
knowledge that employees can apply every day, ensuring sustainability moves from
boardroom policy to company-wide practice.
The Sustainability Training Challenge: Knowledge
Overload
Sustainability training often fails because it attempts to deliver vast, interdisciplinary
information—climate science, social impact, governance policy—in lengthy,
overwhelming formats. This leads to information fatigue, poor retention, and little
change in on-the-job behavior.
Microlearning is the direct counter-strategy, built on the principle of focused,
continuous learning.
Step 1: Translating Policy into Actionable Microlearning
Courses
Sustainability is a massive topic. Microlearning breaks it down into single, precise
behavioral changes.
The Focus: Every Microlearning Course targets one specific, measurable action.
For a Banking employee, the course isn't "Sustainable Investment Principles," but
the action: "How to correctly tag a green bond product in the sales system." For a
Retail manager, it’s "The two steps for minimizing energy use during store closing
hours."
Targeting Industry Risk: For Mining and Oil and Gas, the content focuses on
immediate risk mitigation: a 90-second video on "Correct waste-stream segregation
for hazardous materials" or a flashcard on "New emissions reporting requirements."
This precision ensures that training directly translates into compliant actions.
Step 2: Ensuring Just-in-Time Compliance and Awareness
Sustainability issues often arise in the moment—a waste stream violation, a new
supply chain partner, or a regulatory inquiry. Knowledge must be instantly available.
Mobile Access: The Microlearning Application is the key delivery mechanism.
Employees need to pull up critical information instantly. For a professional in
healthcare checking ethical sourcing for materials or a quality assurance team
member in Pharma verifying new clean room protocols, a mobile-first approach is
non-negotiable.