Originally posted 16-May-24

Stan Garfield
4 min readMay 18, 2024

The late Jay Cross (1944–2015) championed the cause of informal learning in business settings. He was the Johnny Appleseed of informal learning. The Internet Time Alliance, which he chaired, helps corporations and governments use networks to accelerate performance.

Jay challenged conventional wisdom about how adults learn since designing the first business degree program offered by the University of Phoenix. A champion of systems thinking, Jay’s calling was to create happier, more productive workplaces. He was the first person to use the term “eLearning” on the web.

Jay was a change agent, futurist, speaker, and author. He distilled lessons from cognitive science, social networking, business strategy, futures research, and psychology.

For more about Jay, see Profiles in Knowledge.

Selected Books

The Rise of Informal Learning

Research showed that 80+% of the way people learn their jobs is informal. I asked why, if Informal Learning was carrying more of the load, did organizations invest most of their spending on Learning and Development on formal learning? Profit oriented managers were intrigued, but they didn’t know what to do about it. It was an emperor’s new clothes moment.

Real Learning: Learning For Everyone

First Principles

  • Most learning is self-directed. Give people the freedom to chart their course. Make sure resources are readily available and easy to find.
  • Set high expectations, and people live up to them. Help people make sense of and prosper in the world and the workplace. Facilitate social networks that enable people to compare their situation with others.
  • Conversations are the stem cells of learning. Foster open, frequent, frank conversations both virtually and in person. Praise courageous conversations.
  • People learn by doing. Encourage experimentation.
  • Ensure that managers and mentors understand the impact of stretch assignments. Learning is experiential, and stretch assignments give learners new experiences.
  • Teach people the least they need to know to tackle things on their own.
  • Make it drop dead simple to access people in the know, the lessons of experience, how-to information, and performance support.
  • Learning is social. Encourage participation in communities. Make collaboration the norm. Narrate your work and share with others. Communities and guilds create and consume knowledge. If you don’t have a vibrant social network, create one.
  • More than half of us work part of our time outside of the office. Ensure support is mobile.
  • We want what we want, no more. Whenever possible, provide choices. Give employees the pieces to create personalized learning experiences.
  • Learning is for everyone, not just novices and up-and-comers. You can’t expect to prosper without it. Make sure everyone’s covered.
  • Learning takes reinforcement to stick. Seek feedback. Blog, tweet, and otherwise share your reflections. Revisiting what you learn fixes it in memory.
  • Innovation is born of mashing up concepts from different disciplines. Encourage looking outside the box.
  • Provide feeds for what’s going on in the team, the department, the company, the industry, and technical disciplines.
  • People confuse learning with school. Build lessons on learning how to learn into the organization.

Real Learning: Bottom-Up Learning from the Top Down

An organization moving from a traditional structure to an organic one is in an ideal position to embed real learning and working smarter into its culture.

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Stan Garfield

Knowledge Management Author and Speaker, Founder of SIKM Leaders Community, Community Evangelist, Knowledge Manager https://sites.google.com/site/stangarfield/