Learn, Innovate, or Get Ignored*
Changing the culture of an organization is one of the most difficult challenges leaders face. A recent IEG event brings the World Bank Group one step closer to learning-oriented values.
Changing the culture of an organization is one of the most difficult challenges leaders face. A recent IEG event brings the World Bank Group one step closer to learning-oriented values.
By: Caroline HeiderLast week we launched our first phase report on Learning and Results in World Bank Operations. The blog Wanted: A New Approach to Assessing Learning and Results provides a snapshot of some of the findings and what is going to happen in the second phase.
So why write about the same evaluation again so soon? Didn’t the evaluation tell us what we knew, namely that big organizations are quick to restructure and change processes, but move at a glacial pace when it comes to changing culture?
Because this evaluation and this launch event are unusual. Each stands alone as a contribution to changing the discourse. Culture change does not happen in a Big Bang. It takes continuous and repeated conversations about the need to change culture until we will see a shift in the way people think and behave. Our role in IEG is to contribute to these conversations, push the boundaries, be provocative, and tease out what else it will take to make the change that so many of us wish for.
So, what was so unusual about this evaluation and this event?
The evaluation itself was not based on a “plan” – a policy, strategy, program, or project – where we could compare stated objectives with attained outcomes. Rather, it is an evaluation of what are the explicit and implicit understandings about the value of learning in lending and how that relates to results.
The event was also a departure from our usual presentation style. Instead of reporting the findings, we used the event to ask challenging questions and stimulate a discussion of issues that will be further evaluated in the second phase of this project. John Heath and Soniya Carvalho, who co-led the evaluation delivered stirring opening remarks. John asked the audience to stop and think about when they learn and what stops them from doing so, and Soniya asked thought-provoking questions about whether we, as the World Bank, are not sufficiently outward focused in our learning and are insufficiently rewarded to ensure smooth implementation of projects.
We had a terrific panel (which is not so unusual: we have had fabulous panelists in the past and will continue bringing the best together to debate issues}, including World Bank Group colleagues Sanjay Pradhan, Vice President, Leadership, Learning, and Innovation; Ede Jorge Ijjasz-Vasquez, Senior Director, Urban, Rural, and Social Practices; Shomik Raj Mendiratta, Lead Urban Transport Specialist, Transport, Information, and Communications Technology; and Lucy M. Fye, Senior Private Sector Development Specialist, Trade and Competitiveness, who were grilled by our chief knowledge officer Monika Weber-Fahr about priority topics the audience had chosen on the spot.
The audience was asked to vote on eight themes to guide the panel discussion. The top three were: person-to-person conversations, rewards and penalties, and making time for learning. As the panelists spoke about these topics, the audience wrote in questions that appeared immediately on the screen and were picked up by Monika and panelists as they debated the issues.
The discussion covered a lot of ground, which centered around five points:
* Insight from one of the participants at IEG’s launch event for Learning and Results in World Bank Operations: How the Bank Learns
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