The Importance of Learning and Development—and Why Process Matters

Melissa Wilson • January 7, 2026

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People around a conference table with their computers with someone doing a training at the head of the table

Learning and development (L&D) is no longer a “nice to have.” In today’s fast-moving workplaces, it’s essential for growth, engagement, and long-term success. Organizations that invest in learning build stronger teams, retain talent longer, and adapt more easily to change. When people understand their roles, feel supported, and are given opportunities to grow, performance improves naturally.


Yet many learning and development efforts fall short—not because the content is wrong, but because the process behind it is unclear. Training is often delivered without fully understanding how work actually happens day to day. Without clear processes, learning becomes fragmented, inconsistent, and difficult to apply. Employees may attend training sessions but still feel unsure about expectations, workflows, or how their role connects to the bigger picture.


This is where process and learning must work together. Effective L&D is built on a clear foundation: defined workflows, consistent procedures, and shared understanding. When processes are well-documented and aligned, training becomes practical instead of theoretical. New hires onboard faster, experienced employees work more efficiently, and teams communicate with greater confidence.


The Power of Process Workshop that I designed in collaboration with Adriana Torres of The Process Reinvention is designed to strengthen learning and development by addressing the root of many training challenges. Rather than focusing only on what people should learn, the workshop examines how work flows through an organization. Using LEAN principles and intentional training strategies, participants identify gaps, reduce waste, and create repeatable systems that support learning at every level.


By clarifying processes first, organizations can dramatically improve their L&D efforts. Training becomes easier to design, more relevant to daily work, and more sustainable over time. Employees gain clarity, leaders gain consistency, and learning turns into real performance improvement—not just completed courses.


Learning and development thrive when built on strong processes. When teams understand the “how” behind their work, learning sticks, confidence grows, and organizations are better equipped to meet both today’s challenges and tomorrow’s opportunities.


Interested in learning more about the Power of Process workshop? 



📅 When: Tuesday, January 20, 2026 (Rescheduled from January 6)
🕘
Time: 10:00–12:00 PM
📍
Where: Greater Merrimack-Souhegan Valley Chamber of Commerce

👉 Register here to reserve your spot!


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By Melissa Wilson December 29, 2025
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When training isn’t working, the instinct is often to add more: more courses, more content, more tools. But before you build anything new, there’s a critical step that too many organizations skip—understanding where things are right now. That’s where training needs analysis comes in. It’s not about pointing fingers or finding faults; it’s about clarity. And clarity is the foundation of effective processes, meaningful training, and sustainable improvement. You Can’t Fix What You Don’t Fully Understand A training needs analysis helps answer questions such as: What are people actually doing today? Where are processes breaking down? What training exists—and is it being used? Are issues truly training-related, or are they process issues? Without this insight, training becomes guesswork. You may solve the wrong problem, overlook root causes, or create solutions that don’t stick. Understanding the Current State Is a LEAN Principle LEAN thinking emphasizes understanding the current state before designing the future state . The same applies to training. If employees aren’t following a process, it may be because: The process isn’t clearly defined Training doesn’t reflect real work Expectations aren’t consistent The workflow has changed but training hasn’t A needs analysis helps uncover these gaps so training can support the process—not work against it. Training Should Solve Real Problems Effective training starts with purpose. A needs analysis ensures that: Training aligns with business goals Objectives are measurable and meaningful Learning addresses real performance challenges Time and resources aren’t wasted When organizations understand where they are now, they can design training that moves them forward intentionally. Where the Power of Process Fits In If you’re unsure where to start—or you know things aren’t working but can’t quite pinpoint why—the Power of Process Workshop on January 6 is a great first step. This workshop that I designed in collaboration with Adriana Torres of The Process Reinvention is designed to help leaders, managers, and training professionals: Identify where processes and training disconnect Understand the role training plays in process efficiency Apply LEAN thinking to real workplace scenarios Begin asking the right questions before building solutions It’s not about fixing everything in one day—it’s about gaining the clarity needed to move in the right direction. The Bottom Line A training needs analysis isn’t an extra step—it’s the step. It grounds your training in reality, connects learning to process, and ensures improvements are intentional and effective. Before you invest in new training, new tools, or new programs, pause and ask: Do we truly understand where we are today? If the answer is “not yet,” January 6 might be the perfect place to start. Interested in learning more about the Power of Process workshop? 📅 When: Tuesday, January 6, 2026 🕘 Time: 9:00–11:00 AM 📍 Where: Greater Merrimack-Souhegan Valley Chamber of Commerce 👉 Register here to reserve your spot!
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