A Business Approach to Training Is Required to Compete
Despite widespread executive rhetoric about the importance of reskilling and upskilling workers, most Human Resources and Learning & Development functions fail to take a strategic or business approach to training. Instead, most corporate learning is tactical, event-driven, and disconnected from operational realities and strategic priorities. From a strategy standpoint, this is a material failure for any organization that needs to attract, develop, engage, and retain top talent to win.
Maximizing the return on corporate training investments requires Learning & Development leaders to operate with a clear business mindset. That means:
When training is designed to move the metrics the business cares about most, it stops being a cost center and starts becoming a strategic enabler.
McKinsey reports that companies that invest in developing leaders during significant organizational change are 2.4 times more likely to hit their performance targets. We know that our clients are facing increased pressure to impact business outcomes, reduce costs, and meet learners where they are. We also know that L&D must better integrate with hiring, onboarding, performance management, succession planning, and training measurement.
If L&D functions do not directly link themselves to different areas of the business and impact employee performance, they will struggle to remain relevant when they are needed most.
How to Take a Business Approach to Training
Successful L&D leaders design a thoughtful corporate learning strategy based on the company’s strategic priorities and overall talent management strategies. Done right, a business approach to training builds core capabilities for the short- and long-term while measurably impacting business performance. Unfortunately, postmortem data reveals that most business leaders believe that their L&D function is out of sync with current business and talent objectives.
To be effective, L&D functions must:
The Bottom Line
Business leaders are held accountable for business and people outcomes. The corporate training function should be no different. Focus on the “must-haves” not the “nice-to-haves.” The more business-like you can be, the more accepted you and your fully-aligned learning programs will be with the business.
To learn more about how to take a business approach to training, download The #1 Reason Training Initiatives Fail According to Executives

Tristam Brown is an executive business consultant and organizational development expert with more than three decades of experience helping organizations accelerate performance, build high-impact teams, and turn strategy into execution. As CEO of LSA Global, he works with leaders to get and stay aligned™ through research-backed strategy, culture, and talent solutions that produce measurable, business-critical results. See full bio.
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