Published by Gbaf News
Posted on September 15, 2018

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Published by Gbaf News
Posted on September 15, 2018

Faster skills improvement, less time off the job, transparency, measurability and value from the offset–just some of the benefits Huthwaite International’s new learning model is promising to deliver. Huthwaite’s Robin Hoyle takes us behind the scenes and explains why it’s more than just a promise.
Many think that collaborative learning has had its day; failing, as it has, to achieve anything like the anticipated sustainable behaviour changes many business leaders had hoped.
Throughout its rise and fall Huthwaite’s learning innovation experts have stayed firmly on the sidelines, watching with interest. Validation is key for any new delivery method entering the Huthwaite portfolio and for them collaborative never quite cut the mustard. Until now.
After a year of development, 18 months of successful live trials, and an international award already under its belt, Huthwaite Collaborative is here. Fresh and new but building on the rigour of Huthwaite’s core approach, it’s giving those sales organisations with a genuine learning culture,a faster, more measurable, more sustainable route to achieving high performing sales and negotiating teams.
Where did collaborative come from, why did it fail
It’s an eternal problem.
, while continuing to meet targets and minimise downtime? Add on ever increasing workloads and operational pressures and it’s no surprise when leaders and their teams admit they simply can’t spare the time ‘off the job’ for training. Enter the collaborative learning model in 2014. A learning technology that would enable communication and shared working with no downtime was welcomed with a fanfare of enthusiasm from L&D and sales leaders alike. But the adulation was short lived. Data later suggested collaborative learning was not the panacea many hoped it would be. Rather than an uplift in the value delivered there had actually been a fall.
Robin and his Huthwaite colleagues believe there are a number of reasons for the demise of traditionally managed collaborative programmes:
What needed to change for collaborative learning to work?
Despite these common challenges, Robin and the team weren’t ready to give up on the collaborative idea. They believed it had merit but that its success would depend on certain stipulations, that had previously been absent.
Robin explains, “To be an effective learning delivery mechanism collaborative must be delivered in conjunction with a strategic and robust selling skills methodology. That means having expert coaches throughout the process coupled with an understanding that not every sales culture lends itself to a collaborative intervention. One does not fit all.”
The Huthwaite team were convinced they could deliver a collaborative learning environment addressing these prior shortcomings, with a clear purpose, a clear role for sales managers and which would transparently demonstrate the value of the learning intervention – both to those involved and the wider enterprise. In short, they set about proving that rather than being written off collaborative learning had a big future.
So, what does effective collaborative learning look like for sales teams and how can Huthwaite Collaborative succeed, when others’ attempts have failed?
Robin shares what his team believe are the six fundamental and integrated components to a successful collaborative model.
How to know if this newcollaborative model is right for your team?
“Huthwaite Collaborative is a new evolution but it’s not a panacea. For this new evolution in collaborative learning to be effective, it has to be implemented within the right sales organisation, possessing a culture and ethos that fits with the open, supportive and collaborative ethos of the training methodology itself,” explains Robin.
How do you know if your sales organisation has the right foundations in place? “It’s not so hard,” Robin continues, “There are some quite simple questions to ask.”He splits them into three main areas; attitudes towards technology, team dynamics and culture, and finally, attitudes towards skills and developments.
Attitudes to technology:
Team dynamics and culture:
Attitudes to skills and development:
The combination of collaborative learning, teamed with a world class sales methodology and an expert coach represent a genuine step change in collaborative learning. Commercially focused, it is a learning delivery model that enables a faster improvement in skills over a larger population. And it is this integrated approach that offers sales leaders the chance to upskill their teams, while overcoming the key hurdles associated with delivering new methodologies. Providing, of course, they are ready for it.
What are we now?
Trials over, Huthwaite Collaborative is already proving its worth. Learners are more engaged and motivated, new selling skills are put to practice ‘on the job’ immediately and the value of classroom (or so called ‘downtime’) is massively enhanced. In June 2018 Huthwaite and one of our early Collaborative clients ITN Productions won ‘Sales Process of the Year’ at the highly coveted international Promote awards in Stockholm.
It’s not for everyone but with the right components in the right environment, professionals sceptical about collaborative might just want to think again.
Authored and contributed by: https://huthwaiteinternational.com/
Faster skills improvement, less time off the job, transparency, measurability and value from the offset–just some of the benefits Huthwaite International’s new learning model is promising to deliver. Huthwaite’s Robin Hoyle takes us behind the scenes and explains why it’s more than just a promise.
Many think that collaborative learning has had its day; failing, as it has, to achieve anything like the anticipated sustainable behaviour changes many business leaders had hoped.
Throughout its rise and fall Huthwaite’s learning innovation experts have stayed firmly on the sidelines, watching with interest. Validation is key for any new delivery method entering the Huthwaite portfolio and for them collaborative never quite cut the mustard. Until now.
After a year of development, 18 months of successful live trials, and an international award already under its belt, Huthwaite Collaborative is here. Fresh and new but building on the rigour of Huthwaite’s core approach, it’s giving those sales organisations with a genuine learning culture,a faster, more measurable, more sustainable route to achieving high performing sales and negotiating teams.
Where did collaborative come from, why did it fail
It’s an eternal problem.
, while continuing to meet targets and minimise downtime? Add on ever increasing workloads and operational pressures and it’s no surprise when leaders and their teams admit they simply can’t spare the time ‘off the job’ for training. Enter the collaborative learning model in 2014. A learning technology that would enable communication and shared working with no downtime was welcomed with a fanfare of enthusiasm from L&D and sales leaders alike. But the adulation was short lived. Data later suggested collaborative learning was not the panacea many hoped it would be. Rather than an uplift in the value delivered there had actually been a fall.
Robin and his Huthwaite colleagues believe there are a number of reasons for the demise of traditionally managed collaborative programmes:
What needed to change for collaborative learning to work?
Despite these common challenges, Robin and the team weren’t ready to give up on the collaborative idea. They believed it had merit but that its success would depend on certain stipulations, that had previously been absent.
Robin explains, “To be an effective learning delivery mechanism collaborative must be delivered in conjunction with a strategic and robust selling skills methodology. That means having expert coaches throughout the process coupled with an understanding that not every sales culture lends itself to a collaborative intervention. One does not fit all.”
The Huthwaite team were convinced they could deliver a collaborative learning environment addressing these prior shortcomings, with a clear purpose, a clear role for sales managers and which would transparently demonstrate the value of the learning intervention – both to those involved and the wider enterprise. In short, they set about proving that rather than being written off collaborative learning had a big future.
So, what does effective collaborative learning look like for sales teams and how can Huthwaite Collaborative succeed, when others’ attempts have failed?
Robin shares what his team believe are the six fundamental and integrated components to a successful collaborative model.
How to know if this newcollaborative model is right for your team?
“Huthwaite Collaborative is a new evolution but it’s not a panacea. For this new evolution in collaborative learning to be effective, it has to be implemented within the right sales organisation, possessing a culture and ethos that fits with the open, supportive and collaborative ethos of the training methodology itself,” explains Robin.
How do you know if your sales organisation has the right foundations in place? “It’s not so hard,” Robin continues, “There are some quite simple questions to ask.”He splits them into three main areas; attitudes towards technology, team dynamics and culture, and finally, attitudes towards skills and developments.
Attitudes to technology:
Team dynamics and culture:
Attitudes to skills and development:
The combination of collaborative learning, teamed with a world class sales methodology and an expert coach represent a genuine step change in collaborative learning. Commercially focused, it is a learning delivery model that enables a faster improvement in skills over a larger population. And it is this integrated approach that offers sales leaders the chance to upskill their teams, while overcoming the key hurdles associated with delivering new methodologies. Providing, of course, they are ready for it.
What are we now?
Trials over, Huthwaite Collaborative is already proving its worth. Learners are more engaged and motivated, new selling skills are put to practice ‘on the job’ immediately and the value of classroom (or so called ‘downtime’) is massively enhanced. In June 2018 Huthwaite and one of our early Collaborative clients ITN Productions won ‘Sales Process of the Year’ at the highly coveted international Promote awards in Stockholm.
It’s not for everyone but with the right components in the right environment, professionals sceptical about collaborative might just want to think again.
Authored and contributed by: https://huthwaiteinternational.com/