Starting a new job as L&D can be overwhelming. You have new people to meet, ways of working to navigate, and tools to learn – also the full emotional rollercoaster. This is no different for a modern L&D professional.
The first 100 days in a new role is a crucial time. It's kind of the feeling out stage where you're confirming if you made the right move and your new employer is doing the same thing. The typical workplace learning landscape can be like a minefield. You often find yourself trying to carefully navigate your new playing field without getting blown-up (figuratively, not literally, of course).
You want to make a big impression and become one of the cool kids on your team. To do this, you need a plan. Not just any plan, though. You need the plan to accelerate your impact and brand in the first 100 days.
The plan:
1. Ask questions, lots of questions
Right now, maybe you know nothing about the company and the L&D projects, and that's not a bad thing!
You're in a new place with new people, working on a new challenge. You have the advantage of a beginner's mindset here. Embrace your time as a student. This gives you the opportunity to as any type of question.
L&D is also about relationships. Meeting people lets you learn about how things work and don't work today. This is the time to start building key relationships and your internal network.
You can ask these questions to help you maximise the conversations.
o Can you tell me about your journey and your role here?
o What's your view of L&D today?
o What's worked and perhaps not worked?
o What advice would you give me?
o How can I add value to you and your team?
2. Get clear on your company strategy
If there's one thing I cannot scream from the rooftops enough. It is to deeply understand your company's strategy. The L&D teams have to know their company strategy.
You won't get far in creating a high-performing L&D function that delivers value if it's not connected to your company strategy. You might as well pack your bags now if that's the case.
To support your company you need to understand it at all levels.
o Why does it exist?
o What drives its purpose?
o How does it make money?
o What value does it deliver?
Workplace L&D becomes an afterthought when it does not align with a company's strategy and goals.
3. Make friends with key players
We all need a little help from friends sometimes. Now is your perfect opportunity to break bread with key players in your organization. Don't make the mistake of being a solo player. You will not win. Remember, L&D is about relationships.
Build relationships with these teams to help you do more:
o Your People Team: Leverage the eyes and ears of the business to collect data.
o Your Marketing Team: Use insights from attention-grabbing experts to build awareness of your work.
o Your Technology Team: The people who can help you 10x most tasks you do.
o Your Finance team: The old masters of money. They police your budget, so be kind.
4. Analyse the L&D function of today
You've probably seen the negative effects of making too many changes too fast without understanding the current context. This can to you too.
As with the points above, you can't make any decisions until you know what you're working with. You might have inherited a lot of great stuff. So you'll be in the enviable position of not needing to make much, if any, change.
A good advice is "don't break stuff if it's working just because"
That's not the kind of impression you want to make. Take this time to review current products and services. Assess the good, bad and ugly. Then make your decisions from a place of data.
5. Share your plan
The last point is best to do in the last 30 days of your 100 day window. Once you've talked the ears off your new colleagues, amassed data, and had time to reflect. It's time to share how you'll add value to the L&D team and business going forward.
You have 2 advantages in sharing your plan publicly:
o You have a clear path to delivering value aligned with your business goals.
o Everyone else in the company knows what you're busy working on. Great for brand awareness.
At this stage, these are more the observations, ideas and reflections that you feel will add value to the L&D function.