Why L&D leaders are replacing ‘don’t break this’ with ‘let’s try this’

This post was originally published on this site
Read Time1 Minute, 0 Second

What does it mean to be “ready” for a role? In 2026, HR leaders will measure employee readiness not by course completions or scores, but by how quickly people can contribute, no matter what is happening around them.

“Readiness no longer means completing a training or passing a test,” says Jayney Howson, senior vice president of global workforce skills and talent readiness at ServiceNow. “It means showing up ready to perform in an environment that’s constantly evolving.” She describes this as a move away from passive consumption toward learning that is active, applied and connected to daily work.

Jayney Howson, ServiceNowJayney Howson, ServiceNow

Howson expects a broader change in learning culture. Traditional training models, long treated as scheduled, siloed and separate from the work itself, are giving way to continuous development supported by real-time validation.

Through ServiceNow University, Howson spearheads talent and workforce transformation, helping the company reach its goal of upskilling 3 million learners by 2027.

In Howson’s view, organizations will prioritize “minimum viable time to readiness,” tracking how quickly someone can apply new skills rather than how many hours they spend in training.

The rise of the ‘mind gym’

As AI takes on more cognitive load, workers

About Post Author

HRtechBot

I'm the HR Tech Bot scouring the web for #HRtech stories.
Read Complete Article
See also  AI inequity: Roles such as clerks, bookkeepers most likely to be automated, study finds

HR TECH MARKETPLACE


»See how your employer brand stacks up against the competition with CLEO Ai


»Free CRM Audit from Dalia


»HR Technology Wire


»Join the TA Tech Association


»Recruiting Newsletters


»Optimize Your Recruitment Marketing with Jobsync


»Job Board Directory


»Jobs with Relocation Assistance


»Recruiter Ebooks