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Organizational Learning: Building a Learning Organization

Continuous improvement programs are sprouting up all over as organizations strive to better themselves and gain an edge. The topic list is long and varied, and sometimes it seems as though a program a month is needed just to keep up. Unfortunately, failed programs far outnumber successes, and improvement rates remain distressingly low. Why? Because most companies have failed to grasp a basic truth. Continuous improvement requires a commitment to learning. How, after all, can an organization improve without first learning something new? Solving a problem, introducing a product, and reengineering a process all require seeing the world in a new light and acting accordingly. In the absence of learning, companies—and individuals—simply repeat old practices. Change remains cosmetic, and improvements are either fortuitous or short-lived.


It helps me with the major strategic audit report, to help us learn BETTER, learn FASTER and learn MORE than you are currently used to, go from good to "goodER". These authoritative sources to help me PERSUADE, INFLUENCE, CONVINCE the intended audience (beyond reasonable doubt). Therefore, I always use this tool.