Training & Development

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  • View profile for Jeroen Kraaijenbrink
    Jeroen Kraaijenbrink Jeroen Kraaijenbrink is an Influencer
    331,814 followers

    A learning culture is not built by offering more training. It emerges where curiosity, connection, and purpose intersect. Andrew Barry, in The Curious Lion, describes learning culture as a lotus where several forces overlap. I find this framing helpful because it moves the conversation beyond HR programs and into the fabric of the organization. At the individual level, there is curiosity. People must feel invited to ask questions, challenge assumptions, and explore. Without individual curiosity, learning remains compliance. At the organizational level, there is mission. Learning needs direction. When people understand what the company stands for and where it is going, their curiosity becomes focused rather than scattered. At the relational level, there is human connection. Learning accelerates in environments where people feel safe to speak, experiment, and reflect together. The fourth circle is continuous learning. Learning must be ongoing, not episodic. Not a workshop, but a way of operating. Continuous learning ensures that curiosity, mission, and connection reinforce each other over time rather than fading after the latest initiative. When these circles overlap, deeper elements emerge: Shared vision aligns effort. Shared experiences create collective memory. Shared assumptions shape how reality is interpreted. Shared stories transmit meaning across generations. At the center sits what we call learning culture. Not an initiative, but a pattern of how people think, relate, and evolve together. The question for leaders is not, “Do we offer learning opportunities?” It is, “Do curiosity, mission, and connection truly reinforce each other continuously in our organization?” That is where learning becomes cultural rather than occasional.

  • View profile for Sahib Shukurov

    Sales Growth Consultant| Increase your sales with us

    10,054 followers

    My client fired their entire SDR team on Tuesday By Friday, their pipeline had grown by 60% This sounds impossible It's not After auditing 50 B2B sales organizations over 10 years, I've uncovered the most expensive myth in modern selling: → The belief that MORE activity at the TOP of your funnel will fix conversion problems at the BOTTOM Let me share what actually happened: This mid-market software company was spending $350,000 annually on their 4-person SDR team - 100+ cold calls per rep daily - 17 meetings booked weekly - "Incredible metrics" according to leadership - But their close rate? A devastating 1.2% The VP of Sales was convinced they needed MORE outreach, MORE automation, MORE top-of-funnel I suggested something different: pause all prospecting for 7 days Instead, we had their account executives do something radical - engage with the 215 prospects already in their pipeline who'd gone cold after initial meetings Using a framework we developed: - 65 prospects responded within 24 hours - 41 booked follow-up meetings - 23 re-entered active buying cycles - 6 closed within 14 days (total value: $212K) The shocking revelation? - Their pipeline wasn't empty - It was overflowing with neglected opportunity. This company didn't have a lead generation problem. They had a lead nurturing catastrophe. By reallocating resources from mindless prospecting to strategic engagement, they've now: - Reduced CAC by 60% - Shortened sales cycles by 30% - 2x their close rate The counterintuitive truth: Sometimes the fastest path to growth is to stop chasing new opportunities and start converting the ones you've already earned. What percentage of your marketing and sales budget is focused on prospects who've already shown interest vs those who haven't? That ratio reveals everything about your future growth trajectory P.S. If you need help with your sales, send me a message

  • View profile for Dale Tutt

    Industry Strategy Leader @ Siemens, Aerospace Executive, Engineering and Program Leadership | Driving Growth with Digital Solutions

    8,333 followers

    After spending three decades in the aerospace industry, I’ve seen firsthand how crucial it is for different sectors to learn from each other. We no longer can afford to stay stuck in our own bubbles. Take the aerospace industry, for example. They’ve been looking at how car manufacturers automate their factories to improve their own processes. And those racing teams? Their ability to prototype quickly and develop at a breakneck pace is something we can all learn from to speed up our product development. It’s all about breaking down those silos and embracing new ideas from wherever we can find them. When I was leading the Scorpion Jet program, our rapid development – less than two years to develop a new aircraft – caught the attention of a company known for razors and electric shavers. They reached out to us, intrigued by our ability to iterate so quickly, telling me "you developed a new jet faster than we can develop new razors..." They wanted to learn how we managed to streamline our processes. It was quite an unexpected and fascinating experience that underscored the value of looking beyond one’s own industry can lead to significant improvements and efficiencies, even in fields as seemingly unrelated as aerospace and consumer electronics. In today’s fast-paced world, it’s more important than ever for industries to break out of their silos and look to other sectors for fresh ideas and processes. This kind of cross-industry learning not only fosters innovation but also helps stay competitive in a rapidly changing market. For instance, the aerospace industry has been taking cues from car manufacturers to improve factory automation. And the automotive companies are adopting aerospace processes for systems engineering. Meanwhile, both sectors are picking up tips from tech giants like Apple and Google to boost their electronics and software development. And at Siemens, we partner with racing teams. Why? Because their knack for rapid prototyping and fast-paced development is something we can all learn from to speed up our product development cycles. This cross-pollination of ideas is crucial as industries evolve and integrate more advanced technologies. By exploring best practices from other industries, companies can find innovative new ways to improve their processes and products. After all, how can someone think outside the box, if they are only looking in the box? If you are interested in learning more, I suggest checking out this article by my colleagues Todd Tuthill and Nand Kochhar where they take a closer look at how cross-industry learning are key to developing advanced air mobility solutions. https://lnkd.in/dK3U6pJf

  • View profile for Elfried Samba

    CEO & Co-founder @ Butterfly Effect | Ex-Gymshark Head of Social (Global)

    418,401 followers

    It’s simple math 🧐 I use to think that motivation was the key to monumental success. Long story short, it’s not. It’s about the little things you do every day that will take you from reasonable to slightly unreasonable to completely unreasonable progress. Your future is not defined by how motivated you are, but by your daily routines and systems. I believe in this so much that we named our company Butterfly 3ffect to reflect the value of incremental gains. we believe that that’s how the best people and brands grow. Here’s how you grow the small way: 1. Start by setting achievable goals, like reading one chapter of a book each day or going for a short walk 2. Practice gratitude by writing down three things you're thankful for every night before bed 3. Engage in daily self-reflection, even if it's just for a few minutes, to assess your thoughts and actions 4. Incorporate small acts of kindness into your daily routine, like holding the door for someone or offering a genuine compliment 5. Learn something new every day, whether it's a fun fact, a new word, or a new skill 6. Prioritise self-care by getting enough sleep, staying hydrated, and taking breaks when needed 7. Surround yourself with positive influences, whether it's uplifting books, supportive friends, or inspiring podcasts 8. Embrace failure as a learning opportunity and a stepping stone to growth 9. Stay consistent and patient, knowing that small progress over time adds up to significant improvement 10. Celebrate your achievements, no matter how small, to stay motivated and encouraged along the way.

  • View profile for Vitaly Friedman
    Vitaly Friedman Vitaly Friedman is an Influencer

    Practical insights for better UX • Running “Measure UX” and “Design Patterns For AI” • Founder of SmashingMag • Speaker • Loves writing, checklists and running workshops on UX. 🍣

    229,064 followers

    🧑🏽 Designing Better Personalization UX. With guidelines on how to better tailor content and features to user’s needs and interests. ✅ Customization allows users to choose exactly what they want. ✅ Personalization anticipates what they want behind the scenes. ✅ We personalize to match specific needs without user’s effort. ✅ We allow users to customize preferences, filters, layout, data. 🤔 But often only very few people customize their experience. 🚫 Past behavior doesn’t always predict future actions. 🤔 Users often have different needs at different times. ✅ Design a wide range of presets, templates and defaults. ✅ Track frequent actions and errors, and suggest shortcuts. ✅ Always add content, or reshuffle it, rather than removing it. ✅ Expose users to non-matching topics to avoid filter bubbles. 🤔 Often users don’t know what they need, or what they’d like. ✅ Good personalization is deeply embedded in a user journey. ✅ Search for moments when you want to win user’s attention. ✅ Ask users explicitly about their intent to learn their context. ✅ Let users override personalization if it goes against their needs. ✅ When journey breaks, don’t stitch it, but tie a beautiful bow. We can’t personalize without research. Collect reliable data about users first. Then segment users into groups with shared needs. Decide what messages you have for each group. And define a user model, content model and metadata that go along with it. Then decide on individual or role-based personalization. Choose touchpoints where personalized UX will be served. Apply the logic across your channels, but give users full control of their data. In that process, define how the team will test and measure the impact of personalization over time. Such a project might often feel like a huge leap of faith without immediate benefits. But if done well, it can increase customer lifetime value significantly — but you will need short-term victories to get a long-term commitment. So start slowly. Run experiments. Personalize where you can make the highest impact. More often than not, the outcome will be worth the effort — even although most users will never even notice it, they might stay for many years to come. ✤ Useful resources Personalization Pyramid, by Colin A. Eagan M.S., Jeffrey MacIntyre https://lnkd.in/eaztWU8e Definitive Guide To Personalization (free eBook, PDF) https://lnkd.in/eggR4hzB Five Levels Of Recommendations, by Guillaume Galante https://lnkd.in/eKqsZtJ5 Personalization Planning, by Jennifer Leigh Brown https://lnkd.in/e9N48x6F Successful Personalization, by Amy Schade https://lnkd.in/eNSUgQ9B Personalization UX Stats (Medium), by Mallory Kim https://lnkd.in/eRy9pvqt ✤ Books – Hello {first name}, by Rasmus Houlind – The Person in Personalisation, by David Mannheim – The Personalization Paradox, by Val Swisher, Regina Lynn Preciado – Personalization Mechanics, by John Berndt #ux #design

  • View profile for Oana Labes, MBA, CPA

    Helping CEOs Build Financial Intelligence to Lead, Scale, and Win | Founder & Coach of The CEO Financial Intelligence Academy | CEO of Financiario.Com | Top 10 LinkedIn USA Finance

    419,876 followers

    Selling to leadership is tough. Learn to speak finance, and everything changes. (This works for both B2B sales and internal pitches.) Speak the language of financial metrics and business impact, and you’ll earn buy-in. Whether you’re pitching a product, service, or internal idea, this skill makes you a trusted partner to decision-makers. Want to dive deeper? Download my free guide “10 Levels of Profitability” here: https://bit.ly/40pY3CQ Here’s why: Executives don’t want fluff. They need to know *how* your solution or proposal will impact their business financially. Here’s how to make your pitch resonate: 1️⃣ Talk Margins, Not Just Savings ↳ Show how your solution improves gross, operating, or net profit margins. Make it clear how it improves topline or streamlines processes to ultimately add value to the bottom line. 2️⃣ Connect to Cash Flow ↳ Highlight how your solution will boost cash flow, not just the bottom-line. Smart executives prioritize cash flow over simple revenue increases or cost savings because it keeps the business stable and flexible. 3️⃣ Show ROI and Payback Period ↳ Present clear numbers on return on investment (ROI) and how quickly they’ll see a payback. Executives need to know when their investment will yield results. 4️⃣ Impact Key Financial Ratios ↳ Explain how your proposal enhances key metrics like ROE (Return on Equity), ROA (Return on Assets), or EBITDA. This demonstrates that you understand their financial framework and how your solution strengthens it. 5️⃣ Talk Risk Management ↳ Show that you’ve considered potential downsides. Demonstrate how your proposal mitigates financial risk and supports long-term stability—not just quick gains. Why this matters: 1️⃣ You Stand Out ↳ Most sales pitches and internal proposals focus on benefits. When you speak in terms of financial strategy and impact, you differentiate yourself. 2️⃣ You Build Trust ↳ Speaking their language shows you understand their challenges, priorities, and goals. 3️⃣ You Become Indispensable ↳ When you can prove your solution impacts key business metrics, you shift from being just another vendor or team member to a trusted advisor. If you want to learn finance strategy to elevate your pitch and proposals, join 3,000 learning with me here: https://bit.ly/famcol Remember: Learn to speak finance, and you’ll open doors that most can’t. ♻️ 𝐋𝐢𝐤𝐞, 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭, 𝐑𝐞𝐩𝐨𝐬𝐭 to help someone else. And follow Oana Labes, MBA, CPA for more  

  • View profile for Melinda French Gates
    Melinda French Gates Melinda French Gates is an Influencer

    Founder of Pivotal. Co-founder of the Gates Foundation. Author of The Moment of Lift & The Next Day.

    6,709,447 followers

    Over the course of my career, I’ve learned to be okay with getting things wrong.       Not because it feels good (it doesn’t), but because every mistake creates an opportunity to learn and grow. And because it means someone trusted me enough to tell me when I missed the mark. That kind of honesty feels increasingly rare—especially in a world where AI is telling people exactly what they want to hear and where people increasingly gravitate toward information that confirms their beliefs.      That’s why I think one of the most valuable skills you can cultivate is this: Find people who will give you tough feedback.      Across my time at Microsoft, the Gates Foundation, and Pivotal, the moments that shaped me the most weren’t the wins. They were the times when someone I trusted pulled me aside and gave me feedback I needed to hear. These conversations helped me see what I’d missed and rethink how I was showing up, which made me a better leader. But they only happened because the people around me knew they could be honest, and in fact, I expected them to be. You can’t grow—or help your teams grow—if you act like you’re the only one with all the answers.      I’ve seen this in every place I’ve worked. The leaders who made the biggest impact weren’t the ones who got it right all the time. They were the ones who created the conditions for honesty. Their teams felt free to surface new ideas, ask tough questions, and admit their mistakes. And those leaders were humble enough to hear feedback about themselves—and then take the steps to do things differently.       My advice on how to build this skill? Seek out colleagues and mentors you can trust to give you honest feedback. Ask for it often. Be vulnerable—not defensive—and take the opportunity to understand what you didn’t see before. It will transform the way you learn, lead, and build teams that thrive. #SkillsontheRise 

  • View profile for Ian Koniak
    Ian Koniak Ian Koniak is an Influencer

    I help tech sales AEs perform to their full potential in sales and life by mastering their mindset, habits, and selling skills | Sales Coach | Former #1 Enterprise AE at Salesforce | $100M+ in career sales

    102,713 followers

    For my first 16 years in tech sales, I averaged 240K/year. In my last 4 years, I averaged 720K/year. I did this by using an approach I call Yo-yo selling: 🪀 It’s how you win large, complex enterprise deals by building credibility with senior executives at the beginning of a sales cycle. This will save you months of spending time with mid or lower level Directors on a deal cycle, only to have your deal stall because it's not a priority for Executives. Here’s the concept: You start at the top, get senior level sponsorship for a deep discovery, drop down into the business, then bounce back up with a report of findings. This is the process I've used for nearly every 7-figure deal I've ever closed. Step 0: Research before outreach Before asking for time, I do deep strategic research. Earnings calls. Investor decks. Press releases. Executive interviews. I also spend time talking to their team to see if the problem that I solve exists in their company. Using that research, I build a Point of View that connects their top business goals to real execution gaps. This earns executive time. Today, AI tools like ChatGPT make this easier than ever. What used to take hours now takes minutes. If you skip this step, you lose your edge. Step 1: Prospect to the top and gain their sponsorship to engage Lead with your POV. The key is to teach them something new about their business which they aren't already aware of, and show them how it's putting their highest level goals at risk. If they lean in, offer up a deep discovery with your team and their team. Lock in a date to come back for a readout. Have them assign a project manager to help you coordinate Step 2: Drop down Once you have executive sponsorship, meet with their team. The key is to have the Exec sponsor send out a note to their team explaining what it's for. This will keep the assessment moving forward. Study workflows. Capture friction. Collect quotes. Do not pitch. Just listen. Step 3: Bounce back up Bring it all together in an executive summary. Show how their vision connects directly to what’s broken below. Present a focused business case. Build a custom demo. Create a roadmap and implementation plan. That’s where deals close. Real example from my career At Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, we were told “no” on a point solution. Instead of walking away, I stepped back and asked what the company really needed. After deep research, I re-engaged the COO with a transformation POV centered on the experience of 50,000+ agents. The result was one of the largest new logo deals in Salesforce history. But Yo-yo selling alone isn’t enough. Because it's hard to execute and takes patience. Top performers also master their mindset, habits, and discipline. That’s why I put together a free masterclass for sellers who want to break into the top 1 percent. 👉 Watch the free training here: https://lnkd.in/eWD8mTqH If you’re serious about enterprise sales, this will change how you sell.

  • View profile for Simon Sinek
    Simon Sinek Simon Sinek is an Influencer

    Optimist, New York Times bestselling author of "Start with Why" and "The Infinite Game", and founder of The Optimism Company

    8,940,138 followers

    Founders: your job isn’t to be the gatekeeper of ideas. 🚀 When you say no, an idea dies before it ever has the chance to prove itself. That’s how creativity gets stifled and teams stop bringing bold ideas forward. Instead: ✅ Don’t kill ideas; let them prove themselves. ✅ Push ownership back to the person who suggested it. ✅ Say “Prove me wrong” and watch innovation take off. When people feel trusted to test their own ideas, you’ll see more experimentation, more ownership, and ultimately—better ideas.

  • View profile for Antonio Vizcaya Abdo

    Turning Sustainability from Compliance into Business Value | ESG Strategy & Governance Advisor | TEDx Speaker | LinkedIn Creator | UNAM Professor | +127K Followers

    128,052 followers

    Sustainability in Supply Chains A guide for private markets investors 🌍 Private markets investors face increasing pressure to integrate sustainability into supply chain management. This guide by PRI explains why supply chain due diligence is essential and how investors can embed it across the investment cycle to safeguard assets, reduce risks, and capture value. Supply chain risks, ranging from human rights abuses to environmental violations, have become financially material issues with direct implications for investor performance, regulatory compliance, and reputation. Human rights concerns are significant. Forced labour affects an estimated 28 million people worldwide, with rising risks in major sourcing countries such as India, Vietnam, China, Mexico and the United States. Migrant workers are particularly vulnerable, while child labour remains prevalent in high-risk industries and regions. Working conditions also present serious challenges. Excessive hours, unsafe workplaces and poor wages undermine the stability of global supply chains. These issues are concentrated in industries such as apparel, electronics, food and agriculture, construction materials and mining where oversight is often limited. Environmental risks add complexity. Nearly half of global sourcing markets face high or extreme risk of violations related to waste management, emissions and hazardous materials. Biodiversity loss and deforestation linked to commodities such as palm oil, soy and timber increase exposure to both regulatory and operational disruptions. Regulatory requirements are tightening worldwide. The EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive, the US Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act and the EU Deforestation Regulation compel companies and investors to identify, mitigate and report risks throughout their supply chains. Failure to comply carries financial consequences. Volkswagen shipments were detained at US ports, Shein faced delays in listing plans due to sourcing concerns and companies in Germany were investigated and fined for breaches of the Supply Chain Act. These examples show how supply chain management is now a strategic necessity. Proactive due diligence creates opportunities. Companies with strong supply chain transparency and risk management can secure contracts, improve resilience, reduce costs and strengthen their brand. Investors can leverage these practices to enhance portfolio performance and protect value at exit. The guide explains that due diligence should be present at every stage of the investment cycle. This includes governance and policies, early screening, detailed risk assessments, legal agreements, active engagement, monitoring and exit planning. Clear roles, data systems and training are critical. Integrating sustainability into supply chain due diligence strengthens both risk management and value creation. #sustainability #business #sustainable #esg

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