Training and Development
Learning on the Job Is Back in Style
There was a time when most people believed skill-building happened in classrooms, workshops, or weekend certifications. But, a growing number of professionals and companies are rediscovering something powerful: the best development often happens right where you are—on the job.
With budgets tightening and tech evolving fast, organizations are rethinking how they train talent. Instead of relying solely on outside courses, many are shifting toward embedded learning—real-time, hands-on growth inside the workplace.
This doesn’t mean formal training is going away. It means companies are realizing that development doesn’t need to be separate from the work—it can be part of it.
The Rise of Experiential Learning
Experiential learning—also called on-the-job training or work-integrated development—isn’t a new concept. It’s how tradespeople, apprentices, and field workers have learned for generations. What’s different now is how companies are using it strategically across industries, levels, and departments.
Instead of pulling employees away from their roles to “learn,” leaders are asking:
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What skills can we build while they’re doing the work?
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How can we give people stretch projects instead of just tasks?
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Can we create learning loops in our everyday workflows?
This shift reflects a key truth: people retain more when they learn by doing. According to the Association for Talent Development (ATD), learners retain up to 75% of information when they apply it immediately on the job, compared to just 10% when learning passively in a lecture.
Microlearning, Mentorship, and Manager Coaching
In today’s fast-paced work environments, few people have time for day-long training sessions. That’s why microlearning—bite-sized, actionable lessons delivered in 10–15 minute formats—is taking off. Teams are now integrating these into their weekly meetings, Slack channels, or digital platforms to make learning quick, accessible, and consistent.
Equally important is mentorship and manager-led coaching. Gone are the days when professional development was only HR’s responsibility. Now, direct managers are being trained to:
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Offer real-time feedback
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Guide learning goals tied to actual projects
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Create a culture of curiosity, not perfectionism
A 2025 LinkedIn Workplace Learning report revealed that employees who receive weekly coaching and stretch assignments from their manager are 3x more likely to report satisfaction with their career growth.
Training Tailored to the Individual
Not everyone learns the same way—or wants the same path. Leading organizations are investing in personalized development plans based on individual career goals, skill gaps, and learning preferences.
Whether someone wants to upskill in data tools, lead more effectively, or explore a new department, customized plans help them feel seen and supported. And that matters—especially when retention is on the line.
It’s also why companies are introducing internal mobility programs. Instead of losing high-potential employees to outside job offers, they’re creating structured ways for them to reskill and pivot into new roles inside the organization.
Why Employees Are Driving the Shift
There’s a new expectation from today’s workforce: If I’m going to stay, I need to grow.
Employees—especially Gen Z and younger Millennials—aren’t waiting for yearly performance reviews. They’re asking:
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“What am I learning here?”
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“How does this job prepare me for the next one?”
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“Am I gaining skills that are transferable?”
In response, smart organizations are treating training and development as a core part of employee experience—not just a checkbox.
And it’s not just about career advancement. Learning boosts confidence, combats burnout, and keeps employees engaged even when business gets tough.
The Role of Technology
AI and tech tools are making workplace learning smarter than ever. Platforms like Workday, Coursera for Business, and LinkedIn Learning are using data to:
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Recommend personalized courses
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Track skill development across departments
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Identify emerging skills needed by the company
These tools help bridge the gap between individual growth and organizational strategy—making training measurable, scalable, and relevant in real-time.
Let’s Rethink What Training Looks Like
Workplace learning doesn’t need to be expensive or complicated. It needs to be intentional.
Start small:
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Let someone shadow a senior team member for a day
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Break a complex task into a learning opportunity
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Ask during 1:1s, “What do you want to get better at?”
These moments matter more than we realize.
The Wrap-Up: Growth Happens in Motion
You don’t have to pause progress to build skills. And you don’t need to be in a classroom to become a better professional.
Growth happens in motion—while solving a problem, asking a new question, or saying yes to something slightly out of your comfort zone.
So the next time someone asks what your training strategy is, don’t just point to a course catalog. Point to the culture, the conversations, the everyday chances to stretch.
Because real development isn’t an event. It’s a way of working.
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