Reinvent or rust: The learning leader’s guide to AI maturity
Summary
Learning and development (L&D) sits at a crossroads: stay a reactive cost centre that produces courses or reinvent as a strategic driver of capability and competitive advantage. The article introduces an AI maturity model with five phases (Ad Hoc → Transformational) to help learning leaders diagnose where their organisation sits and map a path forward.
It argues L&D must simultaneously deliver operational improvements today (embedding AI into workflows, governance and measurable value) and reposition itself strategically (from content delivery to performance enablement). The piece outlines four essential shifts — embedding learning in the flow of work, personalising at scale, building future-ready capabilities and proving strategic value — plus a vision of atomic instructional design and the structural changes needed across governance, technology, collaboration and team capabilities to reach transformational maturity.
Key Points
- L&D faces a binary choice: reinvent as a capability engine or risk obsolescence under cost pressures.
- The AI maturity model: Phase 1 Ad Hoc → Phase 2 Exploratory → Phase 3 Structured → Phase 4 Integrated → Phase 5 Transformational.
- Most organisations are in Phase 2 or just entering Phase 3; the leap to Phase 5 requires reframing purpose, not just technology.
- Transformation requires two parallel tracks: operational excellence now and strategic positioning for future capabilities.
- Four performance-enabling shifts: embed learning in the flow of work; personalise at scale; build future-ready capabilities (AI literacy, data fluency, adaptability); and prove strategic value with measurable business outcomes.
- Atomic instructional design (modular, reusable learning atoms assembled by AI) enables personalised, agile learning ecosystems and shifts power toward learner-driven pathways.
- Structural imperatives: governance that enables, modern AI-capable tech stacks, enterprise-wide collaboration (L&D, HR, IT, business) and new human+AI capabilities within teams.
- The payoff: organisations that get this right gain rapid capability building, resilience and a sustainable competitive advantage; failure risks L&D being cut as AI reduces content-creation costs.
Why should I read this?
Short version: if you run or influence learning, this is your wake-up call. It’s a practical map — not just hype — showing what to fix now and what to build for. Saves you the legwork of sifting through the noise: practical phases, clear trade-offs and a blueprint for turning AI from a toy into a business lever.
Author
Punchy: This is essential reading for CLOs and L&D leaders. The article doesn’t just warn — it lays out a concrete, strategic route from experimenting with AI to making learning a core source of organisational advantage. If reaching Phase 5 matters, the detail here matters.