Learning Experience Design — Knowledge Resource

Understanding Organizational Learning Design

A guide to the knowledge foundations, design process, key decisions, and professional practice that characterise effective organizational learning design.

ℹ️ This resource is for learning designers, organizational leaders, and those involved in capability-building. Use the tabs to explore at whatever depth is useful.

Six Knowledge Foundations

Effective organizational learning design draws on interconnected bodies of knowledge. The strongest design work holds all of these in view simultaneously — producing solutions that a content-focused approach cannot.

🧠

Adult Learning Theory

Adults learn most effectively when they understand why something is relevant, can draw on prior experience, and exercise some autonomy over their learning path. Malcolm Knowles' andragogy — built on self-direction, problem-centering, and intrinsic motivation — remains the core theoretical reference for organizational learning design.

⚙️

Cognitive Load Theory

Working memory is limited. Effective design manages three types of cognitive load: intrinsic (the inherent complexity of content), extraneous (friction created by poor design choices), and germane (the effort devoted to building lasting schemas). The goal is to minimize extraneous load while promoting deep schema formation.

🔄

Organizational Development & Change

Learning does not occur in isolation. Effective design accounts for how organizations change, where resistance originates, and how capability-building fits within broader transformation efforts. Models such as ADKAR, Kotter's 8-Step framework, and Lewin's change stages provide the structural language for this work.

🌐

Systems Thinking

Learning is embedded in organizational systems — culture, incentives, leadership behavior, and job design. Peter Senge's Five Disciplines framework, along with causal loop analysis, equips designers to diagnose root causes rather than address surface symptoms. This is what distinguishes strategic learning design from content production.

🌍

Cultural Responsiveness

Cultural backgrounds shape how people interpret, engage with, and transfer learning. Rigorous design acknowledges that systemic barriers — including unconscious bias, resource inequity, and misaligned organizational structures — affect participation and transfer. Culturally responsive design is a design requirement, not an add-on.

Equity, Access & WCAG

Accessible design anticipates learner variability from the outset. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), organized around four principles — Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust — provide the technical baseline for digital learning. Automated tools detect roughly 30–40% of real barriers; human judgment remains essential.

A Practical Hierarchy Use instructional design models to structure the process. Use adult learning theory to shape learner experience. Use systems thinking to situate learning within the organizational context. Use cultural responsiveness and WCAG to ensure no learner is excluded. Rigorous practice holds all of these in view simultaneously.

Strategic Design vs. Content Production

Learning design is an analytical and design discipline, not primarily a content development function. The most consequential work happens before any content is created: diagnosing whether a performance gap is actually a learning problem, identifying whose participation is structurally constrained, and mapping the organizational conditions that will either support or undermine transfer.

Learning transfer research — including the work of Calhoun Wick, Emma Weber, and the Transfer of Training literature — consistently shows that post-training manager support, practice opportunity, and organizational climate are stronger predictors of behavior change than the learning experience itself. Effective design addresses both.

Organizational learning design also draws on models better suited to workplace learning than frameworks developed for formal education. Bloom's Taxonomy, widely referenced in instructional design, has been critiqued for artificially separating cognitive processes that are in practice symbiotic, and for its limited relevance to adult learners in organizational contexts. In practice, the field draws on complementary frameworks: the 70-20-10 model, which recognizes that most workplace learning occurs through experience (70%) and social interaction (20%) rather than formal instruction (10%); action learning, which treats learning as a continuous, recursive process embedded in real work rather than a prerequisite to it; and Kirkpatrick's Four Levels, which evaluates learning by its actual impact on behavior and organizational results rather than by the cognitive category of the objective.

A Collaborative, Context-Specific Approach

Each organization brings a distinct culture, history, and set of constraints. Effective learning design is developed collaboratively — with organizational leaders, subject matter experts, and learners — rather than applied as a generic template. Working closely with those who hold the knowledge means asking the right diagnostic questions, building shared understanding of the problem, and translating that understanding into experiences that develop real capability rather than familiarity.

How a Rigorous Design Process Works

Effective organizational learning design is structured, iterative, and context-sensitive. The stages below represent a comprehensive approach; in practice, scope and depth are calibrated to each organization's capacity and constraints. Understanding the full process clarifies what is gained or lost when particular stages are abbreviated.

Before any design begins, it is essential to understand the organizational context, the learner population, and the performance gap being addressed. This includes clarifying whether learning is the right intervention, what success looks like across different stakeholder groups, and where the organizational constraints lie.

Intake conversations establish the conditions for productive collaboration — decision-making authority, review processes, timelines, and the SME's time commitment. Assumptions surfaced here prevent scope creep later.

This stage produces
  • Documented scope, constraints, and stakeholder expectations
  • Preliminary determination of whether learning is the right intervention
  • Shared understanding of roles, timelines, and review process
Projects that skip rigorous scoping frequently encounter misaligned expectations and remediation work late in the cycle — at significantly higher cost than early clarification.

Needs analysis diagnoses the gap between current and desired performance — through interviews, observation, document review, and data analysis. It distinguishes learning problems (a knowledge or skill deficit) from performance problems rooted in motivation, environment, or process, each of which requires a different response.

This stage also maps the conditions that will support or impede transfer: manager behavior, practice opportunity, incentive alignment, and cultural climate. Analysis that overlooks these factors produces recommendations that look sound on paper but fail in practice.

This stage produces
  • Clear articulation of the performance gap and its root causes
  • Confirmation (or not) that a learning intervention is appropriate
  • Analysis of organizational conditions affecting transfer
  • Prioritized learning needs to inform program design

Measurable learning outcomes describe the observable performances that demonstrate learning has occurred. Well-constructed outcomes use the ABCD formula — Audience, Behavior, Condition, Degree — and are written at a level of specificity that reflects what learners will actually do on the job.

Constructive alignment ensures that outcomes, assessments, and activities are coherently connected: learners practice what they are assessed on, and assessments measure what the program claims to develop. Misalignment here is a common source of ineffective training.

This stage produces
  • Clearly worded, measurable outcomes grounded in observable job performance
  • Alignment map connecting outcomes to assessments and key activities
  • Documented agreement with stakeholders on what success looks like

The design phase translates outcomes into a learning architecture: sequencing, modality selection, content chunking, and interaction design. Decisions here are shaped by cognitive load theory — scaffolding complexity, reducing extraneous load, and promoting germane load through meaningful practice and reflection.

Storyboarding brings the design to life before development begins, allowing stakeholders to review structure and approach without the cost of full development. In agile contexts this takes the form of rapid prototypes in iterative sprint cycles. Instructional models such as ADDIE, backward design (UbD), SAM, and Gagné's Nine Events provide the structural language for sequencing decisions.

This stage produces
  • Learning path or module sequence with rationale
  • Storyboard or prototype for stakeholder review
  • Modality and media decisions grounded in context and constraints
  • Assessment design aligned to outcomes

Content development encompasses writing, multimedia production, LMS course-building, and facilitation materials. Writing for learning is concise, active, and organized around the learner's task rather than the subject's structure.

Accessibility is built in, not retrofitted. WCAG compliance, UDL principles, and inclusive design are applied throughout — including alternative text, caption quality, keyboard navigability, color contrast, and flexibility of format and pacing.

This stage produces
  • Fully developed eLearning modules, facilitator guides, or blended materials
  • Accessible media (captions, alt text, contrast-compliant visuals)
  • LMS-ready course package with navigation and assessment logic

Beta testing engages representative learners in structured evaluation before launch — identifying comprehension gaps, navigation friction, and misaligned expectations that stakeholder review cannot surface. QA reviews technical function, accessibility compliance, and content accuracy.

Frameworks such as Quality Matters (QM) and OSCQR provide structured rubrics for evaluating online learning quality. Findings are documented and triaged by severity, and changes are tracked through a formal revision log.

This stage produces
  • Beta testing report with participant feedback and prioritized revisions
  • QA audit report with accessibility and technical findings
  • Revision log documenting changes made prior to launch

Evaluation is designed into the program from the start. Kirkpatrick's Four Levels provide the framework: Reaction (did learners find it useful?), Learning (did knowledge or skill change?), Behavior (did performance change on the job?), and Results (did organizational outcomes shift?). Levels 3 and 4 require data beyond the LMS — manager observation and business performance metrics.

A sustainment plan addresses how the program is maintained, updated, and embedded into ongoing organizational practice rather than treated as a one-time event.

This stage produces
  • Evaluation plan spanning all four Kirkpatrick levels
  • Post-program impact report with data-informed findings
  • Sustainment plan for ongoing relevance and continuous improvement
Most organizational training is evaluated only at Level 1. Designing for Levels 3 and 4 requires organizational buy-in, pre-established measurement infrastructure, and a willingness to connect learning data to business outcomes.

What Shapes a Learning Design Project

No two projects are identical. Decisions about scope, approach, learner involvement, and measurement determine what kind of program is appropriate — and what it will produce. These dimensions also shape how the design process is structured collaboratively with the organization.

🎯

Intervention Type

Is learning actually the right solution?

Not all performance gaps are learning problems. Motivation deficits, process failures, and environmental constraints call for different interventions. Needs analysis determines whether a training solution is warranted — and prevents the most common failure mode in organizational learning: building programs for problems learning cannot solve.

📐

Design Model

How iterative does the process need to be?

ADDIE provides sequential rigor suited to stable, well-defined content. SAM prioritizes rapid prototyping and iterative feedback — better suited to agile environments and evolving subject matter. Backward design anchors the process in desired outcomes from the start. Most projects draw on elements of each.

🖥️

Modality & Blend

What combination of formats serves this learner population?

eLearning, live facilitation, coaching, job aids, and social learning serve different needs. Modality decisions should follow the analysis — not precede it — and account for learner access, schedule constraints, and what the evidence suggests about transfer for this type of skill.

👥

Learner Involvement

Are learners part of the design process?

Learner involvement in needs analysis, prototype review, and beta testing consistently improves program relevance and reduces post-launch revision cycles. Co-design is particularly valuable when designing for communities whose experience may not be well-represented among the design team or SMEs.

Timeline & Iteration

How much time exists for rigorous design?

Compressed timelines require explicit decisions about which stages are abbreviated and what is lost as a result. When time is genuinely constrained, the highest-value investment is usually in needs analysis and outcome clarity — because errors at those stages are the most expensive to correct later.

📊

Evaluation Depth

What will success look like — and how will it be measured?

Evaluating at Levels 3 and 4 requires measurement infrastructure established before the program launches. Organizations that define success metrics early design differently — and are better positioned to demonstrate program value to leadership on evidence rather than advocacy.

On Rapid vs. Comprehensive Approaches Rapid design approaches are valuable when constraints are real and acknowledged. The risk is treating abbreviated processes as equivalent to rigorous ones. A well-scoped, explicitly constrained project produces better outcomes than an under-resourced project that does not acknowledge its own limitations.

Core Competencies in Organizational Learning Design

The following competencies form the professional foundation of organizational learning design work — spanning analysis, design, delivery, and evaluation across a range of organizational contexts.

Instructional & Learning Design

The ability to analyze performance gaps, identify learning objectives, and select appropriate modalities and sequencing — grounded in models like ADDIE, SAM, and backward design. This includes knowing when learning is, and is not, the right intervention.

Needs Analysis & Stakeholder Consultation

Diagnosing what an organization actually needs — through interviews, observation, and data review — and translating findings into a learning strategy. This requires navigating competing priorities across organizational levels without losing analytical clarity.

Curriculum & Program Architecture

Structuring learning at the system level: sequencing, scaffolding, blending modalities, and designing for transfer into real practice. Program architecture considers not just the individual learning experience but the broader organizational ecosystem in which it sits.

Facilitation

Designing and leading synchronous learning experiences — in-person or virtual — in ways that build shared understanding, psychological safety, and genuine skill development. Effective facilitation is structured sense-making, not information transfer.

Assessment Design

Constructing assessments that measure intended learning outcomes rather than proxy performances. This includes formative and summative approaches, authentic assessment design, rubric construction, AI-aware academic integrity considerations, and equity analysis — ensuring assessment format does not inadvertently exclude capable learners.

Evaluation & Measurement

Assessing whether learning is working — at the reaction, learning, behavior, and results levels. This includes designing evaluation into programs from the start, interpreting learning analytics, and connecting learning data to organizational performance metrics.

Project & Stakeholder Management

Managing timelines, subject matter experts, vendors, and organizational complexity across collaborative, cross-functional processes. This includes scope management, structured feedback protocols, and the ability to maintain design integrity under organizational pressure.

Accessible & Inclusive Design

Designing for the full range of learners — including WCAG compliance, UDL application, cultural responsiveness, and awareness of how systemic barriers affect participation and transfer. Accessibility is a design practice, not a compliance checklist.

Subject Matter Proximity

Not expertise in every domain, but the sustained ability to work alongside subject matter experts — asking diagnostic questions, surfacing tacit knowledge, managing review cycles productively, and translating specialized content into experiences that build real capability. This collaboration is structured and respectful of the SME's time and expertise.

What Well-Designed Learning Produces

Rigorous organizational learning design creates change at two horizons. The shorter-term outcomes are tangible and measurable. The longer-term shift affects how an organization builds and sustains capability over time.

Shorter TermWhat becomes visible and actionable

Performance gaps are named and prioritised

A clear picture of what is limiting performance, organized by root cause — not just what content to create.

Learners acquire transferable skills

When outcomes are specific, assessments are aligned, and practice is structured around real tasks, transfer to the job is substantially more likely than with knowledge-transmission approaches.

Stakeholders share a design language

A structured process builds shared understanding of what learning can and cannot accomplish — reducing misaligned expectations in future projects.

Design team knowledge grows

Practitioners who engage with rigorous design processes develop professional judgment that improves the quality of subsequent work.

Longer TermWhat becomes embedded in practice

Learning becomes a strategic function

Organizations that invest in rigorous design develop the institutional capacity to connect learning investment to organizational outcomes — on evidence rather than advocacy.

Accessibility and inclusion are designed in

Rather than retrofitted, equitable design is incorporated from the start — benefiting all learners and reducing the cost of remediation over time.

A culture of continuous improvement develops

Evaluation infrastructure and sustainment plans shift learning from discrete events to an ongoing organizational practice that responds to changing needs.

Change initiatives are better supported

When learning design is integrated into organizational development — rather than treated as separate — capability-building becomes an instrument of transformation rather than a compliance activity.

On Evidence and Transfer Learning transfer research consistently shows that post-training conditions — manager reinforcement, practice opportunity, and organizational climate — are stronger predictors of behavior change than the learning experience itself. Effective design addresses both.

Where Is Your Organization in This Work?

This reflection is intended to surface useful questions about your organization's current approach to learning design. There are no right or wrong answers — choose the response that most honestly reflects your situation.

Question 1 of 4 How does your organization currently approach the design of learning programs?
Question 2 of 4 How is accessibility currently addressed in your learning materials?
Question 3 of 4 To what extent do your learning programs address the conditions for transfer — not just the learning experience itself?
Question 4 of 4 How is learning connected to organizational strategy and performance measurement in your context?
Please answer all four questions to see your reflection.

    Academic & Professional Citations

    The knowledge claims, frameworks, and evidence in this resource draw on established scholarship and professional practice. Sources are grouped by the area of the resource they primarily support.

    Adult Learning Theory
    Foundational theory

    Knowles, M. S. The Adult Learner: A Neglected Species. Gulf Publishing, 1973. Foundational source for andragogy, self-direction, and adult motivation.

    Extended framework

    Knowles, M. S., Holton, E. F., & Swanson, R. A. The Adult Learner: The Definitive Classic in Adult Education and Human Resource Development. 8th ed. Routledge, 2015.

    Cognitive Load Theory
    Foundational theory

    Sweller, J. "Cognitive Load Theory, Learning Difficulty, and Instructional Design." Learning and Instruction, 4(4), 293–312, 1994. Source for intrinsic, extraneous, and germane load distinctions.

    Multimedia learning

    Mayer, R. E. Multimedia Learning. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2009. Principles for reducing extraneous load in multimedia instructional design.

    Organizational Development & Change Management
    Change leadership

    Kotter, J. P. Leading Change. Harvard Business Review Press, 1996. Source for the 8-Step change model.

    Individual change management

    Hiatt, J. M. ADKAR: A Model for Change in Business, Government and Our Community. Prosci Learning Center Publications, 2006.

    Organizational learning

    Argyris, C., & Schön, D. A. Organizational Learning II: Theory, Method, and Practice. Addison-Wesley, 1996.

    Systems Thinking
    Foundational framework

    Senge, P. M. The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization. Doubleday, 1990. Source for the Five Disciplines framework and systems thinking in organizational learning.

    Accessibility & WCAG
    Primary technical standard

    World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1. W3C Recommendation, June 2018.

    w3.org/TR/WCAG21/
    Universal Design for Learning

    CAST. Universal Design for Learning Guidelines, Version 2.2. CAST, 2018.

    udlguidelines.cast.org
    Cultural Responsiveness
    Cultural frames of reference

    Spring, J. The Intersection of Cultures: Multicultural Education in the United States. McGraw-Hill, 1995.

    Equity-minded practice

    Gay, G. Culturally Responsive Teaching: Theory, Research, and Practice. 3rd ed. Teachers College Press, 2018.

    Instructional Design
    Backward design

    Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. Understanding by Design. 2nd ed. ASCD, 2005. Source for backward design and constructive alignment in curriculum development.

    Successive approximation

    Allen, M. W. Leaving ADDIE for SAM: An Agile Model for Developing the Best Learning Experiences. ATD Press, 2012.

    Organizational Learning Models
    70-20-10 framework

    Lombardo, M. M., & Eichinger, R. W. The Career Architect Development Planner. Lominger, 1996. Source for the 70-20-10 framework for workplace learning.

    Action learning

    Revans, R. W. The Origins and Growth of Action Learning. Chartwell-Bratt, 1982. Foundational source for action learning as a model of workplace problem-solving and continuous reflection.

    Learning Transfer & Evaluation
    Transfer of training

    Wick, C., Pollock, R., & Jefferson, A. The Six Disciplines of Breakthrough Learning: How to Turn Training and Development into Business Results. Wiley, 2010.

    Four-level evaluation framework

    Kirkpatrick, D. L., & Kirkpatrick, J. D. Evaluating Training Programs: The Four Levels. 3rd ed. Berrett-Koehler, 2006. Used here both as an evaluation framework and as an alternative to taxonomy-based objective-setting — assessing learning by behavioral change and organizational impact rather than cognitive category.