My AI lesson of the week: The tech isn't the hard part…it's the people! During my prior work at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), we talked a lot about how any technology, whether a new drug or a new vaccine or a new information tool, would face challenges with how to integrate into the complex human systems that alway at play in healthcare. As I get deeper and deeper into AI, I am not surprised to see that those same challenges exist with this cadre of technology as well. It’s not the tech that limits us; the real complexity lies in driving adoption across diverse teams, workflows, and mindsets. And it’s not just implementation alone that will get to real ROI from AI—it’s the changes that will occur to our workflows that will generate the value. That’s why we are thinking differently about how to approach change management. We’re approaching the workflow integration with the same discipline and structure as any core system build. Our framework is designed to reduce friction, build momentum, and align people with outcomes from day one. Here’s the 5-point plan for how we're making that happen with health systems today: 🔹 AI Champion Program: We designate and train department-level champions who lead adoption efforts within their teams. These individuals become trusted internal experts, reducing dependency on central support and accelerating change. 🔹 An AI Academy: We produce concise, role-specific, training modules to deliver just-in-time knowledge to help all users get the most out of the gen AI tools that their systems are provisioning. 5-10 min modules ensures relevance and reduces training fatigue. 🔹 Staged Rollout: We don’t go live everywhere at once. Instead, we're beginning with an initial few locations/teams, refine based on feedback, and expand with proof points in hand. This staged approach minimizes risk and maximizes learning. 🔹 Feedback Loops: Change is not a one-way push. Host regular forums to capture insights from frontline users, close gaps, and refine processes continuously. Listening and modifying is part of the deployment strategy. 🔹 Visible Metrics: Transparent team or dept-based dashboards track progress and highlight wins. When staff can see measurable improvement—and their role in driving it—engagement improves dramatically. This isn’t workflow mapping. This is operational transformation—designed for scale, grounded in human behavior, and built to last. Technology will continue to evolve. But real leverage comes from aligning your people behind the change. We think that’s where competitive advantage is created—and sustained. #ExecutiveLeadership #ChangeManagement #DigitalTransformation #StrategyExecution #HealthTech #OperationalExcellence #ScalableChange
Creating a Training Feedback Loop
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𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗜𝗺𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝗙𝗲𝗲𝗱𝗯𝗮𝗰𝗸 𝗶𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗗𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗹𝗼𝗽𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 🗣️ Ever feel like your Learning and Development (L&D) programs are missing the mark? You're not alone. One of the biggest pitfalls in L&D is the lack of mechanisms for collecting and acting on employee feedback. Without this crucial component, your initiatives may fail to address the real needs and preferences of your team, leaving them disengaged and underprepared. 📌 And here's the kicker—if you ignore this, your L&D efforts risk becoming irrelevant, wasting valuable resources, and ultimately failing to develop the skills your workforce truly needs. But don't worry—there’s a straightforward fix: integrate feedback loops into your L&D programs. Here’s a clear plan to get started: 📝 Surveys and Questionnaires: Regularly distribute surveys and questionnaires to gather insights on what’s working and what isn’t. Keep them short and focused to maximize response rates and actionable feedback. 📝 Focus Groups: Organize small focus groups to dive deeper into specific issues. This setting allows for more detailed discussions and nuanced understanding of employee needs and preferences. 📝 Real-Time Polling: Use real-time polling tools during training sessions to gauge immediate reactions and make on-the-fly adjustments. This keeps the learning experience dynamic and responsive. 📝 One-on-One Interviews: Conduct one-on-one interviews with a diverse cross-section of employees to get a more personal and detailed perspective. This can uncover insights that broader surveys might miss. 📝 Anonymous Feedback Channels: Ensure there are anonymous ways for employees to provide feedback. This encourages honesty and helps identify issues that employees might be hesitant to discuss openly. 📝 Feedback Integration: Don’t just collect feedback—act on it. Regularly review the feedback and make necessary adjustments to your L&D programs. Communicate these changes to employees to show that their input is valued and acted upon. 📝 Continuous Monitoring: Use analytics tools to continuously monitor engagement and performance metrics. This provides ongoing data to help refine and improve your L&D initiatives. Integrating these feedback mechanisms will not only enhance the effectiveness of your L&D programs but also boost employee engagement and satisfaction. When employees see that their feedback leads to tangible changes, they are more likely to be invested in the learning process. Have any innovative ways to incorporate feedback into L&D? Drop your tips in the comments! ⬇️ #LearningAndDevelopment #EmployeeEngagement #ContinuousImprovement #FeedbackLoop #ProfessionalDevelopment #TrainingInnovation
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Your people want to grow… But you’re not listening. Employees crave development, not just feedback. Leaders miss the bigger picture: ↳ Skill gaps and ambitions. Otherwise, employees feel: 1. Unheard 2. Undervalued 3. Stuck Without growth, engagement drops. Turnover soars… You need more than feedback. You need an actionable strategy. Here’s how: 1. Use Structured Frameworks. - Standardized templates reduce personal biases. - Blend metrics with narratives for actionable insights. - Structured feedback eliminates guesswork. 2. Focus On Future Goals. - Set SMART goals to make development clear. - Shift feedback from past to forward-looking progress. - Align team growth with your company’s goals. 3. Listen To Employees' Voices. - Surveys uncover ambitions often left unspoken. - Safe spaces allow employees to share openly. - Listening fosters trust and deeper engagement. 4. Bridge The Gap For Future Success. - Use benchmarks to prioritize critical skill gaps. - Compare current skills to those your future requires. - Prepare employees today for tomorrow’s challenges. 5. Empower Growth Ownership. - Prompts like “Where do I excel?” spark reflection. - Encourage employees to own development paths. - Regular discussions keep growth consistent and visible. 6. Collaborate On Development Goals. - Build trust with safe, judgment-free feedback spaces. - Visualise their goals, showing progress and alignment. - Collaboration ensures both clarity and accountability. When growth is intentional, businesses succeed. Focus on development now to avoid turnover later. Invest in your people to future-proof your business. Follow Jonathan Raynor. Reshare to help others.
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Don't ask your trainees to rank how confident they feel: — "After the training, I feel confident to perform my job." 1) Strongly Disagree 2) Disagree 3) Neither Agree or Disagree 4) Agree 5) Strongly Agree — You'll end up with an average of 3.9 (or something like that). But what are you supposed to do with a 3.9? What decisions should you make? What specific actions should be taken? It’s impossible to know. Instead: Ask questions that reveal insights related to the effectiveness of the training. — “How confident are you when applying this training to real work situations? (Select all that apply)” A) I AM CONFIDENT I can successfully perform because I PERFORMED REAL WORK during the training and received HANDS ON COACHING B) I AM CONFIDENT because the training challenged me WITH AMPLE PRACTICE on WORK-RELATED TASKS C) I’M NOT FULLY CONFIDENT because the training DID NOT PROVIDE ENOUGH practice on WORK-RELATED TASKS D) I AM NOT CONFIDENT because the training DID NOT challenge me with practice on WORK-RELATED TASKS E) I HAVE ZERO CONFIDENCE that I can successfully perform because the training DID NOT REVIEW WORK-RELATED TASKS — One look at survey results that gauge the effectiveness of training will leave you with immediate decisions and actions to make. #salesenablement #salestraining PS - “confidence to apply” is only one important factor to assess. Read Will Thalheimer’s “Performance-Focused Learner Surveys” for the other pillars of training effectiveness.
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The Feedback Loop Revolution: Why Annual Reviews Are Dead Alex sat across from his manager, stunned. "I'm not meeting expectations? But... this is the first I'm hearing of it." His manager shifted uncomfortably. "Well, there was that project last February where the client presentation wasn't up to par. And in April, your report lacked the depth we needed." "That was ten months ago," Alex said quietly. "Why am I just hearing this now?" This scene plays out in offices worldwide every day. The annual performance review continues to be the primary feedback mechanism in many organizations. It's a system that fails everyone involved. For employees like Alex, it means navigating in the dark for months, only to be blindsided by feedback too late to act upon. For managers, it means the impossible task of remembering a year's worth of performance details and delivering them in a way that somehow feels fair and comprehensive. Contrast this with Emma's experience at a company using Maxwell's continuous feedback approach. After presenting to a client, Emma received a notification: "Great job addressing the client's technical concerns today. Your preparation showed. One suggestion: Consider preparing more visual examples for non-technical stakeholders next time." The feedback was specific, timely, and actionable. Emma immediately incorporated the suggestion into her next presentation. No waiting. No guessing. Just growth. "The difference is night and day," Emma explains. "Before, feedback felt like a judgment on my worth. Now, it's just part of our daily workflow—a tool that helps me improve in real-time." This is the feedback loop revolution. It's not just about frequency; it's about fundamentally changing how we think about performance and growth. Maxwell's approach transforms feedback from an event into a continuous conversation. The platform enables immediate, context-specific feedback that arrives when it's most relevant; two-way dialogue that empowers employees to seek input when they need it; recognition that celebrates wins in the moment, not months later; and early intervention for performance challenges before they become patterns. Organizations using continuous feedback report 34% higher employee engagement, 26% lower voluntary turnover, and 22% faster skill development compared to those relying on annual reviews. For managers, the shift from annual reviewer to ongoing coach is equally transformative. Instead of dreading a single high-stakes conversation, they build coaching into their regular interactions, strengthening relationships and improving outcomes. The companies thriving today understand that growth happens in moments, not meetings. They're creating cultures where feedback flows naturally, where employees feel supported rather than judged, and where improvement is continuous rather than annual. Ready to leave annual reviews behind? Experience the future of feedback with Maxwell: https://lnkd.in/gR_YnqyU
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One of my biggest learnings from leading summer professional development for teachers? If you want a culture of feedback, you have to intentionally do so. The first step is to have short and sweet surveys (daily for summer PD, weekly thereafter). Most leaders do this. But to ensure the survey truly builds a culture of feedback and continuous improvement, I've learned three things: ✅ Ask focused questions. Simply, we get the data that we ask for. Ask both about the content and the general format of PD. For content, a few questions can be: What is one practice you are excited to try?; What is one thing you remain unclear on? What is one thing you know you will need further support on? For format, a simple Keep-Start-Stop can be super helpful. ✅ Review the data with your leadership team- This will allow you to process the feedback, add any additional color based on observations, and design a game plan. This can include differentiating groups, shifting a summer PD schedule or changing up future case studies and role plays to better address where the team is at. During the year, it will help you focus your observations. ✅ Respond to the feedback-It's not enough to make changes to the day based on the feedback. If you are giving people surveys, you must discuss the trends you saw and address these so that folks know they are being heard. Articulate how you are shifting things or if you can't, address where concerns or confusions will be addressed. When folks hear how their feedback is being heard they are more likely to be honest in the future. For concerns or feedback that only 1 or 2 folks have? Follow up individually. The time invested early on will pay dividends later. I know these tips don't only apply to school leaders, though Summer PD is definitely top of my mind. What are your tips and 1% solutions in building a culture of feedback and continuous improvement?
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Training without measurement is like running blind—you might be moving, but are you heading in the right direction? Our Learning and Development (L&D)/ Training programs must be backed by data to drive business impact. Tracking key performance indicators ensures that training is not just happening but actually making a difference. What questions can we ask to ensure that we are getting the measurements we need to demonstrate a course's value? ✅ Alignment Always ✅ How is this course aligned with the business? How SHOULD it impact the business outcomes? (i.e., more sales, reduced risk, speed, or efficiency) Do we have access to performance metrics that show this information? ✅ Getting to Good ✅ What is the goal we are trying to achieve? Are we creating more empathetic managers? Creating better communicators? Reducing the time to competency of our front line? ✅ Needed Knowledge ✅ Do we know what they know right now? Should we conduct a pre and post-assessment of knowledge, skills, or abilities? ✅ Data Discovery ✅ Where is the performance data stored? Who has access to it? Can automated reports be sent to the team monthly to determine the impact of the training? We all know the standard metrics - participation, completion, satisfaction - but let's go beyond the basics. Measuring learning isn’t about checking a box—it’s about ensuring training works. What questions do you ask - to get the data you need - to prove your work has an awesome impact?? Let’s discuss! 👇 #LearningMetrics #TrainingEffectiveness #TalentDevelopment #ContinuousLearning #WorkplaceAnalytics #LeadershipDevelopment #BusinessGrowth #LeadershipTraining #TalentDevelopment #LearningAndDevelopment #TalentManagement #Training #OrganizationalDevelopment
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💬 When Listening Isn’t Enough: Designing Teams That Act on Employee Feedback We’ve all seen it: ✔️ The survey goes out ✔️ The insights come in ❌ And then… crickets. Listening without action is like watching the director’s cut without ever releasing the film. Great feedback loops don’t just collect opinions, they shape how organizations operate. Companies like Medallia are proving this: Employee Experience (EX) is no longer just about sentiment. It’s about designing teams, workflows, and leadership models that respond in real time. Here's an example: Schneider Electric wanted to boost employee engagement and retention, especially among frontline and distributed workers who often felt disconnected from corporate decision-making. What Medallia Did: Using Medallia’s Employee Experience (EX) platform, Schneider Electric implemented a real-time listening strategy that went beyond annual surveys. They deployed: - Pulse surveys tied to key employee lifecycle moments (e.g., onboarding, team transitions) - Text analytics and sentiment analysis to uncover patterns in open-ended feedback - Customized dashboards for local leaders and HRBPs to take targeted action The Outcome: Managers received tailored insights along with "action nudges"—specific, behavior-based suggestions to improve engagement on their teams. Leadership teams reorganized internal mobility pathways after identifying a common blocker in feedback around career progression. Engagement scores improved, especially among underrepresented groups and early-career employees. 🎯 The real competitive edge? Org design that closes the loop: -Leaders trained to recognize signal from noise -Team structures flexible enough to act on input -Feedback tied directly to decision rights and resourcing Systems in place to show employees: we heard you, and here’s what we did Because trust isn’t built in surveys—it’s built in what happens next. 📊 I’m curious—what’s one way your org has acted on employee feedback in the past year? #EmployeeExperience #OrganizationalDesign #LeadershipDevelopment #Medallia #PeopleStrategy #TrustBuilding #EXtoAction #HRInnovation
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Employee feedback is broken. Here's your blueprint for conversations that count: Only 14% of companies conduct reviews more than once a year. It's time to shift towards more frequent performance feedback. Here's how to make it happen: 🔄 Implement Continuous Feedback: • Move away from annual reviews • Adopt monthly or quarterly check-ins • Use digital tools for real-time feedback 📊 Leverage Data-Driven Insights: • Track key performance metrics consistently • Use AI-powered analytics for personalized insights • Share data transparently with employees 🗣️ Encourage Two-Way Communication: • Train managers in active listening • Create safe spaces for honest dialogue • Act on employee suggestions visibly 🎯 Set Clear, Evolving Goals: • Align individual objectives with company vision • Adjust goals as priorities shift • Celebrate milestones and progress 🧠 Focus on Growth Mindset: • Frame feedback as opportunity for improvement • Provide resources for skill development • Recognize effort and learning, not just results 👥 Peer-to-Peer Recognition: • Implement a digital kudos system • Encourage cross-departmental feedback • Highlight collaborative successes 📈 Measure Feedback Effectiveness: • Survey employees on feedback quality • Track changes in performance post-feedback • Adjust your approach based on results These strategies aren't just about better feedback. They're about building a culture of continuous improvement. By making every conversation count, you're not only boosting performance. You're nurturing a more engaged, responsive, and dynamic team.
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How does feedback affect performance? There is a solid body of research to show that feedback can be among the most powerful influences on performance (see references in the attachment and link in the comments). However, it is also apparent that feedback is not always a gift, and it can often harm performance. An evidence-based approach can help establish a feedback culture that effectively drives performance. Below you can find recommendations adapted from CIPD’s evidence review and my consulting practice: 1- Remember that feedback is not always useful. Instead of encouraging managers to give as much feedback as possible, emphasize quality feedback. Prompt managers to invest time in better preparing and delivering feedback. 2- Train managers to recognize and work with reactions to feedback. Managers can ask how the person feels about the feedback, and whether it is actionable or fair. 3- Consider assessing employees’ reactions to feedback more systematically. For example, ask short questions to quickly survey employees after a feedback meeting to evaluate how useful the feedback was for them and how positive/negative they feel following the feedback. This can inform further line management conversations or target training to develop managers’ capability in feedback. 4- Managers and colleagues giving feedback should be encouraged and trained to do the following: • Deliver specific feedback. Provide them with a guide on what specific, detailed, and elaborated feedback means, including what points they should cover. • Before giving feedback, assess what type of tasks the feedback will cover. For most tasks, and especially creative ones, avoid giving negative feedback where possible and focus on positive episodes and on how to recreate them in the future. For precision, risk, and prevention tasks, negative feedback is more appropriate. • Ensure feedback is fair and seen to be fair. Explain to employees how the information was gathered, highlighting why it is consistent, accurate, and unbiased. • Encourage managers to ask people what feedback they would find most helpful, both to involve them in the process and help make it specific in relevant ways. • Don’t push for very frequent or immediate feedback across the board. Encourage teams and managers to find the frequency and timing that works for them –monthly might be better than weekly, and immediate feedback might not always be the most helpful. • Managers should involve employees in a two-way conversation, rather than making feedback one-way, top-down communication. • Provide training on how to minimise biases and accurately use observations to inform feedback. 5- Ensure feedback enables behavioral change that is both strategic and impactful. You can find more recommendations and references in the doc attached. What best practices would you add to enable a feedback culture? ♻️ Repost to spread value. 🔔 or follow to read similar content.
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