but, if they do not have the ability or authority to lead the technical teams who will to execute and create the divisions and products then the knowledge is of no value to the company.   Claiming technical success and promising a product prematurely is a function of poor teaching and poor communication, knowledge is not enough to create revenue.

Sometimes it is important for ambitious leaders who feel very confident in the team’s abilities themselves and feel far along the learning curve to recognize that what really matters is the corporate learning curve. If they do not have the political clout to educate and persuade, if they do not have the willingness and the ability to teach the organization it does not matter what they know. The only thing that matters is what the organization “knows and will accept” as a whole and can prove in that company’s labs or manufacturing processes.

What is even more remarkable is how much organizational culture can further slow down the corporate learning curve. It is not necessarily a delay due to inability to understand or is it stubbornness in management, sometimes complex office politics further slows down learning curves.  I have seen refusal to learn by senior members of teams from junior members simply because of lack of relationship or competitive resistance.  The organization is accustomed to learning in a certain way and sometimes deviations from that way are rejected.

To read more on this topic click here for part 2 of this post.

 

What is the best way to keep an organization together in learning?

Why you can’t access your creativity and what to do about it!

Good morning, Have you ever felt like you are creative deep within but you just don’t know how to access that creativity?  If so I might be able to help.

I am writing an online creativity course and plan to start video taping soon.  I am 90% complete with the content of this course which I’ve been working on for several months.  The course is a series of videos  of me teaching about creativity and its many “languages.”  My perspective on creativity is probably different from many because I am not artistic.  I am more of an analytical-minded person with a bent toward using science to create.

In this course there will be 6 modules with 20-30 videos.  There is a creativity test at the end, similar to a personality test to determine the student’s unique creativity language and several assignments to get the student creating. I want to get other people’s perspective about this course.  Specifically, what is missing out there? What I should leave out and what should I consider adding, below is an outline of the course.

  • Module one: Everyone is a Creative
  • Module two: The Four Creativity Languages
  • Module three: Common Obstacles to Personal Creativity
  • Module four: Tools for Creativity
  • Module five: The Creativity Test
  • Module six: Using this Information, Next Steps

If you are willing to give feedback on this course send me an email at collierak@me.com or just comment below and I will send you to a page with more details of this course!

New Creativity Course – Feedback Wanted

Greetings from NY,

I am writing an online creativity course and plan to start video taping soon.  I am 90% complete with the content of this course which I’ve been working on for several months.  The course is a series of videos  of me teaching about creativity and its many “languages.”  My perspective on creativity is probably different from many because I am not artistic.  I am more of an analytical-minded person with a bent toward using science to create.  In this course there will be 6 modules with 20-30 videos.

There is a creativity test at the end to determine the student’s unique creativity language and several assignments to get the student creating.  I am looking for volunteers to give me feedback about the course before launch-day.

I want to get other people’s perspective about creativity courses.  Specifically, what is missing out there? What should I leave out and what should I consider adding, below is an outline of the course.

  • Module one: Everyone is a Creative
  • Module two: The Four Creativity Languages
  • Module three: Common Obstacles to Personal Creativity
  • Module four: Tools for Creativity
  • Module five: The Creativity Test
  • Module six: Using this Information, Next Steps

If you are willing to give feedback on this course send me an email at collierak@me.com or comment below and I will send you to a page with more details of this course. Thank you

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