The Purpose Of Mentoring Has Changed, Here’s Why

Author:
Gary
PUBLISHED ON:
November 29, 2021
June 26, 2023
PUBLISHED IN:
Leadership And Mentoring

Today’s workplace may be almost unrecognisable versus a few short years ago, but one of the oldest and most long-standing practices — mentoring — is still going strong.

And, in fact, in an era of remote working and asynchronous teams, mentoring in the workplace has really never been more important than it is today.

Mentoring programs are a great way to share knowledge within a company and to onboard and upskill team members to greater effect. It also brings a ton of benefits for mentees, mentors and the businesses they work for.

Let’s take a look at why mentoring should be part of any modern workplace and how to build the foundation of a brilliant mentoring relationship.

The impact and purpose of mentoring programs in the modern workplace

Here’s a big stat to kick things off: over 70% of Fortune 500 companies run mentoring programs, and you probably should too.

A mentoring relationship can improve onboarding

There’s always been a lot of information to take in when joining a team. And, sure, you could provide a laminated one-size-fits-all welcome pack or slide deck to peruse, but too often, these are a) uninspiring and b) trying to say too much to too many people. The result is an onboarding experience that lacks engagement and value — especially for today’s distributed teams.  

Try spending the first week of a new job, on your own in your home office, flicking through a “we send this to everyone” PowerPoint and see how excited you feel about the journey ahead.

In the post-pandemic and hybrid era,  mentoring relationships can play a huge role in the onboarding process and help us do so much more. We can leave one-size methods behind and focus instead on personalised, tailored approaches that provide specific information related to the role.

With mentors and subject matter experts by their side, newbies can hit the ground running armed with a dedicated fount of knowledge — someone to ask those “stupid questions” to and for a cultural barometer.

Google is an example of a business that takes onboarding mentoring one step further: offering mentors to potential development hires, preparing them to join the team. ‘Nooglers’ undergo a two-week, immersive program to learn the ropes of Google’s internal ecosystem.

Then there’s the ‘Googler-to-Googler’ network, where colleagues volunteer to help onboard and develop their peers. When you think about the traditional approach for a workplace mentoring program, which would run from the top down, this is a great shift towards the democratisation of mentoring. The purpose of mentoring isn’t for information to travel in one direction, but for everyone to share their expertise – something we’ll get to very soon.

This is a great example of using small-scale initiatives over a big-bang mentoring programs. Mentoring can happen informally, within teams and even for the length of certain projects, it doesn’t need to be a fixed or intense project involving countless stakeholders.

The mentor/mentee relationship supports knowledge sharing

Mentoring is a way for staff members to share knowledge across the workplace and to improve their understanding from one department to the next. This boosts knowledge for a mentee while also making the business work better together collaboratively.

But it doesn’t always have to follow an age-based or hierarchical model like the old-school, formal mentoring programs. Younger employees often have something to teach their more-established colleagues — about new tech tools and changing customer demands, for example. This is known as reverse mentoring, just one of the many mentoring types seen in progressive businesses today, and reinforces the idea that mentoring’s purpose is shifting.

Inga Beale, CEO at insurance firm Lloyd’s of London, believes reverse mentoring is especially important for the volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity (VUCA) landscape we’re in. That’s why she’s built a mentoring relationship with one of the company’s young apprentices — and says:

“We need to be reminded of what’s happening in the world and how the new generation thinks and behaves and wants different things. I take ideas and inspiration from all the young people I work with. This helps me to think about how we can do things differently and appeal to that generation.”

When businesses are run by the big cheeses in the boardroom, for the big cheeses and their peers, it’s one way to lose relevance with younger customer demographics — and fast. Thinking of your mentoring relationships in a multi-directional way could help you build a far better culture and more effective ways of working.

What could early talent and young hires teach your senior staff? From navigating the evolving tech of a hybrid workplace to understanding what Gen Z is looking for in their careers, who better to guide the way?

Mentor programs improve employee satisfaction, engagement and retention

Team members who go through and benefit from mentoring relationships tend to be paid better, get better promotion opportunities and are generally more satisfied in their careers — all of which bodes well for employee retention.

Companies are facing the Great Resignation as they enter 2022. And whether this trend began before the pandemic or not is largely irrelevant when we consider one of the driving forces behind all these millions of people potentially quitting their jobs: the need for growth. After all, according to 2020 research, it’s mid-career and manager-level employees resigning most. And that’s something a mentorship program could certainly help avoid.

At technology company Sun Microsystems, retention rates for employees who took part in their mentoring program were 72% higher for mentees and 69% for mentors. This led to a saving of $6.7 million for the company, well worth the $1.1 million investment into the programme. Now that’s a business case that makes itself!

If you’re a mentoring advocate looking for buy-in from the C-Suite, that’s an ROI case study you need to remember.

Mentoring is essential for engaging remote and hybrid workers

When working from home and missing out on watercooler chat, it’s hard to get informal advice from more experienced team members. That’s why a dedicated mentoring program can help to keep colleagues engaged and on-track towards personal and professional development.

America Needs You (ANY) has moved their mentoring program online — and to great effect. They’re developing talent, building talent pipelines and boosting resilience among their remote working teams by offering one-on-one mentoring relationships and establishing norms for online communication.

A question you can ask yourself is how do we make our technology and hybrid structures work with our mentorship scheme rather than against it? That’s one of the key leadership skills in the hybrid age.

In ANY’s case, it was ensuring that they didn’t simply revert to type when the opportunity arose. Instead, they tweaked their approach to sync up with their new ways of working and learning – giving their mentoring program a greater chance of success in hybrid and remote working environments.

Mentored employees actually feel less stressed and burned out

Yes, really. A study has shown that people enrolled in a mentoring programme feel less stress and anxiety about work because they have a trusted person to share their concerns with. Winner!

And that doesn’t just apply to the mentee, it applies to the mentor too! Not only are they developing leadership skills, they’re gaining a sense of meaning or purpose. As the research explains:

“We found that mentoring relationships provide a unique context for mentors to discuss and normalise their concerns, to share ideas for managing anxieties, and to find more meaning in their work. Mentoring relationships appeared to provide an organisational mechanism to prompt supervisor and colleague interactions, which in turn facilitated a reduction in the mentors’ anxiety.”

Mentoring can connect people to purpose and drive their performance

There’s been a shift since the pandemic that people want to do more meaningful work, we are becoming a more purpose-driven workforce.

Now, if we think about how and why we set up mentoring relationships, there’s a way we can foster this feeling and help people feel they’re contributing. But it means we need to connect it with business challenges and employee performance.

Let’s say someone in sales comes to us because they feel like they’d benefit from having a mentor. We could just say, sure, we’ll put you in touch with someone else.

Or we could probe further and given our mentoring efforts greater purpose. We could ask them if they’re struggling in particular areas or dig into their performance data to see where there’s more room for improvement.

That might lead us to discover that they’re great at reaching out to prospects but then struggle to move them into the demo stage. Now that we know this, we could pair them up with someone who has shown their prowess in getting people to book in for demos.

Better yet, we could set some goals around it! We could say that the purpose of mentoring in this case is to increase the percentage of people moving from prospect to demo by 5%. That’s measurable! We know if our mentor has had an impact because we can assess those numbers.

And if we can then help our mentee understand the correlation between that improvement and the number of deals they close or the company closes, we’re driving that sense of purpose.

What are the benefits of being a mentor? Winning people over through the value of mentioning

Become a mentor, and you’ll join a prestigious crew that includes the likes of Warren Buffett, Steve Jobs, Maya Angelou, Audrey Hepburn and Gandhi.

But don’t be fooled into thinking that workplace mentoring is simply an altruistic act on behalf of the mentor. There are benefits to having a mentor but there are lots of benefits to being a mentor too. Everyone gets something worthwhile out of the mentoring relationship.

A mentor can expect to gain:

  • Leadership skills – Mentors develop lots of really important soft skills that can help them to become great leaders: empathy, creativity, communication, strategy and the ability to inspire.
  • New perspectives  A good mentee will ask pertinent questions, encouraging you to look at your career and your workplace through new eyes — helping you find new ways to progress as a result.
  • Better mental health – Mentoring reduces stress and anxiety for mentors as well. Sharing experiences and concerns with a trusted colleague is good for both people in the mentoring partnership.
  • A renewed sense of meaning and motivation – Giving something back feels good. Many experience increased job satisfaction and better career development throughout their time as a mentor.

Nichole Higgins was a finalist in the National Mentoring Awards in 2019. She spent time as a CIPD Steps Ahead mentor, supporting unemployed people to rediscover their motivation and find work.

Here’s what she had to say about the experience:

“My involvement as a Steps Ahead volunteer has definitely assisted in building my own confidence, especially when it comes to public speaking and delivering presentations. Being a mentor and an ambassador has also given me the drive and hunger to want to improve myself. This led to me wanting my own mentor and I am now in a mentoring relationship with one of the senior leaders at the CIPD.”

Helping mentors and mentees set their purpose and build relationships with goals in mind

The benefits of mentoring can be applied to a broad range of objectives, what your mentor-mentee relationships aim to achieve will be dependent on the individuals involved and the business context too. Need some inspiration? Here are five common purposes of mentoring in the workplace:

  • Developing future leaders: Probably the most immediate use of mentoring, when a rising star is paired with an expert in their field, impressive things can happen. Perhaps the C-Suite has identified a handful of high-potential employees and wants to invest in not only their learning and development but their long-term engagement as well. Mentoring programs can help achieve this, developing their skills but also showing them how valued they are and what they could go on to accomplish as part of the team.
  • Succession planning: Mentoring can also help senior leaders identify and nurture the individuals who may go on to take over the most prominent roles in an organisation. In the case of succession planning, in particular, a mentor can help model the cultural cues of a company’s top tier teams, so that those values will be carried through to the next generation of leaders. At the same time, they’ll be imparting business-specific wisdom and knowledge built up on the job, something it would be difficult for the mentee to pick up elsewhere. This is an example of when more formalised and structured mentoring programs are useful, given that there will be the need to capture and share knowledge consistently.
  • Bridging remote/hybrid gaps: Loneliness can plague remote and hybrid teams, but pairing employees with mentors can help keep the channels of communication and learning open. Tools and tech also exist to facilitate effective conversations and objectives-setting between mentors and mentees, even when they are miles apart.
  • Managing up and helping leaders develop soft skills: Managers are on a learning and development journey, just as much as their more junior colleagues. And that’s fine, except that there are some managers who get promoted more on account of their technical skills than their ability to lead. This is such a widespread issue that one research study found 65% of people would opt for a new boss rather than a pay rise! Mentoring programs can help; it creates a safe space for peers and colleagues to help fill a manager’s talent gaps and lacking leadership skills, while making the team a more productive place for everyone involved.
  • Plugging a skills gap: Sometimes, we just find ourselves lacking enough of a certain skill to achieve a goal or solve a problem. Let’s say we’re having major problems with our system and need to manage a huge tidal wave of customer questions, we might have limited customer support staff with that skill in place. So, in the short term, we might need to borrow people from other parts of the business, and an internal expert can mentor them through that process to temporarily upskill them.

How does mentoring work in flatter organisations?

We often celebrate that we’re living in an era of flatter organisations, where middle and micro management are cut down and we have direct levels of communications.

However, with these limiting the more formalised and traditional workplace mentoring program, it really increases the onus for mentoring and leadership to become behaviours we all show in our day-to-day.

As L&D and leadership teams, your role is to set the guidelines and provide the tools for people to participate in peer and self-mentoring, so that not every interaction is a formal touch point. Is the feedback culture open? Is there psychological safety for people to try new things and fail? Are they empowered to run with ideas as they build mentoring relationships with each other, rather than running everything by a manager.

Bring mentors and mentees together with HowNow

Mentoring in the workplace is all about building the right partnerships — and HowNow simplifies that process for you.

We’ll empower you to identify internal experts, measure skills and make intelligent mentor-mentee matches. From there, you can create learning pathways, assign learning resources, and track progress all through the same easy interface.

Sign up for a demo, and we’ll happily show you around your mentoring program’s new favourite support system!

Check out our other leadership development resources

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Overview: Based on reviews from learning platform users, Sana Learn is praised for its intuitive interface, easy adoption, engaging interactive content, and AI-powered tools that can speed up content creation and discovery. Customers consistently highlight smooth onboarding, responsive support, and useful integrations with email, calendar, and collaboration tools. However, recurring limitations emerge around content flexibility, AI accuracy, occasional technical glitches, UI quirks, and gaps in admin training, which can create friction as teams scale their learning programs. While Sana Learn works well for organisations seeking fast rollout and straightforward learner engagement, teams needing more customization, reliable AI, and robust integrations may want to explore alternative platforms and see how they compare in practice.




When you're evaluating learning platforms, everyone has an opinion. Vendors have feature pages. Review sites have listicles. And everyone claims to be the best AI-powered LMS on the market.

What nobody tells you is what it's actually like six months in.

Sana Learn (part of Sana Labs), an AI company founded in 2016 in Stockholm, will likely show up early in your research. It's well-funded, well-marketed and has built a genuine reputation in the AI learning space.

But reputation and reality don't always match. And the people best placed to tell you the difference aren't the sales team. They're the L&D leaders, admins and learners who use it every day.

To help you, you’ve analysed 50+ real customer reviews so you don't have to. Not to cherry-pick the bad bits but to find the patterns that will help you make informed decisions. The things that come up again and again once the implementation is done and the day-to-day reality sets in.

Because when you're making a buying decision that affects your entire workforce, what matters isn't which platform has the best copy or demo. It's which one that will help you build and engage your workforce to proactively build the skills your business needs to grow.

Where Sana Learn does well.

One thing becomes clear when you read through the customer reviews: Sana Learn is easy to like.

Users consistently describe the platform as intuitive, clean and simple to pick up. There's very little friction in getting started which, if you've ever tried rolling out a new learning platform to a sceptical workforce, you'll know is no small thing.

That ease extends to implementation. Several reviewers highlight how seamless the setup felt, with teams barely noticing the transition. For organisations without the time or appetite for a heavy rollout, that's a meaningful advantage.

AI is another area where Sana Learn gets genuine praise. Users point to how quickly they can generate content, surface answers and navigate learning materials with AI woven throughout the experience. When it works, it removes friction from the content creation process in a way that L&D teams with limited resources will appreciate.

The learning experience itself also lands well. Interactive modules, clickable elements and embedded content make it easier to engage with topics that would otherwise feel dry. Learners aren't just clicking through slides; they're actually interacting with material.

Put simply: Sana Learn is a platform that's genuinely easy to adopt and easy to engage with. For teams prioritising simplicity and fast time-to-value, that counts for a lot.

What are the limitations of Sana Learn?

Once you move past first impressions, the reviews become more nuanced; and more useful.

A recurring theme is that while Sana Learn is easy to use, it can feel limiting when you try to do more with it.

Several users point to a lack of flexibility in content creation. Editing options are described as restrictive, with one reviewer putting it plainly:

"Tables are a bit clunky and hard to edit… [there's not] much freedom when it comes to text & layout."

Others mention having to rely on external tools to get the output they actually need:

"Many features are unavailable and have to be done outside of the platform using third-party providers."

For L&D teams trying to scale content production or tailor learning experiences more precisely, that's where friction starts to add up.

There's also a subtle but telling critique around product direction. One reviewer notes that the platform sometimes prioritises:

"attention-grabbing features over more basic feature development."

That's the kind of comment that tends to surface when a platform is evolving quickly; but not always in the direction its users need most.

Is Sana Learn's AI reliable?

AI is one of Sana Learn's biggest selling points; but it's also one of its most inconsistent areas.

While some users are impressed by the speed and convenience, others highlight accuracy issues that slow them down rather than speed them up:

"There are times when the AI doesn't fully grasp what I'm asking for…"

"Sometimes the AI suggestions are not fully accurate, and it takes a bit of time to find the exact content I'm looking for."

That tension shows up across multiple reviews. The capability is there; but it's not always reliable enough to trust without sense-checking.

For L&D teams expecting AI to meaningfully reduce manual effort, that gap matters more than it might first appear.

What do Sana Learn users say about technical performance?

Another pattern across the reviews is the presence of ongoing, low-level technical friction. Not catastrophic failures; but enough to interrupt workflows when they matter most.

Users mention occasional platform freezing, performance lags when handling complex content and integration challenges, particularly around APIs. One reviewer sums it up plainly:

"The platform can be a bit glitchy at times…"

Others call out specific integration issues:

"Had some hiccups with [the] Bamboo integration API."

These aren't universal experiences; but they appear frequently enough to be worth factoring in, particularly for organisations running a broader HR and L&D tech stack where reliable integrations aren't optional.


What do Sana Learn users say about the interface?

Interestingly, even though usability is one of Sana Learn's most praised qualities, there are still consistent complaints about specific interface behaviours; particularly once users move beyond everyday tasks.

For example, one reviewer points out a frustrating content creation issue:

"When I'm creating a comment… and then pop over to another window, the comments I started typing disappear."

Others find the home screen experience overwhelming:

"The interface can appear a little overwhelming with all the videos visible when you enter the homescreen."

There are also mentions of difficulty navigating back to in-progress courses, and issues with live learning environments around audio and visual quality.

None of these are deal-breakers on their own. But together they create a sense of inconsistency; where the platform feels smooth in some moments and frustrating in others. For L&D teams managing large learner populations, those friction points tend to get amplified at scale.


What do Sana Learn users say about the learning experience?

Beyond the platform mechanics, some users point to limitations in how learning content is actually delivered.

Quiz functionality comes up more than once, particularly around rigid structures:

"When making a mistake… you have to click through the whole exam before being able to repeat."

Others mention repetitive questions and a lack of depth in supporting materials:

"Example videos are not very detailed enough."

There's also feedback around pacing; specifically that learners can move through content too quickly without meaningful controls in place to slow them down or check understanding along the way.

None of these are headline issues. But for L&D teams where learning effectiveness is the whole point, they're worth knowing about before you buy.


What do Sana Learn admins say about the platform experience?

While learners tend to find Sana Learn straightforward, the experience for admins and L&D teams is less consistently praised.

Some reviewers highlight a lack of guidance when it comes to more advanced features:

"Need more training on available features."

Others point to documentation that doesn't quite hit the mark:

"Videos are usually very short and articles can be text heavy."

This creates a meaningful disconnect. The platform feels simple on the surface; but getting the most out of it as an admin can require significantly more effort than the initial experience suggests. For L&D teams who need to move fast and can't afford a steep learning curve behind the scenes, that's worth factoring into your decision.


Should you be looking at Sana Learn alternatives?

That depends on what you need.

If your priority is fast rollout, strong initial engagement and a clean intuitive interface, Sana Learn clearly delivers. For teams that need something up and running quickly with minimal friction, it's a strong option.

But if you're thinking longer term; about scaling learning, tailoring content more precisely and integrating deeply into your wider HR and L&D tech stack, the limitations that surface across these reviews start to matter a great deal more.

The question isn't whether Sana Learn is a good platform. For many organisations, it is. The question is whether it's the right platform for where your organisation is going; not just where it is today.

Is HowNow a good Sana Learn alternative?

HowNow tends to come up for teams that want more than a clean learning interface.

Reviews give you a strong starting point but they won’t tell you how a platform fits your specific setup.

If you’re weighing up Sana Learn against alternatives, the most useful next step is to see them side by side.

HowNow built around a different idea: that learning shouldn't sit in a separate platform, disconnected from the way people actually work. It should connect everything together; the content, the skills data, the performance context and the tools your teams already use every day.

In practice, that means bringing learning from multiple sources into one centralised place, linking development directly to skills gaps and business performance, and using AI in a way that supports real workflows rather than just speeding up content generation.

But perhaps most importantly, HowNow is designed to scale with you. Not just easy to start; but built to deliver more as your organisation grows, your needs get more complex and your expectations of what good learning looks like get higher.

If the patterns in these reviews resonate with challenges you're already facing, it might be worth seeing it for yourself.

👉 Book a demo here

Sana Learn Reviews: Pros, Cons & What Customers Really Think

Based on 50+ customer reviews, this guide breaks down Sana Learn’s pros, cons, AI capabilities and platform limitations. Discover what real users say about usability, integrations, support and whether it’s the right fit for your L&D strategy.
Comparisons
Apr 10
.
5 min read

Buying a learning platform is a big decision.

You’re comparing features, pricing, integrations, and user experience. But there’s one thing that often gets pushed down the list is security.

It shouldn’t be.

Learning platforms sit on a goldmine of sensitive data e.g. employee records, performance data, personal details. If that data is mishandled, the impact isn’t just technical. It’s reputational, legal, and operational.

So before you get dazzled by a slick demo, it’s worth asking more important questions such as:

Is this platform safe? And can I trust this vendor?

Why security matters when buying a learning platform

Security conversations are often left until the final stages of evaluation.

By then:

  • Data has already been shared
  • Internal stakeholders are invested
  • Walking away feels expensive

That’s how risky decisions get made.

Instead, bring security into the conversation early.

Loop in your InfoSec, IT and data protection teams from the start so they can review vendors alongside you (not play catch-up at the end which is what we often see).

It saves time, avoids friction, and builds confidence internally.

What security certifications should an LMS or LXP have?

There are plenty of badges vendors can display.

Not all of them mean the same thing.

When it comes to learning platform security, there are two certifications that actually matter:

ISO 27001:2022 — The Global Standard

ISO 27001 is a globally recognised information security standard.

It’s a risk-based framework that shows a vendor takes security seriously across their organisation (not just in isolated areas).

But this is where many buyers stop too early.

The certificate alone isn’t enough.

Ask for the Statement of Applicability (SoA).

This document shows:

  • which controls are implemented
  • how risks are managed
  • why specific decisions were made

When reviewing it, pay close attention to:

  • information classification
  • data leakage prevention
  • handling of personally identifiable information (PII)

Learning platforms process large volumes of employee data. If a vendor can’t clearly explain how that data is segmented and protected in their cloud environment, the certification doesn’t mean much.

What to double-check

  • Does the certification cover the whole organisation or just part of it?
  • Is it officially accredited?
  • Is it the vendor’s certification, or are they pointing to their hosting provider (AWS, Azure, etc.)?

If it’s the latter, push back. Hosting infrastructure doesn't mean application security.

Cyber Essentials Plus — Essential for UK-based organisations

If you’re a UK-based company, Cyber Essentials Plus should be your baseline.

Unlike the standard Cyber Essentials (which is self-assessed), the Plus certification includes:

  • independent technical verification
  • hands-on testing
  • real validation of controls

For a learning platform handling sensitive employee data, this provides confidence that the basics are properly secured.

As with ISO 27001, don’t just take it at face value.

Verify it:

Security checklist for evaluating any LMS vendor

Even with the right certifications, you should go further.

Here’s a simple checklist you can use internally or share with your IT team:

Before approving a learning platform, confirm:

  • ISO 27001:2022 certification (with SoA available)
  • Cyber Essentials Plus (if UK-based)
  • SSO support (e.g. Okta, Azure, Google)
  • encryption at rest and in transit
  • data classification and leakage prevention controls
  • penetration testing summaries
  • disaster recovery and business continuity plans
  • incident management and breach response policies
  • data processing agreement (DPA)
  • subprocessor transparency

If a vendor struggles to answer these clearly, that tells you something.

Questions to ask your LMS vendor

If you want to quickly separate strong vendors from weak ones, ask:

  • Can you share your Statement of Applicability?
  • Does your ISO 27001 certification cover your entire organisation?
  • How do you protect PII within your platform?
  • How do you prevent data leakage in your cloud environment?
  • Can you verify your Cyber Essentials Plus certification?
  • Is your certification your own, or your hosting provider’s?

HowNow’s approach to learning platform security

At HowNow, security isn’t an afterthought. It’s built into every layer of the platform.

We’ve designed our approach to make life easier not just for L&D teams, but for IT and security teams reviewing us too.

Our compliance framework includes:

  • ISO 27001:2022 for information security management
  • ISO 9001:2015 for quality and continuous improvement
  • Cyber Essentials Plus for independently verified technical controls
  • GDPR compliance and data protection standards
  • NIS2 readiness and evolving regulatory alignment

We also provide full transparency through our Trust Center, including:

  • encryption standards (including AES-256 at rest)
  • SSO and identity provider integrations (Okta, Azure, Google, etc.)
  • penetration testing summaries
  • vulnerability management policies
  • disaster recovery and business continuity plans
  • subprocessor details and data handling practices
  • AI security and ethics policies

👉 Explore the HowNow Trust Center: https://trust.gethownow.com/

This gives your IT and security teams everything they need to evaluate us properly without delays or back-and-forth.

The bottom line:

A great learning platform should help your people perform better.

But it also needs to earn your organisation’s trust.

Security credentials might not be the most exciting part of the buying process but they’re one of the most important.

The right certifications, combined with real transparency, give you confidence that your data is protected and your decision is sound.

Bring your IT team into the conversation

If security is slowing down your buying process, you’re not alone.

The easiest way to move forward is to involve your IT and security teams early and give them direct access to the information they need.

Share our Trust Center with them or book a call with our team to review everything together.

No chasing. No vague answers. Just clear, honest security information.

Which Infosec Credentials Should You Look for When Buying a Learning Platform?

Blog
March 30, 2026
.
5 min read

Learning Technologies is back and we could not be more excited.

L&D is changing faster than most organisations can keep up with. AI is reshaping how people learn, skills gaps are widening and the pressure on L&D teams to prove impact has never been higher. The conversations happening at this year's event are going to matter.

HowNow is already working with companies to build the talent of tomorrow; closing skills gaps, connecting learning to performance and giving L&D teams the data to prove it's working. We want to help you do the same.

Learning Technologies is a great place to start this journey.

You'll find us at stand E30. Come and find us.

Here's what's waiting for you.

1. Get a Free Learning Health Check

Most L&D teams we speak to already know something isn't quite working. Maybe engagement is low. Maybe learning is scattered across too many tools. Maybe the business is asking questions about impact that are hard to answer.

The Learning Health Check is a free 15-minute desk-side consultation with one of our experts at stand E30. No slides, no sales pitch; just a focused conversation about where your organisation is right now, what's getting in the way and where the biggest opportunities are.

You'll walk away with tips you can apply to your strategy straight away, whether you use HowNow or not. This is exclusive to Learning Technologies and designed to be relevant to you and your organisation.

Prebook your session here for your chance to also claim some exclusive swag.

2. Hear How to Prove Learning Is Actually Building Skills

Day one. 1:10pm. Bitesize Stage

If you've ever sat in a leadership meeting struggling to demonstrate the impact of your learning programme, this one's for you.

Harvey Stead is taking the stage for a bitesize session on one of the biggest questions in L&D right now: how do you prove that learning is genuinely building skills? Join a group of 30+ L&D leaders for a practical, focused conversation designed to give you something you can actually take back to the business.

Arrive at 1pm to secure your seat. Spaces are extremely limited and assigned on a first-come, first-served basis.

3. Learn What It Means to Be a Self-Improving Company

Day one, 11:45–12:15pm in Theatre 2. 

Day two, 11:45–12:15pm in Theatre 2. 

Every company wants the same thing: people continuously getting better at their jobs. But running that loop manually is nearly impossible. Who's struggling? When do you intervene? What actually helps? Did it work? By the time you've coordinated answers to those questions, months have passed and the moment is gone.

In this session, Nelson Sivalingam; CEO of HowNow, one of the fastest-growing AI learning companies and author of the acclaimed book Learning at Speed; introduces a fundamentally different model: the self-improving company.

Nelson will show how AI agents are transforming organisational performance by monitoring work systems in real time, detecting struggles the moment they emerge, intervening with the right support at the right time and measuring what actually improved in performance data; not surveys.

So popular we are running it twice. No excuses to miss it.

4. Hear Trainline’s Approach to Employee Engagement

Day two, 14:45 – 15:15 in Theatre 2. 

Building a learning culture sounds great on paper. Doing it in reality? That’s where things get interesting.

In this honest fireside chat, Trainline shares how they’re approaching employee engagement from the ground up; what’s worked, what hasn’t and where they’re still experimenting. From driving early adoption to making learning feel genuinely relevant across the business, this session goes beyond theory and into the real challenges L&D teams face every day.

Expect practical insights you can take back with you, along with a clear view of what it actually takes to get people engaged in learning.

If you're trying to increase learning engagement, bring a notebook.

5. Meet HowNow Customers at Our Happy Hour

Day one, 15:00 onwards - Stand 30. 

Straight after Nelson's session, we're hosting a customer meet and greet at stand E30. Prosecco, canned cocktails, beers and the kind of conversations you actually come to events like this for.

Want to know what it's really like to use HowNow? Don't ask us. Ask them.

Look out for the special 'talk to me' badges; those are the HowNow customers with the real stories. They'll be in and around the stand all afternoon and they're easy to spot. Pull them aside, ask them anything and hear first-hand what's working for organisations just like yours.

6. Get refreshed with us

And if all that wasn't enough, we’ll also have fresh coffee flowing and soft serve ice cream on hand too; because balance is important.

Whether you need a caffeine boost, something sweet, or just a reason to pause between sessions, it’s the perfect excuse to stop by and have a relaxed chat with the team. No agenda, no pressure; just good conversation (and better snacks).

The best moments at events like this aren’t always on stage. Sometimes they’re over a coffee… or an ice cream, but either way, they are together.

And so many more reasons….

So, whether you want to catch a talk, grab a drink, or just have a proper conversation about your learning strategy, we'd love to see you. Learning Technologies is one of the best opportunities of the year to connect, learn and get inspired and we're making sure our stand is worth your time.

See you there.

6 Reasons to Visit HowNow at Learning Technologies 2026

Blog
March 18, 2026
.
5 min read

Onboarding is one of those things everyone agrees matters and yet it’s still one of the most inconsistently done processes in most organisations. Too often it’s a chaotic first week of back-to-back meetings, a SharePoint folder nobody can find, and a laptop that arrives three days late.

Designing onboarding that actually scales is one of the biggest challenges HR and L&D teams face. Most organisations know their onboarding could be better. 

Pauline Taylor, VP of People at HowNow, spoke with Ian Walker on the L&D Disrupt Podcast about what great onboarding really looks like and how to build it properly.

This blog walks you through what came out of that conversation and where to start.

Why Onboarding Matters More Than You Think

Let’s start with the business case, because it’s a strong one.

As Ian puts it:

“The value, of course, is that you are accelerating people’s sense of connection. And the statistic about that is that if people feel that they have been treated well in the onboarding process, their longevity is extended. So from a retention point of view, the evidence is pretty unequivocal.”

Connection drives retention. If a new hire spends their first few weeks feeling lost, anxious, or like an afterthought, you’re already on the back foot, regardless of how good the role is. Good onboarding accelerates that sense of belonging and gets people up to speed faster. Friction in those early weeks doesn’t just feel bad. It costs you time, productivity, and ultimately, people.

Want to learn how to create an onboarding process? Check out this blog on how to create an onboarding process.

Should Employee Onboarding be In-Person vs. Remote?

There’s no universal answer here, but there are some useful principles.

If you’re onboarding in person, you’re making a strategic investment in culture. Salesforce, for example, made in-person onboarding a priority specifically because they believed it was the best way to embed culture from day one. That’s not a logistical decision; it’s a values one.

If you’re onboarding remotely, the goal is to make the experience feel as close to in-real-life as possible. As Ian says:

“Similarly, if you’re doing it remotely, make sure that all of the experience is as far as possible close to the in real life experience.”

The principles are the same: connection, culture, and clarity. The delivery just looks different.

Nail the Employee Onboarding Fundamentals

This one sounds obvious, but it’s where so many onboarding programmes fall apart.

If you’re bringing someone in person, the infrastructure has to be invisible. Ian is direct on this:

“If you’re gonna do it in person, make sure that all of that is properly handled and does not come back onto the individual. Not only will that distract them, it’ll make them more nervous, it’ll make them feel less good about the whole experience. But it will detract from the efficiency of ramping them up quickly as well.”

That means flights and hotels booked correctly, a laptop ready on day one, security badges sorted in advance, and schedules organised. Get the admin right, and everything else has a chance to land.

What Should Actually Be In Your Onboarding Programme?

Your company culture is the most important element of any onboarding programme. Don’t just list your values on a slide and move on. Bring them to life.

Ian’s advice here is clear:

“Bring in managers, bring in people who are living the culture. So it’s not just someone listening to the same person, same voice all day. You’re getting different voices in there, but you’re getting people sharing their lived experience of why is this culture important to me?”

When people share their lived experience, it lands differently. It’s personal, it’s real, and far more memorable than a PowerPoint.

Networking opportunities

When you’ve got a cohort of new starters in a room (or on a call) that’s a real opportunity. Ian puts it well:

“Use this opportunity to build your network as well. Understand what’s happening within the company because not only will you leverage those relationships, but you’ll learn about what are potential career paths that you can also follow?”

Build in time for people to actually connect with each other. Those relationships can shape how people collaborate and grow within the organisation long after onboarding ends.

Setting real performance expectations

Be upfront about what working there actually looks like. Ian recalls:

“I remember talking to a room full of newly hired employees and saying, you’re gonna be expected to work hard. And you could see these big eyes — and it’s like, yeah, it’s just a reality. You are gonna be held to account for what you do. So expectation setting early on, I think, is really key.”

Ideally, it starts in the interview process, but reinforcing it early avoids misalignment down the line.

The big picture

Help new starters understand how the company works from top to bottom. As Ian explains:

“If you can explain from a top level down, this is a corporate objective, this is what we try and accomplish, this is how it cascades down within each team and each department — how it all fits together and what role you play in it — people get the sense of the bigger picture they’re playing within the organisation as well.”

When people understand how their work connects to something larger, they’re more motivated and more effective.

The Triangle: Getting the Handoff Right

This is one of the most important (and most overlooked) parts of onboarding at scale.

Onboarding isn’t one team’s job. It’s a shared responsibility across three groups:

  1. The onboarding team: responsible for culture, company-wide knowledge, and the rites of passage every new starter goes through
  2. The enablement or L&D function: responsible for the functional knowledge someone needs to actually do their job
  3. The manager: responsible for supporting the new hire and integrating that learning into day-to-day work

Ian is emphatic about how closely these three need to work together:

“The enablement organisation and the onboarding organisation need to be in a triangle. A really close triangle. So that the handover is happening effectively. The knowledge is being built upon. It’s not being duplicated. Nothing worse than when someone’s being invited to one call for onboarding and then they’ve been invited to an enablement call. You can’t allow that to happen. It has to be sequential and it has to be managed collectively.”

When this triangle breaks down, the new hire falls through the gaps. When it works, everything flows.

Onboarding is a Two-Way Street

Onboarding isn’t something that happens to a new hire. They have a role to play too. As Ian puts it:

“The fourth person is the learner themselves. They need to invest the time in order to onboard themselves effectively. So they need to read the materials, do the out of the room learning piece, as well as relationship building out of the room as well, which is so key to onboarding effectively.”

Setting that expectation early makes a real difference. People who take ownership of their own onboarding get up to speed faster and feel more settled sooner.

How Long Should Onboarding Last?

There’s no magic timeline that works for every role, every person, or every organisation. The length of onboarding depends on the complexity of the role, the individual’s prior experience, and how transferable their skills are.

What Ian suggests is a more interesting reframe altogether:

“You should always feel that you’re onboarding because you are always in your job. And particularly now, jobs are changing so quickly that if you have that beginner’s mindset, you are always onboarding yourself in a new direction. If you are always growing yourself.”

The most effective people don’t stop onboarding when week four ends. They carry that curiosity with them.

The Summary

Great onboarding isn’t about cramming as much information as possible into someone’s first week. It’s about connection, clarity, and getting the fundamentals right so people can do their best work sooner.

Get the logistics sorted. Bring culture to life. Build the triangle. Give new starters the space to take ownership. Resist the urge to put a fixed time limit on it.

Want to hear the full conversation?

Watch on YouTube


Listen on Spotify

Other relevant blogs:

The HR and L&D How-To Guide for Designing Onboarding That Actually Scales

Podcast
March 9, 2026
.
5 min read
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