Corporate learning used to measure success by the size of its course catalogue and the number of completions. That world is fading. Employees now have access to commercial-grade learning inside tools like ChatGPT and Gemini, and leaders expect proof that learning actually shifts performance, culture and results.
Lori Niles-Hofmann thinks this is the reckoning the profession has needed for years.
Lori is a long-time learning strategist and co-founder of Eight Levers, with more than twenty years of experience in L&D across international banking, consulting and marketing. She specializes in large-scale digital learning transformation and helps organizations use data, platforms and design to make learning a business driver instead of a content factory.
Her book, "The Eight Levers of EdTech Transformation: A Field Guide to the New Future-Focused L&D," lays out a practical model for CLOs who know that the role must evolve.
In this episode of Leadership NOW, we talk about:
• Why L&D will be under extreme pressure from external learning experiences if it does not change
• What it means to stop being a course factory and start running campaigns built around triggers and performance
• Her view of the LMS as invisible middleware, living inside tools like Copilot, rather than a portal people “go to”
• How to work with HR, IT and finance as part of a skills supply chain instead of a standalone training shop
• The learning–work continuum, where every task can become a learning opportunity that feeds directly into output
• Learning triage, closed-loop reporting and how data can move L&D from order taker to strategic partner
Lori also shares why she believes we are only millimeters away from truly contextualized, personalized learning experiences at scale, and what learning leaders must do now to be ready.
Find out more:
Lori Niles-Hofmann: https://www.loriniles.com/
Dan Pontefract and the Leadership NOW podcast: https://www.danpontefract.com
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Corporate learning used to measure success by the size of its course catalogue and the number of completions. That world is fading. Employees now have access to commercial-grade learning inside tools like ChatGPT and Gemini, and leaders expect proof that learning actually shifts performance, culture and results.
Lori Niles-Hofmann thinks this is the reckoning the profession has needed for years.
Lori is a long-time learning strategist and co-founder of Eight Levers, with more than twenty years of experience in L&D across international banking, consulting and marketing. She specializes in large-scale digital learning transformation and helps organizations use data, platforms and design to make learning a business driver instead of a content factory.
Her book, "The Eight Levers of EdTech Transformation: A Field Guide to the New Future-Focused L&D," lays out a practical model for CLOs who know that the role must evolve.
In this episode of Leadership NOW, we talk about:
• Why L&D will be under extreme pressure from external learning experiences if it does not change
• What it means to stop being a course factory and start running campaigns built around triggers and performance
• Her view of the LMS as invisible middleware, living inside tools like Copilot, rather than a portal people “go to”
• How to work with HR, IT and finance as part of a skills supply chain instead of a standalone training shop
• The learning–work continuum, where every task can become a learning opportunity that feeds directly into output
• Learning triage, closed-loop reporting and how data can move L&D from order taker to strategic partner
Lori also shares why she believes we are only millimeters away from truly contextualized, personalized learning experiences at scale, and what learning leaders must do now to be ready.
Find out more:
Lori Niles-Hofmann: https://www.loriniles.com/
Dan Pontefract and the Leadership NOW podcast: https://www.danpontefract.com
Leadership In The Longevity Era with Leanne Clark-Shirley (American Society on Aging)
Leadership NOW with Dan Pontefract
36 minutes 8 seconds
3 weeks ago
Leadership In The Longevity Era with Leanne Clark-Shirley (American Society on Aging)
There is a demographic shift hiding in plain sight. In a few short years, the United States will have more people over 60 than children under 18. For Leanne Clark-Shirley, that statistic is not a curiosity for actuaries. It is “the mega trend of our moment” and a direct test of how leaders think about work, culture and contribution.
Leanne is the President and CEO of the American Society on Aging, a seventy-one-year-old professional home for everyone who cares about aging, from community nutrition sites and academics to tech startups and interior designers. She is a social gerontologist who has spent more than two decades in aging-related nonprofit, consulting and academic roles, including senior work at AARP and in policy research and evaluation.
In this episode of Leadership NOW, we discuss:
• why executives continue to treat aging as a backstage topic about benefits and pensions
• how language, especially words like “elderly”, quietly swindles older workers out of opportunity
• the evidence that older entrepreneurs and older workers are powerful sources of innovation and stability
• the practical moves leaders can make to design “with, not for” across ages
• two simple experiments Leanne recommends to change how you notice age in your own life and organization
Leanne also shares ASA’s North Star, captured in her line that “longevity is the goal, and aging is how we get there”, and what it means for leaders who want their organizations to thrive in the longevity era.
Find out more:
American Society on Aging: https://www.asaging.org
Dan Pontefract: www.danpontefract.com
Leadership NOW with Dan Pontefract
Corporate learning used to measure success by the size of its course catalogue and the number of completions. That world is fading. Employees now have access to commercial-grade learning inside tools like ChatGPT and Gemini, and leaders expect proof that learning actually shifts performance, culture and results.
Lori Niles-Hofmann thinks this is the reckoning the profession has needed for years.
Lori is a long-time learning strategist and co-founder of Eight Levers, with more than twenty years of experience in L&D across international banking, consulting and marketing. She specializes in large-scale digital learning transformation and helps organizations use data, platforms and design to make learning a business driver instead of a content factory.
Her book, "The Eight Levers of EdTech Transformation: A Field Guide to the New Future-Focused L&D," lays out a practical model for CLOs who know that the role must evolve.
In this episode of Leadership NOW, we talk about:
• Why L&D will be under extreme pressure from external learning experiences if it does not change
• What it means to stop being a course factory and start running campaigns built around triggers and performance
• Her view of the LMS as invisible middleware, living inside tools like Copilot, rather than a portal people “go to”
• How to work with HR, IT and finance as part of a skills supply chain instead of a standalone training shop
• The learning–work continuum, where every task can become a learning opportunity that feeds directly into output
• Learning triage, closed-loop reporting and how data can move L&D from order taker to strategic partner
Lori also shares why she believes we are only millimeters away from truly contextualized, personalized learning experiences at scale, and what learning leaders must do now to be ready.
Find out more:
Lori Niles-Hofmann: https://www.loriniles.com/
Dan Pontefract and the Leadership NOW podcast: https://www.danpontefract.com