Chief Learning Officer
Buy Naltrexone OnlineSUBSCRIBE


Breakfast Club
Philadelphia: The Next Frontier for Learning and Development
Mar 18, 2010 07:30 am
Four Seasons Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania


Webinars
Improving Emotional Intelligence Through Behavioral Style
Mar 18, 2010


CLO Symposiums
The Networked Organization: Leading Learning in the New Economy
Apr 12, 2010 - Apr 14, 2010
Boca Raton Resort & Club
Boca Raton, Florida


See More Events



In Practice

Published December 2004

Hyperion: Global Governance in Progress

  

  Grant Ricketts

Even medium-sized companies can go global. Hyperion is a leading enterprise software provider of business performance management solutions. The company employs approximately 2,400 people in 20 countries and manages a network of more than 600 partners worldwide that help install and support the company's specialized solutions. It serves more than 9,000 customers–including 91 of the Fortune 100–which translates to about 30,000 learner days annually. Hyperion's revenues exceed $600 million, including a recent acquisition, Brio Software Inc.

As recently as 2003, Hyperion had separate education businesses operating in three different segments of its business: a for-profit customer education business, a corporate university for professional development and a partner education business for channel certification. In addition, the recent acquisition meant that both respective employee groups would need cross-training, and members of each learning organization would need to be assimilated.

"A smaller company operating on a global basis with three separate education lines of business was not easy to rationalize," said Sundar Nagarathnam, vice president of education services for Hyperion since August 2003. "We wanted to avoid the prospect of having different groups go out and buy different LMSs and other tools. So, we started a dialogue to align our resources behind one common system and build an organizational model that would enhance collaboration while allowing us to focus on some of the unique aspects of each education segment."

The learning organization adopted a mission statement that incorporated elements that each group needed to excel. Its charter enabled rapid adoption of new products and services throughout its value chain and focused on performance through dedication to excellence, while achieving process and system efficiencies, building domain expertise and innovating service delivery. The team also was able to categorize its objectives and challenges along four dimensions: strategic, organizational, financial and operational. Its leading strategic objective was to leverage new technology to expand the reach and standardize business processes for education services globally. However, it also had to provide cost predictability for employee and partner training, and revenue profitability for customer training. Additionally, as an evolving organization, it needed to establish credibility within Hyperion while helping merge the two companies.

A learning governance council was created comprising business/curriculum leaders, regional and line-of-business leaders, and central HR/learning leaders. Its priorities were to clarify roles and responsibilities among groups for business support, technology support and regional planning, as well as ensure appropriate decision rights, program prioritization, issue resolution and chargebacks for services provided.

The governance model that evolved resembles a "spoke and hub" model, where the central learning organization manages learning functions that can be shared by other groups, while the operating units design, develop or leverage needed learning solutions from other teams. Centralized learning functions include the LMS and related tools, content development, resource availability management to support other groups, planning and administrative roles, budget planning and overall stewardship responsibilities. Distributed learning functions include learner needs analysis for customers, partners and employees, business requirements definition, curriculum ownership and management of specific content development or procurement projects, and overall performance governance of the respective education segment.




blog comments powered by Disqus

Executive Search

ESI International Director, eContent Strategy
01/14/2010
The Director, eContent Strategy is responsible for providing ESI’s executive team with strategic-level direction to implement alternative blended learning delivery formats to our worldwide client base.

Senior Manager, Global Learning & Talent Development
11/19/2009
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (DTT) is an organization of member firms devoted to excellence in providing professional services and advice. We are focused on client service through a global strategy executed locally in nearly 150 countries.

Director, Leadership & Organizational Development Parkland Health & Hospital System
10/26/2009
Parkland Health & Hospital System (www.parklandhospital.com) located in Dallas, Texas has been voted one of "America's Best Hospitals" by U.S. News & World Report for 16 consecutive years and recently named one of the "Top 100 Hospitals to Work For" by Nursing Professionals Magazine.