Développement de compétences Archives - Degreed https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/tag/developpement-de-competences/ The Learning and Upskilling Platform Thu, 19 Mar 2026 18:32:33 +0000 fr-FR hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Accélérez la montée en compétences en clarifiant vos attentes pour chaque poste https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/accelerate-skill-development-role-expectations/ Tue, 25 Nov 2025 23:00:27 +0000 https://degreed.com/experience/?p=87604 Pour rester compétitives dans un environnement qui évolue de plus en plus vite, les entreprises ont plus que jamais besoin d’investir dans le développement des compétences. Mais des attentes mal définies pour chaque poste ralentissent cette dynamique et laissent les collaborateurs dans le flou. De quelles compétences ont-ils besoin pour réussir ? Comment peuvent-ils savoir s’ils […]

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Pour rester compétitives dans un environnement qui évolue de plus en plus vite, les entreprises ont plus que jamais besoin d’investir dans le développement des compétences. Mais des attentes mal définies pour chaque poste ralentissent cette dynamique et laissent les collaborateurs dans le flou. De quelles compétences ont-ils besoin pour réussir ? Comment peuvent-ils savoir s’ils ont le niveau attendu ? Que doivent-ils améliorer, et comment peuvent-ils s’y prendre ?

Pour répondre à ces questions et accélérer la montée en compétences, les équipes L&D et RH doivent miser sur trois axes :

  1. Définir clairement les attentes pour chaque poste
  2. Communiquer ces attentes
  3. Orienter les collaborateurs vers les contenus qui leur permettront de progresser

Grâce aux nouvelles fonctionnalités Degreed, vous avez désormais toutes les clés en main pour accompagner chaque collaborateur dans le développement des compétences dont il a besoin. 

Des attentes claires pour aider vos talents à développer les bonnes compétences

Imaginons Cynthia, ingénieure logicielle fraîchement arrivée chez Entreprise SA. Elle occupait un poste similaire chez son précédent employeur, mais souhaite comprendre ce qu’on attend d’elle précisément chez Entreprise SA. 

Lorsqu’elle se connecte à Degreed, son profil affiche automatiquement les compétences qu’Entreprise SA a définies comme stratégiques pour son poste, ainsi que le degré de maîtrise attendu pour chacune d’elles. Chaque compétence et chaque degré de maîtrise sont accompagnés d’une description. Ainsi, Cynthia sait à quel comportement correspond le niveau cible. Grâce à ces informations et au Skill Review Coach de Maestro, elle peut ensuite évaluer son niveau actuel et l’enregistrer directement dans son profil. 

Une fois cette base établie, Cynthia peut alors se concentrer sur les points à renforcer. Degreed facilite l’opération en créant pour elle un plan de compétences dynamique, automatiquement alimenté avec des contenus adaptés aux déficits de compétences stratégiques identifiés. Ce plan est calibré selon le degré de maîtrise actuel de Cynthia et affiche les contenus qui l’aideront à atteindre le niveau suivant.  

Et lorsqu’elle recherche des ressources supplémentaires, elle ne perd plus de temps à faire défiler des contenus trop élémentaires ou trop avancés. Elle accède rapidement à des activités adaptées à son degré de maîtrise actuel et à son avancement. 

Grâce à cette approche, Cynthia sait maintenant ce que l’entreprise attend d’elle, les points qu’elle doit améliorer et quelles ressources l’aideront à développer les compétences clés dont elle a besoin. Cette visibilité et l’accès à des ressources ciblées vont à la fois accélérer sa progression et renforcer son engagement. 

Automatiser à grande échelle grâce à l’IA

Proposer une expérience de formation personnalisée était autrefois un processus complètement manuel et extrêmement fastidieux à déployer à grande échelle. Aujourd’hui, l’IA prend en charge cette partie du travail. Ainsi, les équipes L&D et RH peuvent se concentrer sur des actions à plus forte valeur ajoutée, comme définir pour chaque poste les compétences nécessaires pour contribuer à atteindre les objectifs de l’entreprise.

Dans Degreed Learning, les administrateurs peuvent importer la liste des postes de l’organisation, les compétences associées à chacun d’eux, ainsi que les degrés de maîtrise attendus. Ils peuvent aussi définir les compétences stratégiques qui apparaîtront automatiquement sur les profils des collaborateurs pour guider leur développement.

Avec Degreed Compétences+, les administrateurs exploitent l’IA pour renforcer l’impact de l’association des compétences à chaque poste. Par exemple, l’IA génère des descriptions de degrés de maîtrise pour chaque compétence, afin de préciser ce que signifie réellement chaque niveau. Ces informations permettent aux collaborateurs de mieux évaluer leurs compétences selon la définition retenue par l’organisation. 

Les administrateurs peuvent aussi s’appuyer sur l’IA pour associer automatiquement les degrés de maîtrise aux contenus de leur catalogue, tout en gardant la possibilité d’approuver ou non chaque corrélation. De quoi orienter chaque collaborateur vers les contenus qui correspondent vraiment à son niveau de compétence.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K43BUJQIBSY

Aligner postes et compétences pour créer plus de valeur

DirigeantsRH et L&DCollaborateurs
Développez rapidement les compétences clés pour rester compétitifs sur votre marché / Gagnez en agilité en ciblant précisément les besoins de développement de vos équipes / Maximisez le ROI en réduisant le temps et les ressources de formation inutilesClassez et organisez un volume important de contenus de formation en un temps record / Concentrez-vous sur la stratégie et la conception de programmes / Personnalisez automatiquement l’expérience de formation pour gagner en efficacité à grande échelleComprenez clairement les attentes pour réussir à vos postes / Développez les compétences qui comptent le plus, au niveau qui vous correspond vraiment / Trouvez les contenus qui améliorent vos performances pour optimiser votre temps de formation

Quand l’efficacité opérationnelle rencontre la personnalisation, on obtient des cas d’usage utiles, efficaces et faciles à déployer à l’échelle de l’entreprise, parmi lesquels :

  • Gestion stratégique des ressources : identifier les déficits et éliminer les contenus redondants ou obsolètes.
  • Onboarding : proposer automatiquement aux nouvelles recrues des contenus adaptés à leur degré de maîtrise sur les compétences essentielles afin d’accélérer leur opérationnabilité.
  • Recherche et découverte : fournir des résultats de recherche personnalisés selon les besoins et le niveau de chaque collaborateur.
  • Évolution professionnelle et mobilité interne : cartographier clairement les compétences nécessaires pour gagner en responsabilité ou changer de service, au bénéfice des collaborateurs comme de l’organisation. 

L’IA au service du développement des compétences

On parle souvent du pouvoir de l’IA pour améliorer l’expérience de formation tout en réduisant la charge des administrateurs. Avec Degreed Compétences+, c’est désormais une réalité. 

Grâce au processus d’association poste-compétences, aux plans de compétences dynamiques et à la corrélation automatique des degrés de maîtrise, les organisations peuvent proposer des parcours de développement personnalisés, pertinents et faciles à déployer à grande échelle, sans effort supplémentaire. Avec des attentes plus claires et un suivi plus précis, elles accélèrent la montée en compétences et s’adaptent plus facilement à l’évolution de leur environnement.

* Les fonctionnalités décrites dans cet article seront généralement disponibles dès avril 2026.

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Maîtriser l’IA grâce à l’IA : découvrez comment Degreed Maestro vous forme à la GenAI https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/ai-for-ai-skills-maestro-accelerates-gen-ai-fluency/ Thu, 14 Aug 2025 13:41:42 +0000 https://degreed.com/experience/?p=86911 Une IA qui renforce les compétences en IA ! Coaching personnalisé et impact mesurable : découvrez comment Degreed Maestro vous forme à la GenAI.

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Dans tous les secteurs, les dirigeants sont confrontés à un manque critique de préparation vis-à-vis de l’IA générative (GenAI) : 78 % des collaborateurs manquent des compétences ou de la maîtrise nécessaires pour utiliser la GenAI de manière efficace, et seules 2 % des organisations sont prêtes à adopter cette technologie dans l’ensemble de leur entreprise. Autrement dit, les compétences en matière d’IA manquent à l’appel.

Degreed Maestro a été conçu pour pallier ce problème. Cette solution offre des expériences learning intelligentes, personnalisées et évolutives qui recourent à la GenAI pour générer des gains de productivité, de l’innovation et des avantages concurrentiels. En somme, c’est une IA qui renforce vos compétences en matière d’IA.

En voici un aperçu :

Maestro améliore la précision à tous les niveaux.

  • Il génère des parcours learning personnalisés en phase avec les postes, les compétences et les besoins de l’organisation.
  • Il propose des expériences de formation en phase avec vos objectifs de montée en compétences en GenAI, pour accompagner vos formateurs en intelligence artificielle, vos ingénieurs de prompts ou vos analystes, par exemple.

Maestro offre un coaching personnalisé pour gagner en confiance.

  • Il propose une interaction avec un coach IA et des simulations adaptées à chaque poste pour développer les compétences en GenAI.
  • Il renforce la maîtrise grâce à une assistance et un feedback contextuels, des leviers essentiels pour changer durablement les habitudes.

Maestro intègre la formation dans les workflows.

  • Il coordonne les expériences de formation en se basant sur les actions, les responsabilités et les préférences de chaque utilisateur.
  • Il promeut la formation continue en intégrant des recommandations et des rappels utiles dans les workflows quotidiens.

Maestro a un impact mesurable sur la formation et les résultats de l’entreprise.

  • Il mesure les progrès dans la maîtrise de la technologie, mais également les compétences et les habitudes de formation.
  • Il s’intègre à Degreed Skills+ pour générer des analyses en temps réel et aligner la formation en GenAI sur la stratégie d’entreprise.

Impact stratégique

  • Maîtrise plus rapide de la GenAI à travers l’entreprise
  • Augmentation de l’engagement, de la rétention et de la mobilité interne
  • Résultats plus rapides pour les cas d’usage de la GenAI
  • Alignement des investissements learning sur les objectifs de transformation des équipes et les indicateurs de performance

Et ensuite ?

Découvrez à nos côtés comment mettre en place des stratégies de formation grâce à la GenAI, pour une innovation plus rapide, des opérations plus intelligentes et un impact plus durable sur les résultats de votre entreprise.

Programmez un appel individuel et personnalisé avec un expert de Degreed dès aujourd’hui.

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Développer les compétences à grande échelle : l’approche novatrice de State Street https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/skill-development-at-scale-what-state-street-is-doing-differently/ Tue, 13 May 2025 17:06:31 +0000 https://degreed.com/experience/experience/?p=85403 Découvrez comment State Street renforce l’agilité de ses équipes et favorise la mobilité interne grâce à une stratégie à l’échelle de l’entreprise, fondée sur les données et soutenue par ses dirigeants.

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  • State Street a reçu le Degreed Visionary Award 2025 dans la catégorie « Client Ambassador of the Year », une distinction qui récompense une organisation dont les initiatives inspirent l’ensemble des clients Degreed.
  • Lorsque l’une des institutions financières les plus influentes au monde décide de repenser sa stratégie de développement des compétences, l’enjeu est de taille.

    Chez State Street, ce virage s’est traduit par la mise en place d’une stratégie à l’échelle de l’entreprise, pilotée par les données et soutenue par les cadres. Son objectif : renforcer l’agilité des équipes et stimuler la mobilité interne, tout en s’intégrant à la feuille de route annuelle et aux plans d’action RH.

    Avec plus de 50 000 collaborateurs dans le monde et 11 % des actifs financiers mondiaux transitant chaque jour par ses systèmes, State Street avait besoin d’une approche plus ambitieuse de la formation, capable d’accompagner à la fois les mutations du marché et les nouvelles attentes des talents.

    « Les équipes métier nous ont clairement fait part de leurs difficultés : elles n’avaient aucune visibilité sur les compétences des collaborateurs, ni sur les déficits à combler ou les priorités en matière de montée en compétences ou de reconversion », rapporte Laura Sullivan, vice-présidente en charge du développement des talents.

    Laura Sullivan, vice-présidente en charge du développement des talents chez State Street, présentant les retombées de SkillsFIRST lors de Degreed LENS 2025

    De ce constat est né SkillsFIRST. Bien plus qu’un projet RH, c’est un outil de transformation qui place les compétences au cœur de la performance, de la rétention et de l’évolution professionnelle. Propulsé par Degreed et intégré dans Workday, SkillsFIRST permet de mieux aligner les ressources internes sur les besoins critiques de l’entreprise, tout en donnant aux collaborateurs les moyens de s’approprier leur propre développement.

    D’un pilotage à l’aveugle à un écosystème connecté

    Before launching SkillsFIRST, State Street lacked a unified view of its workforce capabilities, while employees sought greater clarity around growth paths and more targeted development support.

    Plutôt que d’investir dans des logiciels d’inférence onéreux, State Street a préféré construire, avec Degreed et Workday, sa propre bibliothèque de compétences, mêlant référentiels du marché et expertise interne. Avec l’appui des experts du domaine, les équipes learning ont défini sept compétences clés par poste et élaboré des plans d’évolution personnalisés, directement intégrés dans Degreed.

    L’intégration Degreed-Workday au service des enjeux de State Street

    Chez State Street, la stratégie axée sur les compétences repose sur l’intégration entre Degreed et Workday. C’est elle qui permet de relier le développement du personnel à la planification stratégique des talents.

    Tout commence dans Degreed : les collaborateurs explorent des contenus de formation triés sur le volet et suivent leur plan d’évolution de poste personnalisé. Ils sont invités à s’auto-évaluer à l’aide du barème en huit points de Degreed, puis à solliciter un feedback de leur manager en vue d’un échange formel sur les prochaines étapes de leur parcours.

    Les données ainsi recueillies sont transférées dans Workday, où elles viennent renforcer plusieurs fonctions RH essentielles : adéquations des compétences aux postes vacants, recommandations de postes internes, planification stratégique des effectifs… le tout reposant sur des éléments concrets issus des évaluations et des activités de formation dans Degreed.

    Grâce à cette intégration, l’évolution de carrière devient concrète et mesurable, et elle s’ancre dans la stratégie de l’entreprise.

    Un impact stratégique, à grande échelle

    Dès la première année, les résultats ont été significatifs :

    • Plusieurs millions de dollars économisés sur les grosses sommes consacrées à des marketplaces de talents et des outils d’inférence de compétences provenant de fournisseurs tiers
    • 50 % des collaborateurs intégrés dans SkillsFIRST
    • 1 200 promotions internes supplémentaires en six mois
    • Hausse de 11 % du taux d’engagement des collaborateurs en matière d’évolution de carrière
    • 34 % des recrutements internes appuyés par les données SkillsFIRST, évitant les coûts liés à l’embauche externe
    • Plus de 21 000 évaluations de compétences mensuelles, générant des éclairages précieux sur la planification et la formation des talents

    Ces résultats ne sont pas qu’un effet de la technologie : ils traduisent une transformation culturelle portée par un véritable engagement en faveur de la transparence, du développement et de la mobilité.

    Principaux enseignements pour les responsables des talents

    L’expérience de State Street fournit des repères concrets aux responsables RH, des talents ou L&D qui souhaitent passer à l’action :

    • Partez des besoins réels de votre entreprise, et non des capacités offertes par les systèmes.
    • Créez un langage commun à l’aide d’une bibliothèque de compétences harmonisée et de plans d’évolution de poste.
    • Connectez les plateformes pour mener une veille RH basée sur vos données de compétences.
    • Impliquez vos collaborateurs à chaque étape pour les rendre acteurs.

    En faisant des compétences le trait d’union entre performance, planification et développement, State Street a redéfini la manière dont une organisation internationale peut anticiper les compétences de demain et valoriser ses talents.

    En savoir plus

    SkillsFIRST n’a pas seulement révolutionné la formation chez State Street : cet outil a renforcé la rétention, stimulé l’engagement, encouragé la mobilité interne et généré des économies mesurables.

    Et si une approche similaire permettait à votre entreprise d’aller plus loin et plus vite ? Discutons-en.

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    Degreed Maestro : des coachs IA pour soutenir la vente de nouveaux produits https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/degreed-maestro-ai-coaches-for-new-product-sales-enablement/ https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/degreed-maestro-ai-coaches-for-new-product-sales-enablement/#respond Thu, 30 Jan 2025 18:48:33 +0000 https://degreed.com/experience/experience/?p=84336 Ceci est le deuxième volet d’une série consacrée au coaching personnalisé et piloté par l’IA avec Degreed Maestro. Poursuivez votre lecture avec le premier et le troisième volets. Votre équipe produit passe une année à développer une nouvelle plateforme. Des études approfondies permettent de découvrir une solution à des problèmes centraux sur le marché. Votre équipe marketing […]

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    Ceci est le deuxième volet d’une série consacrée au coaching personnalisé et piloté par l’IA avec Degreed Maestro. Poursuivez votre lecture avec le premier et le troisième volets.

    Votre équipe produit passe une année à développer une nouvelle plateforme. Des études approfondies permettent de découvrir une solution à des problèmes centraux sur le marché. Votre équipe marketing élabore un plan de lancement créatif, avec un message fort, une campagne d’e-mailing, des publicités au format numérique et des publications sur les réseaux sociaux. Votre stratégie de lancement sur le marché prend forme, avec des comptes clés à cibler et des profils d’acheteurs clairement définis.

    Le jour J, vous sabrez le champagne.

    Pas si vite ! Votre équipe de vente dispose-t-elle de tous les outils dont elle a besoin ? Vos représentants commerciaux ont-ils suffisamment de connaissances sur le produit ?

    Afin de garantir un lancement couronné de succès, votre équipe de vente doit parfaitement connaître votre produit et savoir le présenter. Fournir des réponses aux questions essentielles sur son fonctionnement et ses fonctionnalités, mettre en avant ses bénéfices en adaptant le discours à chaque client :

    autant de réflexes qu’elle doit acquérir rapidement et de façon flexible, sans perturber un emploi du temps déjà bien rempli.

    Des coachs personnalisés pour répondre aux besoins de votre entreprise

    Si les coachs IA prêts à l’emploi sont de puissants outils, les possibilités de personnalisation offertes par Degreed Maestro en décuplent l’impact.

    Grâce à Degreed Maestro, vous pouvez personnaliser les coachs IA afin qu’ils intègrent les priorités, les contenus, les directives, le ton et la culture de votre entreprise. Cette contextualisation leur permet de dialoguer avec vos collaborateurs de manière plus pertinente, de transmettre les bons messages avec précision et de fournir des formations efficaces. 

    Autrement dit, Degreed Maestro vous permet d’assurer à grande échelle certaines fonctions comme le feedback individuel ou le coaching de vente, sans les contraintes liées aux interactions humaines. Les cas d’utilisation sont innombrables. Dans cet article, nous prendrons pour exemple le scénario suivant : créer un coach personnalisé pour accompagner une équipe commerciale lors du lancement d’un nouveau produit.

    Degreed Maestro en action : créer un coach pour soutenir les ventes

    Dans notre dernier volet, Marc a utilisé le coach de revue de compétences de Degreed Maestro pour guider ses premiers pas en tant que nouveau directeur des ventes. Son objectif était d’identifier ses déficits de compétences et de suivre un parcours de formation personnalisé pour y remédier. 

    À présent, l’employeur de Marc sollicite Degreed Maestro pour créer un coach personnalisé capable de préparer Marc et son équipe à passer à l’action.

    Soyons honnêtes : le lancement d’un nouveau produit n’est pas une mince affaire. Feedback de dernière minute, changement de stratégies, ajout de nouvelles fonctionnalités, argumentaire remanié… L’équipe commerciale doit pouvoir suivre. 

    Mais dans ce cas précis, il ne s’agit pas d’un simple lancement.

    Ce nouveau produit est considéré par la direction comme un levier stratégique majeur. La prudence est donc de mise en ce qui concerne les destinataires et le calendrier de diffusion des informations.

    Ce scénario — une stratégie mouvante et des restrictions d’accès à l’information — constitue un véritable casse-tête pour les équipes d’aide à la vente. Le résultat ? Un grand niveau de stress et une efficacité limitée. Mais il existe une solution rapide et efficace pour rendre les choses beaucoup plus simples : créer un coach personnalisé avec Degreed Maestro*. Plus besoin de jongler avec les plannings pour organiser une série de webinaires internes. Désormais, vous pouvez alimenter le coach avec toutes les informations essentielles pour l’équipe de vente, et ce, à tout moment, y compris le jour du lancement.

    Grâce à la personnalisation des coachs de Degreed Maestro, chacun des membres de votre équipe reçoit la formation exacte dont il a besoin, au moment opportun. 

    Une directrice commerciale souhaite pratiquer son argumentaire de vente avant un rendez-vous important avec un client ? Un coach pourra lui fournir rapidement un feedback utile sur la base des ressources chargées dans le système.

    Un vice-président régional cherche à définir le profil du client idéal d’un produit pour déterminer les comptes cibles et identifier des opportunités ? Il suffit de poser la question pour obtenir la réponse.

    Une membre de l’équipe de vente a besoin d’une réponse rapide à une FAQ, mais le responsable produit enchaîne les rendez-vous toute la journée ? Elle peut simplement interroger Degreed Maestro.

    Finis les programmes de soutien à la vente bricolés avec des infos déjà dépassées. Finies les stratégies chamboulées par des changements de dernière minute. Finies les urgences à gérer.

    Vous pouvez même peaufiner le dossier de présentation juste avant le lancement.

    Grâce à Degreed Maestro.

    Le coach de soutien à la vente pensé pour ses utilisateurs

    Nous avons vu comment l’équipe d’aide à la vente a conçu un coach personnalisé pour accompagner les commerciaux. Mais comment ce coach est-il perçu, et surtout utilisé, côté terrain ?

    Voyons comment Marc s’en sert pour remporter un contrat. 

    Lors de la démonstration du coach, Marc a été impressionné par sa capacité à répondre à des questions qu’il aurait d’ordinaire posées au responsable produit à l’origine de la solution. Curieux, il décide de l’essayer. 

    Le coach étant intégré à un parcours de formation sur le nouveau produit, Marc peut y accéder facilement dans le cadre de sa formation. 

    Il lance une conversation avec le coach pour lui poser ses principales questions sur le produit et reçoit de précieux conseils sur la manière d’adapter son argumentaire de vente. 

    Trois jours plus tard, Marc croise un client lors d’un salon professionnel. Ce dernier a lu un communiqué de presse sur le nouveau produit et souhaite en discuter plus tard ce jour-là. Le salon professionnel est plutôt bruyant. Marc lance donc une conversation textuelle avec le coach personnalisé. Il lui demande des conseils pour adapter son argumentaire aux besoins de ce client. Il peut même s’entraîner et reçoit ensuite un feedback constructif sur la manière de s’améliorer.

    Lors du rendez-vous, Marc applique les conseils de Degreed Maestro et suscite l’intérêt du client. Ils décident donc de planifier un appel de suivi avec toute l’équipe client, qui aboutit à la vente du produit.

    La force d’un coaching personnalisé à l’échelle de l’entreprise

    Pour Marc, le coach personnalisé a constitué un outil essentiel. En effet, il lui a fourni le soutien individuel dont il avait besoin pour vendre le nouveau produit. Mais Marc n’a pas été le seul à en bénéficier. Le coach a aidé l’ensemble de l’équipe commerciale.

    En adaptant cet accompagnement aux spécificités du produit, aux objectifs et aux priorités de l’entreprise, Degreed Maestro a permis à l’ensemble du personnel de vente de se perfectionner et lui a fourni tout ce dont il avait besoin pour contribuer à la croissance de l’entreprise. 

    Le lancement a été couronné de succès. Il ne restait plus qu’à sabrer le champagne !

    Pour aller plus loin

    Programmez un appel individuel et personnalisé dès aujourd’hui.

    * Le coach personnalisé de Degreed Maestro est actuellement en cours de développement.

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    Use Workday and Degreed Data to Fill Your Skill Gaps https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/workday-degreed-fill-skill-gaps/ Thu, 28 Aug 2025 13:45:02 +0000 https://degreed.com/experience/?p=86654 The Workday and Degreed bi-directional integration unifies skill data, creating a single, reliable source of truth to help solve skill gaps.

    The post Use Workday and Degreed Data to Fill Your Skill Gaps appeared first on Degreed.

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    We’re at a turning point. 69% of CEOs say skill gaps are their top talent risk, yet most organizations are still guessing what skills their people actually have. In a market where business priorities shift overnight, guessing isn’t an option. Leaders need to see skills in real time, close gaps faster, and prove the business impact of every learning investment.

    This becomes easier with the right tools, integrated to meet your needs. Take Degreed and Workday. Together, Degreed and Workday create a unified skills ecosystem that turns insight into action. The integration helps you close skill gaps faster, adapt to change, and align development directly with business priorities.

    Degreed and Workday create a unified skills ecosystem that turns insight into action

    Turn Skill Gaps into Growth Opportunities

    In many organizations, skill data is scattered across multiple platforms. That slows workforce planning and creates a mismatch between talent and business needs. The Workday and Degreed integration solves that by connecting skill data in both directions, creating a single, reliable source of truth.

    It also replaces generic, one-size-fits-all learning with highly personalized experiences. By combining Workday’s role and performance insights with Degreed’s AI-powered curation, personalized experiences, and 80+ content providers, employees get the right learning at the right time.

    Whenever the market shifts, agility becomes a competitive advantage. Shared taxonomies, labor market intelligence, and real-time skill validation make it possible to pivot quickly and confidently. Most importantly, every learning activity can be tied directly to measurable outcomes—linking Degreed activity with business targets in Workday, like retention, productivity, and promotion rates—so you can prove ROI, not just report on activity.

    Proof in Action: State Street

    State Street uses Degreed to assess and grow skills, then syncs validated skills to Workday only when proficiency is met. The results:

    • Employees who spend 5–10 hours/month learning in Degreed report higher engagement.
    • 300K+ Validated Skill Ratings powering internal mobility
    • 97% User Activation, driven by integration into internal mobility
    • 72% Monthly Active Use (and growing)

    Your Advantage

    Our Skills and Learning integrations have a Workday Design Approved badge. That means they are reviewed and approved by Workday, built in close collaboration with the Workday Product team, and guided by real client use cases. Together, we deliver one source of truth for HR and L&D, a connected and personalized employee experience, and the agility to pivot quickly, measure impact, and invest in what works.

    Don’t wait for skill gaps to slow your growth. Discover how Workday + Degreed can help you close them. Imagine the impact you could see in just 90 days.

    Want to learn more about Degreed? Get a demo.

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    DEI Skills in Action: A Step-by-Step Guide to Driving Change https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/dei-skills-in-action-a-step-by-step-guide-to-driving-change/ https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/dei-skills-in-action-a-step-by-step-guide-to-driving-change/#respond Thu, 19 Dec 2024 17:48:29 +0000 https://explore.local/2024/12/19/dei-skills-in-action-a-step-by-step-guide-to-driving-change/ This is the second post in a series on building skills for Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (DEI). See the first. DEI skills—such as critical thinking, cultural intelligence, and psychological safety—are no longer optional; they’re essential to a thriving, resilient organization that can adapt to rapid change. By developing DEI skills, leaders and employees can create inclusive […]

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    This is the second post in a series on building skills for Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (DEI). See the first.

    DEI skills—such as critical thinking, cultural intelligence, and psychological safety—are no longer optional; they’re essential to a thriving, resilient organization that can adapt to rapid change.

    By developing DEI skills, leaders and employees can create inclusive environments where diverse perspectives thrive, fostering a culture of belonging that boosts resilience, engagement, and innovation. Key DEI skills bridge the gap between rapid technological advancements and the human connection needed for collaboration—and they might just prove essential in helping your organization meet its most important objectives. 

    Organizations looking to navigate periods of significant change need DEI skills to remain agile and resilient. Navigating change means more than responding to technology shifts; it’s about ensuring your people are equipped to thrive in an inclusive, fast-paced environment.

    As periods of change become the norm, prioritizing DEI skills is key for organizations to stay competitive and agile. Whether it’s enhancing knowledge sharing or building resilient teams, focusing on DEI skills is the path to a truly adaptive, inclusive, and thriving workplace.

    The Leader’s Role in DEI Skill Development

    Leaders in particular play a crucial role in championing DEI skills. Why? Leaders empower individuals and managers to support inclusive practices and create a culture of belonging that drives engagement, grit, and resilience at a time when people need it most. Executive Leaders can prioritize DEI skills to foster an environment where psychological safety and diverse perspectives drive growth.

    Engaging managers and leaders in DEI skill conversations begins with equipping them to act as skill coaches, fostering open dialogue and modeling inclusive behaviors. This process involves providing targeted training and tools to help leaders recognize and mitigate bias, facilitate psychological safety, and encourage diverse perspectives within their teams.

    By embedding DEI into regular performance discussions and aligning it with business goals, managers can actively support their teams’ growth while driving a culture of inclusion and belonging.

    Choosing DEI Skills to Prioritize at Your Organization

    As you assess which DEI skills need attention at your organization, let’s explore a few examples to get you started.

    Remember that skills should be measurable and developable.

    You might be tempted to choose skills like compassion or empathy. These are important, but under scrutiny they’re revealed as inherent human traits. In other words, how can an employee get better at empathy? On the contrary, DEI skills allow for the evaluation of proficiency and improvement over time. To find out more on this, take a deeper dive into skills vs. competencies.  

    Key DEI skills and the benefits they offer include:

    • Critical Thinking. This helps employees recognize and address biases, question assumptions, and make fair, reasoned decisions that align with inclusive values. It helps them understand how best to utilize and evaluate AI tools. It’s not only about problem-solving; it’s essential for uncovering and addressing unconscious biases in decision-making and enabling fairer, more inclusive practices.
    • Psychological Safety. This is about creating an environment where individuals feel secure sharing ideas without fear of judgment, and it’s vital to inclusion. Psychological safety builds trust and encourages diverse perspectives, allowing innovation to flourish while creating a foundation of trust and respect. Psychological safety is pertinent to all levels of an organization.
    • Resilience. This is the ability to adapt to challenges and recover from setbacks. It supports employees as they navigate change, including shifts toward greater equity and inclusion. Resilience is about equipping teams to thrive even during difficult times, which is essential for fostering a workforce that remains engaged and supportive.
    • Cross-Cultural Agility.  This is about understanding and adapting to diverse perspectives in a way that drives better team collaboration. It helps individuals work productively across different backgrounds, enhancing communication and collaboration.
    • Inclusive Communication. This involves learning techniques to actively listen, mitigate biases, and foster open dialogue. Inclusive communication allows for better understanding among team members and creates an environment where all voices are heard and valued.
    • Equitable Decision-Making. This involves systematically ensuring fairness in processes like hiring or promotions through choices that are both inclusive and unbiased. Equitable decision-making lays the groundwork for fair practices that help attract and retain a diverse workforce.

    Each of these skills is developable, actionable, and measurable. The important action is identifying skills to develop that are essential to DEI  as well as accomplishing your company’s goals.

    How to Develop DEI Skills Aligned with Company Goals

    Rather than viewing DEI as a standalone initiative, savvy organizations will recognize that DEI skills are directly tied to broader business objectives—for example, boosting innovation, increasing employee engagement, or improving customer satisfaction.

    Step No. 1: Identify DEI skills that align with business goals.

    Start by identifying a few essential DEI skills that align with your company’s strategic objectives. For example, if your goal is to foster innovation, focus on skills like creativity and cultural awareness, which support diverse thinking and collaboration. If the goal is to improve team resilience during times of change, prioritize skills like psychological safety and adaptability.

    Step No. 2: Define clear outcomes for skill development.

    It’s essential to clearly define what success looks like. Do you need employees to gain deep proficiency in one area, or is a broader understanding of multiple skills more valuable? Asking for both breadth and depth can lead to burnout, so keep the focus on a few key skills and make sure progress is measurable. This specificity will also help you track progress and make adjustments as needed.

    Step No. 3: Take action with small, scalable steps.

    Don’t wait for perfect data or a lengthy approval process to get started. Quick wins like engaging employees in discussions about skills or launching targeted training programs can build momentum. Analyzing employee skill profiles, for instance—to identify gaps in psychological safety or cultural awareness—might quickly help you pinpoint where to start. This in turn could help make your overall implementation process more responsive and agile.

    Step No. 4: Provide targeted resources and training.

    Asking employees to develop DEI skills without adequate resources is a recipe for failure. Ensure they have access to workshops, peer-to-peer learning groups, stretch assignments, and learning content that supports their growth. Be wary of blanket training programs, as these often lack the focus necessary to address specific skill gaps. Instead, opt for tailored learning experiences that address your organization’s unique needs.

    A Note About Creating Lasting, Measurable Mentorship Programs

    A mentorship program is a wonderful tool in the DEI toolbox. But if it’s your only tool, you’ve made a mistake. While many mentorship programs created during the DEI push of 2020 had good intentions, they often lacked long-term sustainability. To create lasting impact, mentorship initiatives must have clear goals and ongoing support. 

    Leaders should be accountable for fostering inclusive cultures and providing mentorship aligned with measurable outcomes. Specific skills tied to a program can help define clear goals. By establishing structured, goal-oriented mentorship that complements other DEI initiatives, organizations can sustain DEI momentum and build a stronger, more inclusive talent pipeline.

    The Measurable Impact of DEI Skills

    Organizations that invest in DEI skills are building a foundation for sustained performance and adaptability, creating a workforce that’s not only more diverse but also more agile, innovative, and resilient. Integrating DEI skills into company strategy isn’t just about “checking a box.” It’s about making an investment in the long-term health and competitiveness of your organization. 

    With the right DEI skills in place, your organization is better equipped to navigate change, embrace diverse perspectives, and drive lasting progress.

    Degreed Professional Services

    Hali Linn is a Learning Strategy Consultant on the Degreed Professional Services team.

    Degreed Professional Services partners with business leaders and learning pros to explore learning strategies, technology goals, and questions. Book a free and private consultation.

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    4 Ways L&D Dodges Skill Development & Why It’s a Mistake https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/dodging-skill-development/ https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/dodging-skill-development/#respond Fri, 03 May 2024 18:06:11 +0000 https://explore.local/2024/05/03/dodging-skill-development/ Let's review the most common reasons L&D professionals either ignore or delay progress with skill development—and why it's a mistake.

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    Looking for an excuse to bypass the skill development bandwagon? 

    Perfect—you’re exactly who I wanted to talk to. 

    I want to chat with the fairly large population of L&D pros out there who either shy away from or tune out skills. I get it. Skills is sucking up a lot of oxygen in our profession right now. Colleagues, leadership, industry leaders, and even vendors pressure you to get on board. 

    I promise that the purpose of this article isn’t to convert you to join a skills-based organization (SBO) club. But while you don’t need to hitch a ride on the fast-paced, all-or-nothing express, it will help if you and your L&D team take at least a few steps down the skills path. 

    Let’s take a look at the most common reasons L&D professionals either ignore or delay progress on skills. After that, I’ll offer advice so it’s easier for you and your team to start taking small steps toward skill development. 

    Skill Development? Someone else will get it. Graphic

    No 1. “Skills? They’re not our responsibility.” 

    A lot of skills wallflowers are holding back out there. When skill development discussions ignite, some may fade into the background. It’s a comfortable position to take. In many companies, talent management and L&D teams are often organized under the HR, Talent, or another department. 

    If your company assigns talent and career development to other departments outside L&D, it’s natural for you to focus on the more tried and true elements of the job like learning engagement, learning culture, or cohort-based learning. It’s easy to think you can relax because someone else has “skills” covered.

    But this thinking will become increasingly problematic. Holding on to divisions between HR, Talent, L&D, and other departments runs the risk of skills falling into a corporate no-man’s land. Corporate skill strategies often fail because there is confusion about who owns skills and or agreeing on a definition.

    L&D are you a skills wallflower? Graphic

    L&D pros can’t afford to be skills wallflowers. 

    L&D professionals, you may feel comfortable with how your company has organized learning, talent acquisition, and career development positions. However, these old divisions of labor responsibilities do not address rapidly growing skills gaps. The truth is that no department can afford to be a skills wallflower any longer. 

    A skills initiative is too big of a challenge and project for one or two departments to own. Skills is a vertical, horizontal, top-down, and bottom-up initiative. It’s all-inclusive. And it certainly calls for responsibility and ownership from a department that helps employees learn and develop.

    Skill Development? It's just not what L&D is Graphic

    No 2. “Skills? They’re not in our DNA.”

    Another common reason to wave the skill development bandwagon on by is ontological. Many learning pros believe L&D exists to champion competencies—not skills. This is understandable because the building blocks for Talent and L&D has been competencies. 

    Over the past few decades, L&D professionals were trained to use competency models, and these models have grown strong roots in organizations. We’ve been trained to develop competencies: the complex mixtures of behaviors, abilities, knowledge, and skills that are tied to specific job roles. 

    Why would we abandon the competency model we know and love for a skills model that may end the role of jobs? From this perspective, skills aren’t just different but almost antithetical to rock solid L&D structures.  

    But here’s the thing: defining learning and development solely with competencies is problematic.

    • First, competency models are complex and include some components—like abilities and attributes—that we can’t change.
    • Second, many employees don’t see the full picture with competencies. Employees don’t see how developing competencies can help advance their careers—especially in the context of hiring managers consulting competencies to gauge whether someone has the skills and experience needed to do a job.
    • Third, competency models are usually associated with job roles, not work like projects, tasks, assignments, or problems to be solved. What L&D does is ultimately not limited to a certain model. Nor should it be. Instead, if you focus on the overall mission of L&D, you’ll find there’s plenty of room for competencies and skill development. 

    Focus on the overall mission of L&D—not competencies.

    I know we’re comfortable with competencies, but we must see the bigger picture. This brings me to an important question: What is the purpose and function of L&D? 

    No matter where someone falls on the skills or competencies scale, the answer to that question, at least in my experience, is fairly universal. The function of L&D is to help people do new things or do current things better than before. 

    And if we can agree that this is our mission, then skills have a role in our mission. Skills are defined as learning that can be applied. Skills are learned and developed—they’re what we do. We can’t help people do new things without skills entering the equation. 

    Skill Development Quote by Janice Burns

    No 3. “Skills? They’re too hard to switch to.” 

    You might not have anything against skill development, but you still might not feel ready to jump on the bandwagon. The vehicle is moving fast, and getting yourself on board seems to require some expert stunt double maneuvers. You’ve got to move from your solid competencies platform and leap onto the fast-paced skills train. 

    To start making the move from what they know—competencies—to where they need to get—skills—lots of professionals define and compare the two models. They assume that if they compare the two long enough, they’ll find the magic key to get from here to there. But this definitional approach isn’t the answer. 

    L&D are you hung up on competencies vs. skills?

    Stop fixating on skills vs. competencies.

    We’ve all seen the hype around skills vs. competencies. I’ve seen it in LinkedIn posts and comments, on webinars, at conferences, and during client discussions. Avoid getting sucked into it. While it may seem like a way to make the transition easier, it just psyches you out and makes something simple appear hard. 

    You don’t need a complex way to translate competencies into skills. Why? Because the skills are already there. Competencies are made up of skills. You just need to identify the skills in the competencies you’ve worked on for decades. 

    Once you identify the skills that make up competencies, focus on how you can better help employees to develop and practice them. Additionally, you may want to consider adding new ones. Skills change quickly, so keeping your eye on the skills needed to get work done is important.

    Skill Development? They're just too hard graphic

    No. 4 “Skills? They’re just too complex.”

    Nothing scares L&D professionals off the skills path more than complexity. I’ll be honest with you: if you look at them holistically, skills are complex. From a numbers perspective alone, there are far more of them to track than competencies. Many companies that create a skills taxonomy have hundreds or even thousands of skills.

    L&D pros are also scared by what they perceive as a steep learning curve. Many approach me holding a long laundry list of questions:

    • How should we define skills?
    • How do we get the whole company to agree on a single definition?
    • How do you validate skills?
    • What assessment model should we use?
    • What technology platform is the best for capturing skill data?

    And the list goes on and on. While questions in general are critical to learning and solving complex problems, you need to ask the right questions in the right order. This will vary from organization to organization, but let’s take a closer look.

    You don’t need all the skills answers to get started. 

    Many L&D professionals believe they must know everything about skills before they can begin. While doing preliminary research is a tried-and-true strategy, the questions should enable you to act and not falter. 

    People always want to know the WHY in things before they change or adopt something new first. WIth this in mind, consider making your first step answering the why question.

    Start with answering the WHY skills development question.

    To better understand why, think about your company’s goals and plans. Show leaders how improving skills can help them reach these goals more quickly and efficiently. This discussion will help you determine what you need to do. 

    Perhaps leaders want to identify your company’s most critical skill gaps. Or perhaps they know which skills gap to tackle, and they need you to help them fill that gap. Ask questions about these specific action-focused items. Ask questions that lead to actions that will make a difference.  

    L&D Continuum Graphic Degreed

    Skill Development—take it one step at a time. 

    While you may not realize it, you’re probably further down the skill development path than you think. Just look at the Learning Continuum grid above to see where you fall. If you see your organization as being anywhere on the continuum, guess what—you’ve already started your journey!

    And keep in mind that you don’t have to jump on that fast-paced SBO bandwagon. You just need to start discussing skills and begin walking down the skill development path. For more help to start your skills journey, download a free copy of The Ultimate Guide to a Skills-First Future.  

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    2023 Unwrapped: Big Headlines, New Research, and Emerging Strategies https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/2023-unwrapped-big-headlines-new-research-emerging-strategies/ https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/2023-unwrapped-big-headlines-new-research-emerging-strategies/#respond Wed, 20 Dec 2023 14:22:06 +0000 https://explore.local/2023/12/20/2023-unwrapped-big-headlines-new-research-emerging-strategies/ We’ve compiled some of the big 2023 L&D headlines, research, and strategies for you to unwrap as the year comes to a close.

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    Let’s be honest: 2023 has been a long and unpredictable year for L&D. Learning teams around the world started the year in survival mode, concerned about the economy and advancements in generative AI. From there, 2023 sped ahead with uncertainty.  

    In light of this year’s challenges and changes, Degreed has continued to help L&D with innovative ideas, research, and solutions. Particularly this year, we’ve studied and discussed the most pressing topics in L&D—whether they were time-sensitive, technical, foundational, or forward-looking, we’ve covered them all. 

    And everyone likes a present—wrapped or unwrapped. So we’ve compiled some of the big 2023 L&D headlines, research, and strategies for you to unwrap as the year comes to a close.

    A Timely Kit For Overcoming Economic Uncertainty

    At Degreed, we’re always playing the long game. But early in 2023, Degreed quickly realized the colossal impact shrinking budgets were having on L&D departments. 

    L&D teams around the world needed to address the economic issues—quickly. Learning leaders faced dramatic budget cuts, and many were put in the stressful position of convincing their C-suites of the value of learning during an economic downturn. As usual—albeit more urgently—learning leaders needed to get more done with less, and we showed them how in our Recession Survival Kit for L&D Leaders

    Take Cover! Your L&D Survival Kit for Weather the Recession.

    3 Must-Reads for Working With a Tight L&D Budget

    While concern of a recession has faded from the news cycle, L&D teams at many organizations are still feeling the squeeze. If you’re anticipating a reduced budget for 2024, we’ve got resources for you. And if you’re still trying to convince senior leaders why they should invest more in learning, our thought leaders have written some excellent articles to help you. 

    Annee Bayeux’s CLO article shares how to use your learning metrics to convince internal leaders that downturns are actually the best time to invest in upskilling your people. 

    • Learning Spend & Impact Scorecard

    When money is tight, best to double-check that your spending accomplishes what you’re paying it to do. To help with your learning budget audit, we created an easy and helpful scorecard of common L&D-related investments and their impacts. 

    Degreed’s own Janice Burns wrote on HR.com compelling research that proves how investing in your people sets you up to come out stronger on the other side.

    A Technical Guide for Navigating A Crowded Learning Tech Market

    As an L&D professional, your main driver is your people’s learning, but it’s not always as simple as that. With tech advancements come more nuances for L&D pros to consider and navigate. It’s a crowded and confusing market, and this requires L&D leaders to have more and more technical know-how. 

    Specifically, the C-suite is asking L&D leaders to solve more and more problems, which often requires additional technology. We’re seeing L&D leaders both consolidate their technology to save money and add new technology to address emerging learning problems. This turns their learning tech ecosystems into wild, disorganized messes characterized by gaps, lost information, and more.

    Seeing L&D leaders struggle with this issue, we created helpful resources for evaluating, simplifying, and improving any learning tech stack. If your ecosystem is like the Wild West and you don’t know how to tame it, check out the Degreed whitepaper Building Your Learning Tech Ecosystem.

    Top Content for Learning Ecosystems

    As with most technical topics, there’s a lot to learn about ecosystems. To give you more insight, we curated some additional articles and videos for you to peruse. 

    What are your learning ecosystem problems? Great question. This Degreed blog breaks down the most common growing pains so you can find and treat the right ecosystem ailment without too much trial and error.

    We love technical experts who speak clearly and frankly. This describes our very own Dan Carlson, Senior Manager of Ecosystem Insights at Degreed, who shares his decades of experience in this compelling webinar about learning ecosystems. 

    The old “you have to pick one” mentality is BS. Tech companies acting in your best interest make friends so you have choices and access to the best of the best. Degreed had a partner coup earlier this year when representatives from Workday, Eightfold, and SAP sat down with us to discuss partnerships at a session for LENS 2023.

    What does your learning ecosystem look like? Many people don’t even know. In this Degreed blog, we guide you in a helpful exercise to map out your current learning ecosystem. The results may surprise you—for example, did you know your vendors’ ecosystems become an extension of your own?

    A Foundational Study to Understand How Your Employees Learn 

    While there are always technical topics to explore, smart L&D teams consistently take the pulse of learning. They keep current with how employees prefer to learn. They stay up to date with new concepts and skill-building strategies. In other words, they don’t forget the fundamentals.

    Degreed prizes itself in putting the learner experience at the center of our platform. This is the reason we spend hundreds of hours gathering, analyzing, and presenting fresh insights into how the workforce learns bi-annually. 

    To understand what your employees need to learn effectively, check out our 2023 report on How the Workforce Learns

    Additional Insights Into How Your Workforce Learns

    How the Workforce Learns has a lot of meat on it—more than we can fit into one report. So here are some additional resources to give our study more context, commentary, and takeaways.

    An article for Human Resources Director (HRD) interviews Janice Burns, Chief Transformation Officer at Degreed, to glean additional insight into the findings from How the Workforce Learns 2023.

    How do you apply the findings in our study to your organization in a meaningful way? Steve Boucher, Director of Strategy and Advisory Solutions at Degreed, helps connect the dots so you can start applying tangible takeaways from our latest How the Workforce Learns report. 

    A Forward-Looking Introduction to Win the Skills-First Future

    To recap: in 2023 we’ve covered timely, technical, and foundational topics. What’s left? The future. We’re always thinking about the future, and that future revolves around skills. The World Economic Forum estimates that, amid the lightning-fast pace of technological change, businesses worldwide will need to upskill approximately one billion workers in the next few years

    The way to fill that skills gap? Help employees learn skills—fast. Of course, L&D will play a critical role in the new skills economy because it provides people with the learning they need for skill development. In many ways, L&D can lead the charge by preparing companies for the quickly approaching future. 

    To learn more about a skills-first future and the role L&D will play, check out our quick 15-minute introduction to Embrace the Skills-First Future.

    3 Resources to Dig Into The Skills-First Future

    Since skills are the future, you’ll need more than just a 15-minute introduction. Here are some additional sources to sink your teeth into to prepare. 

    In a piece for Time Magazine, Mitra Kalita interviews Annee Bayeux, Chief Learning Strategist at Degreed, about our approach to upskilling and reskilling. 

    When you bring up the topic of skills, academies aren’t far behind. In this Brandon Hall Group webinar, a panel of experts gets together to discuss how academies can efficiently close skill gaps, simplify and elevate learning experiences, engage employees, and reduce the burden on administrators. 

    The Degreed blog deconstructs common, and subsequently ineffective, strategies for upskilling and reskilling your employees. 

    After Reflection Comes Ambition and Innovation 

    It’s been a turbulent year, and we’ve felt it. But more than ever, Degreed is here to help L&D navigate this tumultuous and exciting time in the world of work. 

    • If there is a time-sensitive issue, like an uncertain economy, we’re committed to providing you with resources to help you persevere.
    • If you’re getting stuck in the technical elements of your L&D role, we’ll break down those technicalities for you. 
    • If you need fundamental information about the state of learning in your workforce, we’ll provide the raw data.
    • If you need help seeing the future of L&D, we’ll let you borrow our chic Degreed wayfarers to see what’s on the horizon.

    In many ways, Degreed is one of the best in the business at figuring out the complexities coming your way and innovating accordingly. And after reflecting on the challenges of 2023 and our skills future ahead, Degreed has built a product plan that anticipates and innovates

    In other words—bring it, 2024! We’re ready for you.

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    Learning Academies 101: Everything You Need to Know https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/learning-academies-101-everything-you-need-to-know/ https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/learning-academies-101-everything-you-need-to-know/#respond Thu, 15 Jun 2023 10:55:03 +0000 https://explore.local/2023/06/15/learning-academies-101-everything-you-need-to-know/ Learning academies are the next big thing in corporate learning, and this gives you everything you need to know: definitions, use cases, tips, and more.

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    Academies, according to thought leader Josh Bersin, are the “next big step in corporate learning.” Why? Well, academies promise a solution to managing and closing that ever-widening skills gap.  

    This means that any L&D and HR leader worried about the talent shortage — essentially everyone — should invest some time and effort in learning about and leveraging academies to close the skills gap.

    Whether you’re in the process of building your own academy or you just heard the word mentioned at the L&D and HR water cooler, this article will tell you everything you need to know — from the basics like definitions and use cases to more practical how-to’s designed to help you build or improve your own internal academies. 

    Table of Contents

    What are learning academies?

    A learning academy is a collaborative place where employees develop deep skills that align with business needs. 

    It’s possible you’ve already heard about learning academies.  The idea appeared on the radar of HR & L&D leaders a few years ago, when Bersin used the term to describe “an emerging zeitgeist in corporate learning and development (L&D).” 

    The definition of a learning academy

    While the idea itself isn’t new, it signifies a “new breed of platforms » in the learning tech marketplace. In fact, these platforms are so new that the nomenclature of “learning academies” isn’t even fully baked. The “academies” part remains constant but, depending on who’s using the term, a different modifier can wind up at the front of it: learning academies, capability academies, training academies, skills academies or talent academies. Whatever word someone places in front of it, the basic concept driving learning academies — a collaborative place to develop skills that align with business needs — remains the same. 

    Okay, enough with semantics. Now let’s discuss why academies are so damn important. 

    What major problems do learning academies solve? 

    Don’t be fooled by the simplicity of the learning academy definition: a collaborative place where employees develop deep skills that align with business needs. This definition disrupts the current learning tech marketplace by addressing two key problems: 

    • The ever-widening skills gap and talent crisis
    • The misalignment between L&D and business goals

    These two issues have baffled L&D leaders for years. Finally, a promising solution has arrived on the ed tech scene. 

    The major problems that learning academies solve

    Problem No. 1: The ever-widening skills gap and talent crisis.

    Even before the disruption by generative AI, the World Economic Forum in 2020 predicted that by 2025 the unrelenting pace of technology will displace 85 million jobs, create 97 million jobs, and require half of all employees to reskill. 

    McKinsey & Company already reports that, as predicted, 87% of companies are experiencing a talent shortage. But the skills pinch is happening despite business leaders working hard to fill the skills gap. Companies threw a boatload of money at the problem in the past decade.

    In 2010, companies spent 271 billion on corporate training globally, and that spending increased by 37% in ten years. According to Training Industry, companies in 2020 will spend a whopping $357 billion on training and learning programs. And in the United States alone, training expenditures passed the $100 billion mark in 2021-2022. 

    What do companies have to show for their spending sprees? Not much. As companies spent billions of dollars, the percentage of CEOs worried about skill availability only increased. It actually increased at a faster rate than company spending: it went from 53% in 2012 to 79% in 2019. (With the arrival of generative AI, who knows how much that percentage increased?!)

    Clearly, the learning solutions that companies spent billions on in the past decade didn’t fill their skill gaps. But don’t lose heart — now there’s a viable solution for keeping your company stocked with talent.

    Solution: How academies keep your company stocked with talent.

    Academies enjoy a long and successful track record when it comes to developing and delivering internal talent. A famous example comes from General Electric: After building skills at the company’s physical academy in the 1950s, Reginald Jones went on to become a future GE CEO.  

    Bersin also lauds his old-school academy experience at IBM in the 1980s:

    « We had a sales academy like none other. I spent years in sales training and learned more about customers, selling practices, and products than at any other time in my life. (My son just spent a year in the SAP Sales Academy, and it set him off on an incredible career.”

    Josh Bersin

    So historically, learning academies have been successful. And while the GE and IBM academies were brick-and-mortar buildings, today companies can continue to cultivate talent with the same principles using the latest technology. And they continue to remain successful. Bersin identifies some of these successful modern-day versions:

    • Comcast, Academy of Customer Service
    • Comex, Supply Chain Academy and Safety Academy
    • Visa, FinTech Capability Academy
    • Capital One, Cloud, Digital and Cybersecurity Academy
    • Ford, Autonomous Vehicle Academy

    Problem No. 2: The misalignment between L&D and business goals.

    Along with the widening skills gap, another difficulty plaguing HR and L&D leadership is aligning learning initiatives with company goals. Because of the endless learning options provided by podcasts, conferences, books, and boot camps, it’s easy for well-intentioned employees to spend learning benefits on skills that don’t align with company needs. 

    For example, employees using one of the many self-directed learning platforms often make learning decisions with limited to no guidance from C-suite leaders. In an article for Training Industry about academies, Yael Gilbo Kaufmann, Co-founder of Learn In, observes that “self-directed learning requires too much guesswork for employees: ‘Would I be more valuable to my company if I read this article or watch this video on digital analytics?’”

    Just how far off is the alignment? In the Brandon Hall Group 2020 Learning Strategy Study, almost every company (87%) expressed the need to align learning and goals, but only 13% said they were capable of doing it. What an extrodinary statistic!

    Obviously, before companies start investing in upskilling, they need a learning solution that re-aligns learning objectives with business objectives.

    Solution: How academies drive business objectives. 

    For upskilling to align with company goals, academies must provide the connective tissue between learning platforms, data, and people (e.g. other departments, C-suite leaders, managers, and employees). 

    The corporate academy is a storied 20th-century U.S. institution — starting in the mid-1950s when the president of GE, Ralph Cordiner, bought land and established a brick-and-mortar university to develop managers. As you might expect, and with so much overhead spent to run brick-and-mortar academies, leadership in the old days insisted on playing a key role in shaping curricula and goals. 

    Today’s modern academies continue this tradition. Bersin explains that academies “should be led by a business leader, not an L&D professional.” This, he says, could be the CIO, CEO, or CFO at the helm of their academies. 

    But it’s not just having the C-suite over the academy that ensures alignment. Today, modern academies utilize technology, like integrations, to promote quick and easy communication between software programs, access skills data, and connect everyone within the company. More easily and effectively than ever, leadership can now provide insightful unique perspectives on the skills that are needed and help design the learning pathways to fill those needs.

    Why are learning academies a good solution for deep upskilling? 

    Three essential experiences for workforce learning

    As companies spent those billions of dollars over the last decade, many legacy learning solutions attempted to use their software to bridge the skills gaps. As discussed, it didn’t work. So why will learning academies get the job done? 

    The builders of academies understand that deep upskilling is a different critical learning need than training or everyday learning. Deep upskilling requires different pedagogical strategies. Deeper upskilling requires a richer, longer, and more intensive learning experience. To do that, academies focus on a learning methodology that promotes deeper, more critical skill learning and supports developing those skills to pursue a career path. 

    Three learning strategies enable academies to deliver deep skill-building: 

    • Collaborative learning
    • Career pathing and skill mapping
    • Practical application and feedback
    The benefits of learning academies

    Collaborative Learning

    Academies — at their core — are collaborative. It specifically refers to a class of learning methods based on traditional in-person learning models, which are often executed in groups or cohorts. After all, blended learning has long been regarded as one of the most effective learning models for high-impact learning topics. The social dynamic of learning from peers and subject matter experts lends context, sparks discussions, and offers coaching and feedback. 

    Especially with generative AI changing the world of skills, humans must fill in the gaps of deeper learning around more complex or human-centric skills like critical thinking, effective decision-making, communication, and problem-solving. So it’s a win-win for any deep skill building to require employees to flex interpersonal and communication skills.  

    Career Pathing and Skill Mapping

    Academies think big. Careers are built by performing a cluster of skills — not just one skill. Too often legacy learning programs only focus on learning a skill. Or if an employee does learn a cluster of skills, those skills don’t necessarily relate to a clear career path.

    Academies use an infrastructure that looks beyond just “a” skill and toward actual career development. With the right academy program, academy participants can identify a career path and then use the academy program to identify the skills they need to get there. 

    Practical Application and Feedback

    Developing a career require practical experience. Most legacy solutions today focus on knowledge, but they don’t ask learners to apply that knowledge. This leads to the classic situation where someone can know everything about dietary science and weight lifting, but they don’t have any practical experience. To be an expert, and to develop deep skills that go beyond knowledge, they must go to the gym regularly, lift weights, and eat healthily. They need to practice and perfect their actual skills. 

    To build tangible skills, academies facilitate opportunities for employees to balance practice through individual and team projects. To further enhance and reinforce that experience, academies use coaching, peer and expert feedback, and assessments. 

    Who can (and should) build academies?

    Sold on academies and want to build your own? Well, you’re in luck. Now more than ever, any company, no matter the size or industry, can build its own academies. 

    The list of academy builders comprises the who’s who of the business world: Google, AT&T, Amazon, Microsoft, GE, and more. And while seventy years ago only the most rich and well-resourced companies could afford these expensive and resource-heavy institutions, today you just need the right technological platform. 

    Technology democratized learning academies for all businesses. So don’t let the list of academy users intimidate you — let it inspire you! You can (and should) build your own academies. It’s affordable and attainable. 

    What are some additional benefits of building internal academies? 

    Keeping your company well-stocked with talent is critical, but there are additional benefits you can enjoy by building your own academies. Investing in internal academies will: 

    • Reduce costs 
    • Boost retention and engagement 
    • Provide dexterity for future skilling

    Reduce Costs

    You can reduce costs in two ways by building internal academies. First, by building your own internal academies you save the money you’d potentially spend hiring an outside agency. Outside agencies focusing on talent development cost a bundle. On top of that initial fee, they can charge extra to customize and tailor their standard content so it aligns with your company goals. 

    Second, especially in light of the current talent shortage, upskilling your employees is cheaper than externally hiring new talent. For example, a General Assembly Whitepaper reports that between recruitment fees, advertising, and other hiring expenses, it may cost a company about $30,000 to hire a middle-career software engineer. (That doesn’t even include onboarding expenses.) The whitepaper estimates that “the cost to train and reskill an internal employee maybe $20,000.” While that may not sound like much of a difference, it can save a company “as much as $116,000 per person over three years.” 

    Boost Retention and Engagement 

    According to a PEW poll, a majority of workers (63%) quit their jobs in 2021 because of low pay or a lack of opportunities to advance their careers. Many learning platforms will cite this statistic to show how employees value learning. But the statistic isn’t about learning — it’s about career growth. What builds career growth? Acquiring new skills. So not only do you save money and develop new skills-building academies, but you boost retention as well.  

    Provide Dexterity for Future Skilling

    Filling your current skills gaps is critical, but those skills gaps will change over time. “In many ways, technology and AI are moving faster than real life,” explains Andy Bird, the CEO of Pearson. “We’re struggling to catch up, and the impact that that has on us both as individuals and as companies is the need to continually re-skill and upskill.”

    The future, as Bird describes it, is unknowable. You don’t know which skills you’ll need in ten years, but you do know that you’ll be constantly upskilling and reskilling. Academies can help you recognize new skill gaps and address them as they arise. Once you’ve built an academy or two, you design an academy framework that works well for your company so you can add new ones as needs arise.

    What are some basic tips to start building your own internal academies? 

    The obvious question is how can under-resourced L&D leaders put together the kind of flexible, talent-building academies the workforce needs? It’s not as daunting as it might seem. A mix of resources smartly deployed can make it work. Here are a few steps to get you started:

    Step No. 1: Address challenges with the appropriate solution. Ask yourself if the problem requires learning, training, or skill development. Then use the right tools to accomplish those critical learning needs. There are three broad areas of skill building:

    • Training to teach specific skills and processes.
    • Learning that is more focused on enrichment and curiosity.
    • Development that prepares employees to advance the organization. 

    This framework can help you differentiate some of the different needs you might have and clarify how to move forward. 

    Step No. 2: Provide time for upskilling. Providing time is pretty simple. Just 34% of employees are willing to upskill in their own time, while 71% will jump at the chance for paid upskilling and 64% will upskill on company time

    Step No. 3: Encourage learning in cohorts. More than 90% of employees and HR pros surveyed by Randstad said that skilling initiatives would be more effective with guidance and support. Company-led cohorts provide support and accountability and facilitate cross-training. 


    Step No. 4: Get the rest of the business involved. It’s important to make a business case for the talent academy. When the entire business sees the need for talent-building to enable you to compete and win the marketplace, the whole organization is energized and supports it.

    To learn more tips, download a free copy of A Practitioner’s Guide: Building a Modern Academy.

    A Modern Path Forward To Deep Upskilling & Business Alignment  

    With skills changing so quickly, companies must get this critical moment right — and fast. You can’t waste your time trying to solve the most unprecedented skill gaps with whatever learning tool you’ve used for the past ten years. You need a solution that delivers, and Academies not only deliver upskilling but they’re affordable and align upskilling with your business needs. 

    It doesn’t matter how you get it done. You can build your own academy with a paperclip, duct tape, and shoestring or you purchase a fancy academy platform — just build it.

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    Learning Stipends 101: Everything Your Company Needs to Know https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/learning-stipends-101/ https://degreed.com/experience/fr/blog/learning-stipends-101/#respond Tue, 13 Jun 2023 11:24:23 +0000 https://explore.local/2023/06/13/learning-stipends-101/ In this article, we break down everything you need to know about learning stipends: what they are, why companies use them, and more.

    The post Learning Stipends 101: Everything Your Company Needs to Know appeared first on Degreed.

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    Today, many businesses facing the twin crises of Generative AI and the skills gap turn to learning stipends. What are learning stipends? Think no-strings-attached debit cards for learning and development.

    In this article, we break down everything you need to know about learning stipends: what they are, why companies use them, how to set them up, and more. Just think of this as your personal, all-you-need-to-know learning stipends resource. So whether you’ve just heard of learning stipends or need some tips to refine your stipends, this is the article for you.

    What is a learning stipend?

    A learning stipend is a sum of money companies give employees to spend on personal upskilling and learning initiatives. Employees can spend their funds in any way they see fit—as long as they fit within company guidelines.

    Maybe you’ve heard of this idea with a different name, e.g., education stipend, learning and development stipend, continuing education stipend, etc. As long as employees receive money to spend on upskilling and learning, it’s a learning stipend. 

    This idea isn’t new. In fact, it’s a reboot of traditional tuition reimbursement programs. But something needs to change when 47 percent of businesses offer tuition assistance and only 5-10 percent of employees use it. Learning stipends are a new and exciting change. 

    What is a prepaid learning stipend?

    The new and exciting change is prepaid learning stipends. What’s the difference between the two? 

    With a traditional learning stipend, the employees pay upfront for their boot camps, conferences, books, etc. and the company reimburses them. A prepaid learning stipend eliminates the reimbursement process. Today, companies can issue employees their own prepaid digital debit cards. 

    While this may seem like we’re splitting hairs to point out this difference, it matters. It’s the most significant decision you’ll make to set up a learning stipends program. More on that later.

    Why use learning stipends?

    Today, when done well, learning stipends are the most equitable and efficient way to upskill and engage your workforce. This is especially true when you compare learning stipends with other upskilling solutions like content licenses or learning management systems (LMS). 

    Here are the ways learning stipends outstrip other solutions:

    • Flexibility
    • Personalization
    • Scalability 

    Flexibility

    Learning and development requires a myriad of resources to upskill: coaching, classes, conferences, books, training, etc. It’s a long journey to truly master a skill, and many LMS and content licenses don’t offer all those diverse resources. With a learning stipend, employees can spend money on the resources they need, when they need it.

    Personalization

    Along with a myriad of resources, every employee’s learning journey is unique. After all, an engineer in your company requires different upskilling than someone on your marketing team. (Even two engineers at your company may need to learn different skills.) With a learning stipend, employees find and purchase resources that align with their personal development goals.

    Scalability

    But getting access to specialized content, in a scalable way, is difficult. To get the most bang for their buck, many learning and development solutions provide trainings and content that serves the most employees. This creates generic content, and it doesn’t give employees the specialized content they need for deep upskilling. With learning stipends, employees get access to the best-specialized resources available in a scalable way.

    Who uses learning stipends?

    Any company can use learning stipends. Company size, industry, or location? It doesn’t matter. If you look at a list of companies currently offering learning stipends, it will include start-ups, tech juggernauts, and everything in between.

    The Best Workplaces

    Anyone can offer learning stipends, and the savviest companies out there do. When surveying the companies listed for Inc Best Workplaces 2022, 72% offered learning and development stipends. And more companies offer educational stipends than unlimited time off. It’s a bit of a phenomenon: in the past six years, the rise of learning stipends as a benefit rose from 8% to 70%. So you’re ahead of the curve and in good company offering employees learning stipends. 

    The Majority of Employees

    Not only do companies love them, but workers love learning stipends too. Gen Z and millennial workers will make up 74.7% of the workforce population in 2030, and they’re all about learning stipends. 

    Why?

    First, Gen Z and millennial workers value learning and development. A LinkedIn survey found that 76% of Gen Z workers see learning and development as the key to their success, and a Gallup poll found that 87%of millennial workers rank development opportunities as important to them in a job. So by using learning stipends, companies give these young workers what they want.

    Second, personalization is a buzzword for young employees, and learning stipends let employees choose the skills they want to develop. For a Learn In survey of millennial and Gen Z workers, young workers ranked “personal learning choices via a personal learning budget” as the second most important support an employer could provide. 

    Third, if you use prepaid learning stipends, learning and development opportunities become affordable. Half of young workers live paycheck to paycheck, so if you use a reimbursement model, you’ll likely exclude many employees eager to take advantage of their learning stipend. 

    What major problems do learning stipends solve?

    While there are lots of benefits to using stipends, which we’ll discuss in another section, many companies use learning stipends to solve two significant problems: 

    1. The ever-widening skills gap
    2. The rise of Generative AI

    Problem #1: The Ever-Widening Skills Gap

    Calling today’s skill shortage a “gap” is a bit of a misnomer. Instead, it’s more of a chasm: the World Economic Forum (WEF) and Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) expect that a billion jobs will need new skills by 2030. 

    Automation alone will create 95 million jobs that don’t yet exist. « The biggest issue isn’t that robots are taking all the jobs, » Korn Ferry said, « it’s that there aren’t enough humans to take them. » Simply put, the rapid pace of technological change and automation make it impossible for companies to have the necessary skills. 

    In response to this skills chasm, Gartner reported that 60 percent of HR leaders said building critical skills and competencies would be their highest priority in 2022. True to their word, McKinsey found that 69 percent of businesses increased their skill-building investments since 2019. And many of these upskilling investments include learning stipends. Why?

    How Learning Stipends Drive Upskilling

    Companies use earning stipends to solve their upskilling problem because they’re quick, equitable, and effective. Not only do learning stipends offer a quick solution, but they also remove red tape and provide employees access to the right training at the right time. 

    One advantage of learning stipends is that it allows employees to build skills and work concurrently. This is a benefit, according to HR thought leader Josh Bersin. Bersin instructs companies to « make learning part of everyday work, » which also refers to what he calls « learning in the flow of work. » This method « recognizes that for learning to really happen, it must fit around and align itself to working days and working lives. »

    Companies like Salesforce have found that employees respond well to this on-the-job upskilling. In a Salesforce survey, 80 percent of employees said they retain information better with on-the-job training. « Teaching team members a few critical skills they need right now, then providing opportunities to practice as they go, makes learning feel more manageable and helps people retain information, » said Heather Conklin, general manager of Trailhead at Salesforce.

    Problem #2: The Rise of Generative AI 

    The unrelenting pace of technology widens the skills gap further. Before the arrival of Generative artificial intelligence (AI) on the scene, over half of the employees (52%) believed they were “easily replaceable in their jobs.” And employee fears aren’t too far off. Since the new advances in technology like Chat GTP, IBM announced that they could replace 7,800 jobs with AI, and they’re pausing hiring to evaluate which jobs truly need a human. 

    Now, in a Generative AI world, a recent study by Checkr found that 74% of American workers “believe their jobs might eventually be replaced by AI tools.” The fear is so real that up to 67% of workers “would spend their own money to learn about AI to keep their job.” 

    How Learning Stipends Drive Retention

    While 67% of employees are willing to dip into their own pockets for AI upskilling, just imagine the attraction, engagement, and loyalty for a company that provides upskilling. It goes a long way with this generation. Remember, these are the same workers that participated in the Great Reshuffling. 

    When a PEW poll asked workers why they quit in 2021, the second most popular reason was companies didn’t provide enough opportunities for advancement.  If upskilling and career development were key a year ago, imagine just how critical they are now in this moment with generative AI. Employees need to know their companies will invest in and support them in navigating and upskilling in this new AI work environment. 

    Even before the Great Reshuffling and Chat GTP, many studies supported the strategy of using learning and development to improve retention. A Capterra survey found that 87 percent of businesses say employee learning and development programs are critical to retaining talent. Employees agree. In Gallup’s The American Upskilling Study, 71 percent of workers said learning increased their job satisfaction, and 61 percent said learning opportunities make them want to stay with a company.

    What are some additional benefits of using learning stipends?

    Retention and skill-building may be one of the most urgent needs your budget addresses, but employee education brings a host of benefits for employees and businesses. Learning stipends will: 

    • Boost recruiting opportunities 
    • Increase employee engagement
    • Support diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives 
    • Promote career development

    Boost Recruiting Opportunities 

    Learning stipends not only help with retention but attract recruits too. If today’s employees are willing to quit jobs that don’t offer enough growth opportunities, then it’s at the top of their list when job hunting. In fact, a survey found that 80 percent of job seekers consider an employer’s professional development crucial when accepting a new job. Reaffirming this statistic, Andrew Geant, cofounder of Wyzant, found that « in interviews, potential employees often cite the learning stipend as a top reason they applied. »

    Increase Employee Engagement

    As you’d expect, a tool that improves recruiting and retention also drives employee engagement. Education platform Udemy found that more than half of high-engagement companies have employees who spend 31–50 hours learning per year. And this learning is positive engagement. A Glint survey found that employees consider opportunities to learn and grow as the number one driver of happiness at work.

    Unfortunately, when it comes to learning and development programs, 2.5 – 5% is the average for employee engagement. But if you use prepaid learning stipends, your learning and development team can witness incredible engagement gains. A tech company, Checkr, recently revealed that by switching to prepaid learning stipends, employee engagement rose from 2.5% to 20% in just five months

    Improve Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI)

    The engagement scores go up with prepaid learning stipends because more employees can use them. With the traditional reimbursement model, only employees with the extra money and time can take advantage of learning stipends. Since 6 in 10 Americans don’t have $500 in savings, most employees can’t pay upfront for a $2,000 coding boot camp. 

    A reimbursement stipend excludes a lot of your employees from growing and developing, and a Training Industry poll found that 65 percent of Americans believe that providing education benefits to all employees helps promote racial and gender equality in the workplace.

    The solution is prepaid learning stipends. Prepaid learning stipends are how companies can give all employees equitable access to upskilling opportunities and career growth.

    Open Up Career Development Opportunities 

    Speaking of career growth, with record resignations and skills gaps, LinkedIn said 62 percent of L&D leaders are prioritizing internal mobility. Along with retention, a successful learning stipend program can be a lever for leaders to help employees advance their careers.

    The tutoring platform Wyzant gives employees unlimited access to its tutors for work-related skills and $2,000 per year to spend as they choose. « We consider learning stipends to be something of a secret weapon, » admits cofounder Andrew Geant. « In addition to helping with recruitment, they can also make it easier to promote people from within, as current employees use the educational opportunities to uplevel their skills and capabilities. »

    How can you set up your employee learning stipends?

    There are a few ways to structure and administer employee learning funds, depending on your company’s budget, resources, and needs. Perhaps the most important decision you’ll make setting up your learning stipends is deciding when employees receive their learning and development money. Pay attention: this decision heavily influences engagement and accessibility.

    Reimbursement vs. Prepaid Learning Stipends

    As mentioned earlier, a traditional reimbursement model requires employees to pay upfront for their learning and development opportunities. Depending on the process, the reimbursement can take days, weeks, or even months. This is where things get rough for your employees.

    Say that an employee wants to enroll in a three-month-long coding boot camp. With the reimbursement model, the employee may need to pay $2,000 of their own money to enroll. And depending on the reimbursement process, they may have to wait until they complete the course, three months, to get reimbursed.

    If you do want to use the reimbursement method, it works best for supporting light learning and development opportunities. Let’s say an employee just purchases a book for $20 and a one-off course for $80. In this case, reimbursement could possibly work for some of your employees. But to truly be equitable, and to truly fund the boot camps and courses required for deep upskilling, prepaid learning stipends are best.

    Manual vs. Platform Administration

    Today, there is always an app or a platform out there to make any process easier, and learning stipends are no exception. Today, you can build a learning stipend system manually, using a spreadsheet or project management tool like Monday.com or Asana. 

    You can use your existing programs to:

    • Create sheets or boards that list learning opportunities 
    • Enable employees to use email or tags to request courses and funds
    • Enter completion dates and skills learned
    • Pay for courses upfront through credit cards or have employees create purchase orders

    A manual system can be a valuable option for small organizations or those that want to test adoption before investing in a dedicated platform. That said, a manual solution could be slow and create multiple steps for employees to go through to get a stipend, and low adoption could be a self-fulfilling prophecy.

    Platform Administration

    Along with DIY, there are platform administration systems that can help companies with their learning stipends. Depending on the platform, it can help companies administer, implement, support, and track their learning stipends: 

    • Issue debit cards
    • Allocate time to learn at work
    • Set limits on individual employee budgets
    • See how much is spent
    • Add and remove funds
    • Approve program requests, and issue and refill cards
    • Track employee progress, and visualize ROI

    A dedicated platform can be a valuable option for any organization—especially larger businesses. But no matter the size of the company, a learning stipend platform offers quite a few advantages as far as speed, ease of use, and tracking outcomes.

    Covering Anything vs. Work-Related Skills

    There are two schools of thought on whether employee education stipends should be limited to company-related skills. Amazon pays for any program, sharing a story of how a warehouse employee became a registered nurse. The argument here is that the benefit attracts more talent than it loses and that learning any new skill boosts overall learning capacity. 

    In contrast, Buffer gives employees $800 a year to spend on career-related learning. Employees also get a Kindle with unlimited access to books and audiobooks. Similarly, Slack doles out $500 annually for personal development and $2000 for professional courses. The argument here is that companies should guide employees to develop skills that align with their company’s needs and goals.

    Both of these setups have positives and negatives. If you see learning stipends as a fun benefit to fulfill curiosity and exploration, let your employees sign up for that skiing lesson. However, if your company foresees lots of upskilling and talent development needs in the next few years, you may want to align stipends with your company goals.

    What are some basic tips to make the most of your employee learning stipends? 

    If you especially want stipends to align with company goals, use these six best practices below. These six tips will help you implement an education stipend program that fosters learning and aligns employee growth and business needs.

    1. Make financing flexible: look at multiple benefit budgets to see where you could better use funds. 
    1. Start small: leverage existing training budgets to offer as little as $50 to $100 per employee per year.
    1. Use prepaid learning stipends: tuition reimbursement is a barrier to learning and is rarely used.
    1. Target job-ready skills: remember that a learning stipend is a means to an end—the end being upward mobility within the company.
    1. Ensure completion and success: design programs to uplevel employees with skills that expand their scope or role, or result in a promotion, raise, or career shift. 
    1. Measure outcomes: stipends represent an opportunity to establish a « learning-first » mentality while ensuring that the workforce is choosing to build skills the business will need in the future.

    To learn more tips, download a free copy of 10 Best Practices: Learning Stipends that Deliver Results

    The Fast Track to Reskilling and Retention

    Generative AI and the skills gap threaten to derail small and large businesses alike. Few can afford to fall behind the twin race for talent and skill-building at scale. Learning stipends offers a powerful first step to enable companies to compete and win on both fronts, giving employees the development opportunities they crave while providing businesses with a resilient skills pipeline.

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