Covid has encouraged us to be resourceful and creative. Some organizations went from nearly no online working to putting all their business online. This involved creating an IT infrastructure, enabling mobile connectivity, and digitizing processes and materials. It was often an ad hoc, even chaotic affair, but they did it and it worked – to a degree.
Now CLOs in organizations are asking themselves what to do with this shadow, virtual way of working. Can they offer the best of both worlds: take the lessons of lockdown and the best of face-to-face, in-person, social working and digital connectivity, and mobile working to create a hybrid model of working?
Sure, people have missed the human connection. They’ve missed those social moments. They’ve missed the almost intangible benefits of working alongside others: the unspoken communication and understanding; the trust you build spending time with people; the informal learning and knowledge you gain from proximity to others.
Less missed is the commute to work. Working virtually has allowed people flexibility – from choosing the days and hours they work to finding a new balance between work and life. It can be a question of perspective. One person’s sense of isolation is another’s sense of freedom. If Covid has taught us anything about managing and training people, it’s that you need to take account of individual needs and goals.
Why not combine in-person and distance working hybrid working and give people more choice?
Offering hybrid working has implications for how we in learning and development train people. If you broaden the working environment, you need a learning strategy to sustain it.
Hybrid learning combines the best elements of instructor-led, classroom-based, group learning with the reach, flexibility, and accessibility of digital learning. It’s widely used in the education sector but can bring benefits to businesses too.
You might say we have that model already: it’s called blended learning. But while blended learning is a mix of online and in-person training, it strictly delineates which elements are online and which are in-person.
Hybrid learning offers the same training in both online and in-person formats. It gives learners a choice. So, if you can’t attend the class in person, you do it (at the same time) online. It is more inclusive and doesn’t discriminate between those physically present and those participating remotely.
Hybrid learning supports new ways of working and training in the post-Covid environment. It gives organizations and employees more flexibility and more choice in how they deliver training programs. A hybrid training model offers continuity, accessibility, and a more inclusive learning experience.
To find out more on how you can help your organization move forward to the post-pandemic era, get in touch now.