Welcome to Part 2 of our 12-part series on selecting learning and talent technology. In Part 1, we established that preparation is the cornerstone of a successful technology selection process, emphasizing the need to assess your current state, align talent needs, and define business outcomes before evaluating tools. Now, we dive into the critical first step: understanding your organization’s business drivers—the core forces that fuel your revenue, operations, and identity.
Why Business Drivers Matter
Business drivers are the heartbeat of your organization, defining why it exists and thrives. They are not mere training programs or learning activities but the fundamental sources of your success, tied directly to revenue, operations, and strategic goals. As the core of who you are as an organization, business drivers guide every major decision, including technology investments. Without clarity on these, you risk selecting technology that misses the mark, wasting resources and derailing your strategy.
In my 22 years of guiding organizations, I’ve seen firsthand the consequences of skipping this step. Companies that fail to define their business drivers often end up with tools that consume 20-30% of their training budget on misaligned initiatives. Even worse, moving forward without knowing your drivers is a recipe for failure. From experience, I can attest: every time I made a technology purchase without understanding the “why,” the decision was impulsive and failed to deliver the value my business needed. The results? You’ll likely select the wrong technology, your business case will be flawed, and your strategic focus will be limited, undermining your organization’s goals.
Identifying Your Business Drivers
Business drivers are unique to each organization, reflecting its personality and priorities. They are not narrow, single-topic goals but broad, multifaceted forces that encompass a wide range of impact areas. Business drivers are factors that influence a company’s performance, growth, or strategic direction. They vary by industry and context but generally fall into categories like financial, operational, market, technological, and regulatory drivers.
To identify your drivers, ask: What are our top priorities for the next 1-3 years, and what makes our organization thrive? Engage a diverse group of stakeholders—executives, HR, department leaders, and even finance teams—to align on these priorities. Tools like Bluewater’s Learning Blueprint can help map these drivers to your training and talent strategies, ensuring a comprehensive approach.
Below are examples of business drivers across key categories, followed by industry-specific examples to illustrate how these drivers manifest in different sectors.
Categorized Business Driver Examples
1. Revenue Growth (Financial)
2. Cost Reduction (Financial/Operational)
3. Customer Satisfaction/Retention (Market)
4. Market Expansion (Market)
5. Innovation/Technology Adoption (Technological)
6. Regulatory Compliance (Regulatory)
7. Brand Reputation (Market)
8. Operational Efficiency (Operational)
9. Employee Engagement (Operational)
10. Competitive Differentiation (Market)
Industry-Specific Business Driver Examples
To ground these concepts, here are examples of business drivers tailored to specific industries, showing how they align with organizational goals and influence technology selection:
Healthcare
Driver: Patient Safety and Quality Care (Market/Regulatory)
Driver: Workforce Retention (Operational)
Retail
Driver: Customer Experience (Market)
Driver: Inventory Optimization (Operational)
Technology
Driver: Rapid Innovation (Technological)
Driver: Talent Acquisition (Operational)
Manufacturing
Driver: Production Efficiency (Operational)
Driver: Supply Chain Resilience (Operational)
Financial Services
Driver: Risk Management (Regulatory/Financial)
Driver: Digital Transformation (Technological)
These drivers are often interconnected. For example, innovation can enhance customer satisfaction, which in turn boosts revenue. The most relevant drivers depend on your business’s goals, industry, and external environment. For instance, a tech startup might prioritize innovation and talent acquisition, while a healthcare provider might focus on compliance and patient safety. If you’re unsure where to start, Bluewater’s Learning Blueprint can tailor these drivers to your specific context, ensuring they reflect your organization’s unique needs.
A critical warning: If you do not know your organization’s business drivers, do not move forward with purchasing technology. Proceeding without this clarity risks catastrophic missteps, from selecting tools that don’t align with your needs to building a business case that fails to justify the investment. Business drivers are the foundation of a strategic technology selection process—skipping this step is not an option.
Building a Business Case
Once you’ve identified your business drivers, build a robust business case that links them to your learning and talent technology investment. This step ensures your technology choices deliver measurable value. Ask these key questions:
For instance, a restaurant chain might invest in a learning management system (LMS) to train staff on service excellence, directly supporting its quality and customer satisfaction drivers. A manufacturer, meanwhile, might prioritize technology that enhances productivity training to boost operational efficiency. According to SHRM, effective training programs can reduce employee turnover by 20%, saving significant costs given the average employee tenure of 4.1 years.
Your business case should articulate how technology investments align with these drivers, providing a clear narrative for stakeholders. Involve financial leaders early to ensure your case resonates with budget priorities and demonstrates ROI.
Measuring Financial Impact
Understanding your business drivers simplifies the process of measuring the financial impact of your technology investment. When drivers are clearly defined, the business gains a shared understanding of what you’re trying to achieve and where the investment will deliver positive results. This clarity not only strengthens your business case but also guides your long-term strategy, ensuring technology selections align with organizational goals over time.
To measure financial impact, link each driver to quantifiable outcomes. For example:
By tying technology investments to these measurable outcomes, you demonstrate value to stakeholders and build a roadmap for sustained impact. Tools like Bluewater’s Learning Blueprint can help quantify these connections, making it easier to communicate financial benefits and align with strategic priorities.
Avoiding Common Pitfalls
Missteps in identifying business drivers can derail your technology selection process. Here are common traps and how to avoid them:
To stay on track, document your drivers, validate them with stakeholders, and use tools like Bluewater’s Learning Blueprint to visualize their connection to training priorities. This ensures your technology selection is strategic and impactful.
Next Steps
Understanding your business drivers is a critical first step in selecting learning and talent technology. It sets the foundation for aligning your organization’s talent needs, which we’ll explore in Part 3. Take action now: document your drivers, engage stakeholders to validate them, and use strategic tools to map their impact on training and talent strategies. This clarity will guide you toward technology that truly transforms your business.
Next Up:
In Part 3, we’ll dive into assessing and aligning your organization’s talent needs with your business drivers to build a cohesive strategy.