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To
some, the very term "organizational learning" is an oxymoron.
Skeptics use the term "organization" to mean bureaucracy,
a state of "being" that relates more to "occupying
space" rather than functionality. Likewise, others believe
"learning" is something that only occurs in classrooms,
preferably under the age of 22. Therefore, a combination of the
two words"organization" and "learning"seems
to be little more than an exercise in consultant job justification.
(Now that just might be an oxymoron.)
To others, "learning organization" is a commitment to
helping individuals and teams grow collectively and systemically
so that they become smarter, wiser, and more competitive-individually
and collectively. No organization can become a learning organization
without the commitment and support of senior management. Leadership
is essential to instilling a shared vision that will enable individuals
and teams develop their potential and share their learnings throughout
the entire organization.
Put another way, if one area of the company discovers a better way
of doing things, or happens upon an interesting piece of research
that works, it would be helpful to the entire organization if everyone
in the company could share in the new ideas. In part, this is what
it means to be a "learning organization"sharing
ideas, concepts, successes with others in the organization. The
other part involves people coming together for common purpose and
learning to solve their problems in a logical, systemic way.
Leaders of today's organizations would be wise to pay attention
to how organization learning is transforming many companies and
making them more competitive and more prepared for future challenges.
Organizations that have implemented organizational learning are
as diverse as AT&T and Ford Motor Company as well as Hewlett-Packard
and the U.S. Army. I would argue also that many entrepreneurial
ventures notably in Silicon Valley implement the principles of organizational
learning almost intuitively, almost as a means of survival.
Peter Senge, the author-consultant most credited for creating the
organizational learning "industry," wrote in The Fifth
Discipline: "Through learning we reperceive the world and
our relationship to it... This then is the basic meaning of a 'learning
organization'-an organization that is continuously expanding its
capacity to create its future." (1)
Senge's gift (if you can call it that and I do) was in taking five
disparate approaches to learning and molding them into five disciplines
that work together holistically to generate learning within organizations
that is healthy, sustainable, and nourishing.
Systems
thinking is an approach that emphasizes the individual relationship
to the group and to the organization as means of creating feedback
to address organizational issues. The "double loop"
learning process is fundamental because it's a process that
enables us to map root causes and then find ways to treat them.
Most importantly, causal looping, as part of systems thinking,
enables progress because it incorporates what we have learned
along the way.
Personal mastery is an approach that forces the individual
to come to terms with who he is and what he wants from life.
It, too, is a discipline that incorporates conflict, in the
form of creative tension, as a means of self-learning.
Mental models exist within us all. These are the "images,
assumptions, and stories we carry within us." (2)
It is our perception of the world as well as others perception
of the same. Since mental models affect the cognitive and affective
processes, they have an effect on how we learning. An organization
then is not only a collection of individual mental models, but
also is a meta-mental model that transcends individual thinking.
Another word for it might be culture, the way an organization
behaves.
Shared vision is the collaborative shaping of an idea for
the future that includes the participation of individual. If
a vision is to guide an organization, it must be shared; members
have to make it their own.
Team learning is the approach members of a team use to come
together and align themselves with the goals of the organization.
As with other group activities, it's a "team skill"
that can be nurtured through honest and open dialogue.
I
think we can boil the five disciplines down to three areas of thought:
personal development, team growth, and systemic learning.
Organizational learning must occur on the personal level first and
foremost. The individual must commit to a vision as well as to a
means to make it happen. The team (or the organization as a whole)
has to work together to fulfill their goals, otherwise they will
not occur. And both individuals and teams must be rational and logical
in the way they apply the learnings of the past and present to generate
results for the future.
My three do not negate the five disciplines by any means. I firmly
believe that organizational learning (at least as we know it today)
must depend upon systems thinking, personal mastery, mental models,
shared vision, and team learning. Whether you use those terms or
not, the principles must apply.
If you've read this far you might be thinking, "What's all
this got to do with me? I have a business to run. I can't worried
about this stuff?"
Think again! Organizational learning is fundamental to an organizations
ability to profit and grow. Why? Profitability depends upon a company's
ability to produce goods and service with a sufficient margin to
ensure stable operation, a healthy, safe environment for employees,
and an ability to put away some for the development of future goods
or services. Organizational learning will enable people within the
company, as individuals and as teams, to observe their roles, note
their contributions, learn from their mistakes, and forge new ideas
and new products for future. This in turn leads to growth, the ability
to increase in size, scope, and return.
Failure to tap into individual, collective, and systemic thoughts
will doom a company to loop endlessly in circles, chasing its tail
Leaders, by contrast, should understand that organizational learning
does not by itself guarantee profit and growth. But organizational
learning does provide the disciplines a leader can use to find out
what's right, what's wrong, and build on the rights to create a
strong, competitive enterprise. Leadership based upon continuous
learning is leadership positioned for growth and opportunity.
" John Baldoni 1998
References:
(1) Senge, P.M. (1990). The fifth discipline: he art and
practice of the learning organization. New York: Doubleday
(2) Lapides, J. (1997) "The Five Disciplines for
Building Highly Performing Learning Organizations. Schoolof Engineering.
University of Michigan-Dearborn (Course syllabus ISME-588)
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