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Right now, AI is handing chief learning officers (CLOs) an opportunity they have long been waiting for.

As AI embeds itself in daily workflows, it is not just changing what people need to learn, but it is transforming how and when they learn.

Rather than pulling employees away from their work to build skills in isolation, learning can now be delivered at the precise moment it is needed, in the context where it will actually be applied.

This represents a breakthrough for corporate learning leaders and practitioners.

The So What

“Learning and development (L&D) is having an existential moment,” says Patrick Erker, a partner at BCG U, which delivers upskilling solutions. “If people have a question about anything—a research topic, how to learn a new skill, how to deliver effective feedback—they go to their preferred AI tool. That puts pressure on traditional L&D, because people are now doing that learning within their daily workflow.”

This is an opportunity for leaders who recognize this disruption as a long overdue paradigm shift rather than a threat.

“For years, L&D has been trying to get out of the classroom and into the workflow,” says Elizabeth Lyle, managing director and partner at BCG, who leads BCG U in North America. “AI has done that for them. That’s not a threat, that’s a gift. The opportunity now is to harness that shift and reimagine L&D as the high impact enabler that today’s transformations really need.”

Upskilling workforces to meet strategic challenges and opportunities is a top investment priority for C-suites, yet the barriers to transformative upskilling have been consistent. There is limited appetite to take people away from their work and low tolerance by employees for learning that feels disconnected from the job. Until now, those constraints were difficult to overcome.

AI doesn’t simply lead to faster content creation, at-scale coaching, or more personalized learning, explains BCG U’s Laura Dermody. Rather, it makes applied learning the crux of the skill-building journey.
For example, a product manager could receive tailored content directly in their workflow tools to guide them through building a working prototype, rather than watching videos on a static training platform.

It also allows learning facilitators to enable and monitor the progression of new skills in the context of carrying out the job.

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Now What

The organizations that will look back on this moment as a positive turning point are those whose CLOs chose to employ AI as the mechanism for learning as well as for organizational transformations.

For CLOs ready to lead that shift, five moves matter most:

“Applied AI does not signal the demise of L&D. For those willing to seize the opportunity, it is the beginning of something far more powerful,” Lyle says.

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