If you’ve ever felt like the rules of advancement keep changing just when you think you’ve figured them out, you’re not alone. The challenge with “Merit” as we know it is that research demonstrates that people worldwide tend to believe their societies are more meritocratic than they actually are, and this blind spot particularly affects professional women, LGBTQ+ and people of color. Interestingly, studies show that when organizations emphasize meritocracy as a value, it can actually trigger implicit gender biases.
Most humans are fascinatingly steeped in their contextual and subjective realities, combine that with stereotypical implicit beliefs and it is cognitively easy to believe that more effort would equal more success. Social psychology meets neuroscience very quickly here to result in false conclusions with real life negative impacts for people when surface thinking instead of systems thinking is applied by HR and leaders.
Why Learning Agility is Your Competitive Edge
Here’s where it gets interesting. The most successful organizations are shifting away from traditional merit measures toward something called “learning agility”— and this change could be your secret weapon. Learning agility isn’t just about taking more courses or earning additional certifications. It’s about demonstrating your ability to adapt, grow, and deliver results in new situations. Research shows that learning agility — the ability to learn from experience — is one of the key characteristics of high-potential employees. Even better, Korn Ferry research shows that people with high learning agility are promoted twice as fast as individuals with low learning agility.
This shift matters because it measures what you can do, not just what you’ve already done. For women who may have had fewer opportunities to build traditional credentials, learning agility creates new pathways to demonstrate your potential.
Four Ways to Build Your Learning Agility Profile
1. Become the Solution Finder
Instead of just executing tasks, position yourself as someone who tackles complex problems. Studies demonstrate that workforce agility enhances not only individual performance but also promotes innovation and effective knowledge dissemination. When challenges arise, volunteer to lead cross-functional teams or pilot new approaches.
Action Step: In your next team meeting, don’t just report on your progress. Come prepared with one process improvement suggestion and offer to lead the implementation.
2. Make Your Learning Visible
It’s not enough to learn—you need to demonstrate how your learning translates into results. Research indicates that learning agility directly affects employee engagement and innovative behavior, but only if others can see the connection.
Action Step: After completing any training or taking on a new challenge, send a brief summary to your manager highlighting what you learned and how you’re applying it. Include specific metrics when possible.
3. Seek Stretch Assignments
Learning agility is best demonstrated through performance in unfamiliar situations. Ask for projects outside your comfort zone, volunteer for challenging assignments, or request to work with different teams or departments.
Action Step: Identify one area where your organization needs improvement but lacks expertise. Propose a pilot project and position yourself to lead it, even if it’s not directly related to your current role.
4. Build Your Feedback Loop
Learning agility requires continuous improvement, which means you need honest feedback. Create a system for getting regular input from colleagues, clients, and supervisors about your performance and growth areas.
Action Step: Schedule quarterly “learning check-ins” with your manager. Come prepared with specific questions about your performance and growth areas, and ask for concrete suggestions for improvement.
Navigating the Transition
Not every organization has made this shift yet, and you may encounter resistance. In 2020 Robin J. Ely and David A. Thomas share in HBR a study named “Getting serious about diversity: Enough with the business case” as a follow up from their 1996 research paper called Managing Differences Matter which included a prediction of an emerging paradigm cited as the learning and effectiveness paradigm. This work may have provided answers if it had of been applied, but the work was not undertaken by most firms at scale. For meritocracy or “diversity” benefits to truly be realized, organizations have to adopt a learning orientation and be willing to change structures, and culture.
If you are in a more traditional environment or an environment now recoiling from their last twenty years efforts, focus on building your learning agility profile quietly while demonstrating clear results.
Your Next Steps
The workplace is changing, and this shift toward learning and effectiveness could be the key to unlocking opportunities that traditional merit systems may have denied you. Start building your learning agility profile.
1. Assess your current situation: Where have you demonstrated learning agility in the past year?
2. Identify growth opportunities: What challenges could you volunteer to tackle?
3. Make your learning visible: How can you better communicate your development to key stakeholders?
4. Build your support network: Who can provide feedback and advocate for your growth?
The traditional rules of advancement may have been stacked against you, but the new rules reward exactly what you bring to the table: adaptability, fresh perspectives, and the ability to learn and grow. It’s time to make that work in your favor.
Work with a coach – book in for an exploratory chat to see if coaching is right for you HERE
By Nicki Gilmour, founder and CEO of theglasshammer.com and Evolved People Coaching
