Would you build your home or business without a strong Foundation?

17 Feb 2026

Would you spend your hard earned cash to build a home or a business without laying a solid foundation first?    Of course not.  What a stupid question?  Even entertaining the idea feels reckless. A structure without a base is a liability dressed up as ambition. You need something solid to hold the weight, to carry the roofline, to endure wind, rain, time, and the unexpected tremors that life inevitably delivers. A foundation is not glamorous. No one hosts a dinner party to admire it. But remove it, and everything collapses.

So here is the real question.  If we instinctively understand this in life principle (or use construction), why do we hesitate to treat Learning and Development as the foundation of our businesses?

People are our greatest cost / expense. They are also our greatest capital. Yet we often attempt to build performance, culture, and profitability without intentionally strengthening the base that holds it all together. 

A Learning and development strategy is not an add on. It is not a compliance tick box. It is the departure point.

The goal needs to be the creation of lifelong learners, who can be self directed in their growth only then does learning & development move beyond a training calendar and become part of the organisation’s identity and brand.  Talk is cheap and marketing is a facade.  L&D needs to be embedded into the organisation strategy and values. 

What would that look like?

The outputs are logical.

We would see competent employees. Competence brings three major wins. 

  • First, job mastery, which leads to optimal performance in the role owned. 

  • Second, psychological safety, because confidence grows when capability is real. 

  • Third, community impact. A well trained employee does not leave new competencies at the office door. They carry them home. They teach their children differently. They influence conversations differently. Work skills quietly become life skills in a world that desperately needs both.

Competencies are portable. They can be developed upward and downwards.  That is what makes succession planning more than theory. It becomes a natural progression built on a solid base. When we truly accept that our people equate to financial capital, HR cannot remain administrative. It must embrace a human capital process flow, a systems approach designed to enable individuals to reach their full potential.

One of the simplest tools I have used in Learning and Development is what I call a JCP – job competency profile. It is not complex. It can be used as a simple Excel document or system generated.  What it does?  It brings clarity. It outlines the Key Performance Areas of a role and aligns the required competencies to each one. Traditionally we would ask: What knowledge is required? What skills are needed? What attitude must be demonstrated?   Knowledge. Skill. Attitude.

During a current consultation I have reframed it into the acronym of ASK.

Start with Attitude. Then Skill. Then Knowledge.

After years of lecturing, training, and coaching, I always positioned it the other way around. Corporate experience has sharpened my thinking. Attitude is not the finishing touch. It is the ignition point.

The L&D department can transfer knowledge. It can assess skill. It can declare someone competent or not yet competent. However, attitude is different. You can coach it. You can reinforce it. Yet when pressure mounts and crisis hits, what carries a person through?  The values that formed that Attitude.  Simply put a can do, wont do and dont want to do – all formed within the values we stand for.  Attitude is ultimately a choice. I get to choose how I respond. And that choice is anchored in the values that have been instilled, modelled, and lived consistently within the organisation.

When values are duplicated, replicated, and embodied across every level of the business, they do more than support performance. They sustain people in the storm. They shape culture. They overflow into homes and communities. They bring about revelation and change.

Learning and Development is not a department. It is the concrete slab beneath your strategy. Ignore it, and cracks will appear. Invest in it, and you build something that lasts and can leave a legacy.

Author

Shelley-Anne McMaster

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