Common Challenges When Implementing an Organizational Learning Plan and What to Do About Them

Written by: Katherine Haugh & Monalisa Salib 

With thanks to the following contributors and thought partners: Alan Hudson, Raquel Rubio, Charlotte Ornemark, Nick Oatley, Nikki Zimmerman, Johanna Morariu, Cristine Geers. 

As organizational learning professionals, we frequently get asked about how to create an organizational learning plan and how to put it into practice. This is the third blog - a grand finale if you will - of a three-part blog series on this topic. The first blog covered what an organizational learning plan is, the second blog outlined the steps for actually creating one, and this blog details how to actually put the plan into action and common challenges that arise and what to do about them. 

You have an organizational learning plan. Now you want to implement it. What do you do? 

Well, what was in the plan?! No, but seriously, if you have a plan and then you can’t figure out what to do next, it was not a good plan. 

Who is responsible for implementing the plan? 

In addition to reinforcing that it is everyone’s responsibility to contribute to organizational learning, you also need several critical roles filled in order to make sure learning happens: 

  • Someone should have been designated in the plan as ultimately responsible for making sure it gets implemented. This is typically a MEL manager.

  • Someone else should have been designated as responsible for making sure learning gets used. This has to be management - a Chief of Party or Deputy or a division director. Learning has to be integrated into management and decision-making. If it’s not, it’s not going to work.

What is the first step in implementing it? 

It’s important to give people a sense of the learning journey you are about to embark on so they know what to expect and feel included.  Give people a sense of the big picture - where are we headed with this learning, what does it inform? But also break the process into smaller chunks. First we’re going to gather information, then we’re going to synthesize it, then we’re going to talk about it. When we talk about it, we’re going to figure out what we should do about it. It’s really that simple. 

When and how often should you update your organizational learning plan? 

As mentioned in the previous blog, you also will want to reflect on what is working in the organizational learning plan and what is not. Because you started with a minimum viable product, you should be thinking constantly about updating and improving it. Having structure around this will be helpful - for example by scheduling quarterly reviews of the learning plan to consider what is working and how you know its working. 

Incentives, structures, and competencies related to organizational learning

For organizations to really be “learning organizations,” individuals need to be “learning professionals.” The purpose of the plan is ultimately to inspire large scale behavior change on an individual and organizational level where people are intentionally taking up learning mindsets and behaviors and integrating them into organizational processes and policies. 

It has to start with individuals. What this looks like is people being self-aware, honest, curious, and open-minded. How can you recruit people who demonstrate these adaptive capacities and set up your organization writ large to reinforce the value and generation of these competencies?  Then, once you have your team, how can you further develop these competencies (we love CRS’s approach to evaluative thinking for inspiration).

This is part of an overarching approach to thinking about incentivizing and rewarding learning behaviors all of the time, like how USAID LEARN tried to do with nominating and celebrating quarterly learning champions for their learning behaviors. This should be something that is baked into the organization - in performance evaluations, formal feedback, celebrations, etc. to turn it from an organizational learning plan into an organizational learning culture. 

Common challenges that come up when implementing an organizational learning plan and what to do about them: 

Note the suggestions below are not to be confused with one-size-fits-all solutions. They are also not simply tools. Several of them are more about approaches, mindset, and culture. 


Challenge: We have been taught, especially in professional settings, to always know the answer. In response, we tend to protect ourselves from appearing ignorant or insecure by not recognizing that we don’t know X, Y or Z, and this is a huge barrier for learning.

Suggestion: Create a psychologically safe space where we encourage and celebrate intellectual humility and growth mindsets by saying “I don’t know, but I will find out.” And then providing the support and resources needed for that to happen. This is key to infuse a learning culture in our organization.


Challenge: Focusing too much on specific actions instead of in the root causes of those actions. While facilitating learning conversations, most of the time people get stuck in the “event,” having a hard time zooming out and reflecting about the longer term patterns of change that lie behind those actions.

Suggestion: Infuse systems thinking lens in our learning efforts. System thinking helps us to see the “wholes,” the patterns in our organization, allowing us to identify tendencies of change instead of just actions. This helps us to avoid blaming individuals as we reflect together about the complexity of the system and how everything is interconnected.


Challenge: When things get busy, learning tends to be the first thing that we put aside.

Suggestion: Keep learning as a priority by embedding the learning plan in each component of the organization implementation strategy. This helps us to hold each other accountable as learning is seen as a key goal for each staff member.


Challenge: Whose responsibility is it to manage and support the learning process? What are the different but complementary roles of everyone involved?

Suggestion: Clearly spell out roles while ensuring that all staff have a stake in the learning process.


Challenge: Aligning evidence building efforts like research and evaluation projects, such that findings are available to support decisions at the right time.

Suggestion: Map out learning questions and needs in advance to the extent possible so that evidence can be collected or generated to support learning efforts.


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