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Doug Brown - Executive Coach

Most leadership and sales training programs don’t fail because the content is poor. They fail because organizations misunderstand what training is supposed to do.

Too often, what could be an incredibly valuable training session (or sessions) is hijacked to drive participation, engagement scores, or short-term enthusiasm rather than business results. Leaders feel good. People say the session was “useful.” Tomorrow arrives, and behavior stays the same. Have you seen this inyour experience? I have.

If training is not measurably improving performance, capability, and on-the-job effectiveness, it is not development. It is an event.

The difference matters. 

Who Owns This?

Senior leadership owns this.

Not HR. Not Learning & Development. Not the external facilitator.

‍If training outcomes are unclear, ownership has already been misplaced.

Executives own training effectiveness because they control the systems that determine whether new behaviors are supported or suppressed: strategy, structure, metrics, incentives, managerial expectations, and cultural norms.

When training “doesn’t stick,” the root cause is almost always upstream of the classroom.

The Real Reason Training Fails

‍Across industries, roles, and organization sizes, failed training programs tend to break down in predictable ways:

None of these are training problems. They are leadership decisions.

Training fails when leaders delegate development while retaining control over everything that determines whether the development succeeds. 

What Decision Does This Clarify?

The critical decision leaders must make is this:

Are we investing in training as an activity—or developing capability as a business system?

If training is an activity, success is measured by attendance, satisfaction surveys, and completion certificates.

If development is a system, success is measured by:

This activity-versus-development decision drives every subsequent design choice.

Why “Good Training” Still Doesn’t Transfer

‍Even well-designed programs collapse without four conditions in place:

  1. Clear Performance Expectations
    People must know exactly what behavior is expected to change—and how success will be evaluated on the job.
  2. Manager Reinforcement
    Direct managers must coach, observe, and reinforce new behaviors. Without this, training competes with daily pressure—and loses.
  3. Aligned Systems
    Compensation, KPIs, workflows, and approval structures must support the behaviors being taught. People follow what the system rewards.
  4. Post-Training Accountability
    There must be follow-up, commitments, and consequences. Otherwise, training becomes optional the moment urgency returns.

‍When any one of these is missing, training degrades into insight without execution. 

What Changes When Leaders Get This Right

‍Organizations that treat development as a system see clear, measurable shifts:

‍Training stops being something people attend and becomes something the organization uses. 

The Leadership Trap to Avoid

‍One of the most common—and costly—mistakes leaders make is using training to compensate for unresolved leadership issues:

Training cannot fix what leadership has not defined, modeled, or enforced. In fact, it often exposes those gaps.

When organizations send people to training without addressing these issues, they unintentionally teach cynicism: “We’re being trained on things we’re not allowed to do.” 

The Practical Shift Leaders Must Make

‍Effective development requires a shift in thinking:

This does not require more training. It requires better integration between leadership, management, and development. 

What Changes as a Result?

‍When leaders own development outcomes:

That is the difference between training that feels good and development that works.

And it is why the most effective organizations don’t ask, “Did people like the training?”

They ask, “What changed—and how do we know?”