logo
#

Latest news with #immersiveLearning

3 Ways to encourage AI fluency at work
3 Ways to encourage AI fluency at work

Fast Company

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Fast Company

3 Ways to encourage AI fluency at work

In my conversations with business leaders around the world, I consistently hear the same phrase to describe what they want to achieve for their workforce: AI fluency. I often tell them that to achieve AI fluency, we need to treat it as a foreign language. Like learning a new language, becoming AI fluent requires dedication, immersion, and practice. Fluency transforms how we think and communicate. Becoming fluent requires us to overcome the fear of making mistakes or incurring risks. Yet there's one crucial difference between achieving fluency in AI versus a new language: When learning a new language, we step into an established culture. With AI, we're learning the culture while simultaneously creating it. The big question: How can organizations build these cultures and become laboratories of AI fluency? Here are three ways to foster AI fluency. 1. Create an immersive environment Whether we're learning Spanish, Mandarin, or any of the other 7,000 languages in the world, immersion is an essential step to fluency. Living where the language is spoken forces you to adapt, to think differently, and to develop new neural pathways. AI requires the same commitment. Organizations are uniquely positioned to create these immersive environments where employees interact with AI tools daily, not as occasional novelties but as essential components of their workflow. From Udemy's work with thousands of organizations around the world, helping to create these environments, we've found that organizations succeed when they integrate AI across departments, from marketing teams using generative AI for content creation to HR departments employing AI-powered skills assessments. Immersive environments are built when employees understand they need to become fluent to reach their goals. That means the most successful AI adoption happens when tools directly address employees' pain points. Just as language learners progress faster when they need the right words to order food or navigate transportation, employees embrace AI more readily when it solves real problems they face. Organizations seeking AI fluency must balance structure with exploration. Consider how language learning works: Structured lessons provide grammar and vocabulary, but real learning happens through conversation and experimentation. Similarly, building organizational AI fluency requires a few basic building blocks: Upskilling on foundational AI capabilities and limitations, like learning the rules of grammar. Creating a sandbox-style environment where people can experiment without fear of consequences. Developing communities of practice where people can find social support to troubleshoot, ask questions, celebrate successes, and motivate each other to keep experimenting. Establishing guidelines for when to rely on human judgment versus AI, how to evaluate AI outputs, and how to maintain human connection in AI-mediated interactions. 2. Overcome fluency barriers The barriers to AI fluency mirror those of language learning. Fear of embarrassment prevents many language learners from practicing conversation, just as fear of looking incompetent may prevent employees from experimenting with AI. Imposter syndrome—the feeling that everyone else knows more than you do—impacts both AI and language fluency. The solution is creating psychologically safe environments where questions are welcomed, and mistakes are treated as learning opportunities. Leaders like Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff model this by encouraging employees to approach new challenges with a 'beginner's mind,' getting curious instead of expecting immediate mastery and understanding. What's more, both language learners and AI adopters often experience an ' uncanny valley ' stage where they know enough to recognize their limitations but not enough to feel confident. Supporting people through this phase is critical. This is where many abandon the journey if they're not properly encouraged. In this case, encouragement can come not only from leaders, but from the environments leaders create such as building supportive communities of practice where learners can share their struggles with gaining fluency. This normalizes the experience, while reminding them that this uncomfortable stage is not just common but also a sign of meaningful growth. 3. Create culture while learning This is where the language metaphor ends. While becoming AI fluent, we're simultaneously students and architects of the culture. This dual role presents unprecedented responsibility and opportunity. Leaders must consciously shape how AI integrates into the organizational culture by establishing rules and norms that preserve human creativity and connection while leveraging AI's capabilities. This means modeling thoughtful AI usage, celebrating innovative applications, and continuously reinforcing that AI serves human objectives, not the reverse. The organizations that thrive will be those that build immersive environments where employees can become AI fluent and build cultures where technology amplifies uniquely human capabilities. In a workplace where managers offload administrative or basic creative tasks to AI agents, employees would gain hours back in their day. This would allow them to spend more time coaching their teams, helping them solve problems, identify opportunities for growth, and learn the best ways to motivate them during times of change and upheaval. The journey to this future begins with recognizing that AI, like any language, isn't just a skill to acquire but a new way of thinking.

WILL Interactive Wins TELLY Awards for Groundbreaking Immersive Training
WILL Interactive Wins TELLY Awards for Groundbreaking Immersive Training

Associated Press

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Associated Press

WILL Interactive Wins TELLY Awards for Groundbreaking Immersive Training

POTOMAC, MD, UNITED STATES, May 28, 2025 / / -- WILL Interactive has earned two honors in the 46th Annual Telly Awards, which recognize excellence in video and television across all screens. The awards celebrate WILL's continued innovation in immersive, interactive training and mark national recognition for two standout programs: ● Common Ground Industrial (CGI) received a Telly in General–Education & Training in the Immersive, Interactive & Mixed Media category. ● Cyber received a Telly in Craft–Use of Interactivity in the Immersive, Interactive & Mixed Media category. These programs were among more than 13,000 entries submitted globally and judged by a panel of leaders from top media platforms, production companies, agencies, and networks, including Roku, ESPN, NASA, Hearst, LinkedIn, and more. Award-Winning Programs at a Glance Common Ground Industrial (CGI) CGI is a first-of-its-kind immersive training program created for manufacturing and industrial workforces. Built using WILL Interactive's proprietary interactive movie format, the program teaches essential skills in communication, teamwork, and conflict resolution. Users become the lead characters in realistic stories and learn how to make good decisions regarding safety concerns, interpersonal dynamics, and management pressures in industrial environments. Cybersecurity WILL's course revolutionizes cybersecurity training by sharing immersive stories about actual events. Users are placed in dynamic scenarios involving phishing, ransomware, and insider threats. With multiple decision points and branching narratives, participants learn not only what to look out for but also how their choices affect broader organizational security. This program strengthens awareness, accountability, and proactive defense strategies across the workforce. 'Winning two Telly Awards is an honor,' said Sharon Sloane, CEO of WILL Interactive. 'They recognize and validate that learning makes a more positive and lasting real-life impact when it's fun, challenging, and thought-provoking by depicting real-world events and complexities.' About the Telly Awards Now in its 46th year, The Telly Awards honor excellence in video and television across all platforms. This year's winners include some of the world's most respected brands. In addition to WILL Interactive, other Telly winners include Pixar, Microsoft, MTV, Telemundo, and NASA. According to Telly Managing Director Amanda Needham, 'Our industry is experimenting with new technologies like never before, shaping truly compelling stories to draw attention to some of the world's most pressing issues.' Explore all 2025 winners at About WILL Interactive WILL Interactive is the world leader in immersive training for improving human decision-making and on-the-job human performance. For over three decades, WILL has delivered award-winning, story-based training based on real events that help solve real-world challenges in compliance, safety, inclusion, cybersecurity, leadership, and culture. WILL's Interactive Behavior Modification System has been proven effective in nine independent studies and are trusted by hundreds of leading organizations, including the U.S. Government (DOD, DOS, TSA, USDA), National Football League, Mercedes-Benz, Broad Institute of MIT & Harvard, Yale New Haven Health, Hospital Sisters Health System, Disney and over 500 others. Explore WILL Interactive at For media inquiries, please contact Sharon Sloane at [email protected] or call 301-983-6006. Sharon Sloane WILL Interactive +1 301-983-6006 email us here Visit us on social media: LinkedIn Legal Disclaimer: EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store