The HR Podcast | Built for Business
Ask an employer who's responsible for employee development, and most will say the employee needs to drive their own growth. Ask the employee, and most will say their employer doesn't take any responsibility at all. That disconnect shows up whether you're a five-person business with no training budget or a 10,000-person organisation with a dedicated learning and development function. In this episode, you'll learn why 73% of UK employees believe their employer carries no responsibility for their development, why a big L&D team doesn't automatically mean better career development, and how to tell the difference between employee training and genuine personal development at work. You'll also get practical, low-cost ways small businesses can support career development without a big budget or a formal programme. * 73% of UK employees believe their employer carries no responsibility for their development, and only 15% say their manager helped them build a career plan in the past six months — even in organisations with formal L&D programmes in place. * Personal development and career progression are not the same thing. Personal development is about doing the current role brilliantly; career development is about where someone goes next — conflating the two is often where the disconnect between employer and employee starts. * A big learning and development function doesn't guarantee good career development. L&D teams are typically focused on meeting the biggest, most immediate training need (core job skills), which often has little to do with an individual's longer-term career development plans. * The 70-20-10 model is worth knowing: roughly 70% of development happens through on-the-job experience, not formal training — which means managers, not just L&D, carry much of the real responsibility for employee development. * Training and development are different things, and businesses often conflate them. Investing in a sales training course is training on how to do the job — it isn't automatically career development or real growth, even if it's badged that way. * Small businesses can support employee development without a big budget. Ideas mentioned include a set annual development allowance, a monthly learning budget for books or memberships, half a day a week for developmental activities, or dedicated innovation time. * Clarity beats good intentions. Employees are more likely to feel supported when a business is upfront about what development it will and won't offer, rather than assuming a training course or a benefit automatically counts as career development in the employee's eyes. * Employees who take ownership of their own development tend to get more support, not less. Framing a personal development goal in a way that also benefits the business makes it far easier for managers to say yes to supporting it. [00:55] Who's responsible for personal development?[02:07] Why only 15% feel supported by their manager[04:29] Personal development vs career progression[06:34] Why small businesses struggle with career paths[09:41] Giving employees clarity on what's on offer[10:50] Low-cost ways to support development[14:58] Why big L&D teams aren't the full answer[19:20] Why employees need to own their growth too Resources Mentioned 1. LinkedIn Workplace Learning Report — cited for the statistic that only 15% of employees say their manager helped them build a career plan in the past six months 2. 70-20-10 learning and development model — referenced as the framework showing roughly 70% of development happens through on-the-job experience 3. Elevate Hub — mentioned as an example of a learning platform some employees choose to spend a development budget on 4. Audible — mentioned as an example of how employees use development budgets for informal learning * employee development * personal development at work * career development * employee training and development * learning and development * career progression at work * L&D strategy for small business
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