When my colleague Robert Dobay called me in 2014 to say that Magyar Telekom (subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom) would like us to develop a “likeable” mobile application for them that would support the daily work of managers, I was not very enthusiastic. Developing managers is not an easy business, and their phone will NOT do it for us, I thought.
phone in hand

But Robert doesn’t give up easily, he made us visit the client and listen to their needs. There we all got into the spirit of things and the development of th Act2Manage app was launched. It’s been seven years (or eight since the first meeting) since then, we’ve rolled it out to a number of national and multinational companies, but perhaps we’re most proud of the fact that it’s being used beyond our borders. Companies such as AUDI’s headquarters in Ingolstadt (after the Győr motor factory), the air freight forwarder Cargolux in Luxembourg, or even Unicredit Bulbank, Bulgaria’s largest bank. And as a result of the tireless efforts of my colleague Laszlo Filep, one of the largest European operational excellence companies, REOSS, became our partner to add Lean Management content to the Act2Manage app. 

We’ve learned a lot from our customers over the past 7 years, here are the ten most important lessons:

  1. A mobile phone app can indeed provide a quick and practical response to the “at the moment of need” learning situations, when motivation to learn is at its highest.
  2. Encouraging concrete action and making a commitment at the end of the microlearning process will increase the likelihood of trying out and practising learning content.
  3. While not all managers are motivated by gamification tools (points, trophies, levels, progress bar, etc.), many are.
  4. User feedback shows that simplicity is much more valued by managers than glitzy content (as opposed to some HR people who think the opposite.) Users are much more likely to read a short piece of text content when they need it in their day-to-day work than to watch a video between meetings.
  5. What matters in digital learning is not what generation the user belongs to (i.e. it doesn’t matter if they are Generation X, Y or Z), but how eagerly they want to learn.
  6. While the app can stand on its own as a leadership development tool, it has a much greater impact when combined with in-person or hybrid programmes.
  7. Facilitation is of huge importance because there is a lot of information noise in the workplace. Combining the use of the app with current corporate actualities (performance review cycles, change initiatives, ongoing development programmes, etc.) will increase its relevance and significantly increase the usage rate.
  8. User activity is not distributed according to a bell curve but according to a power function (Pareto), i.e. there is a top 20% who are highly active. However, as I explained in the previous section, with the help of facilitation and linking to the other programmes, the involvement of moderately active users can be increased considerably. And just as with in-person develepment programmes, there will be a certain percentage who are not particularly interested in participating. The proportion of this is closely related to where the organisation is on the culture development ladder.
  9. According to our statistics (compared to digital and offline services provided separately), the app increases participant activity (the amount of engagement) in our in-person programmes. And also the other way: app usage is increased by participating in an in-person programme. So they are mutually reinforcing. Therefore, we have been able to provide data to prove that blended learning solutions make sense.
  10. Managers are keen to use the feedback feature in the app, which allows them to compare their self-assessment of their leadership behaviour with the aggregate feedback they receive from their subordinates. They are also interested to see how they are progressing after 3-6 months.

Act2Manage Application

An interactive, gamification-based, practice-oriented leadership development application that provides immediate help and enables follow-up to the most common dilemmas.

Get info and request a free trial!

More blog posts:

The Big Leadership Development Myth

Over the last couple of decades, the training industry, hand in hand with corporate HR has developed the following myth: if managers go offsite for a training session once or a couple of times a year, they listen to some smart stuff or play a few games yielding “aha” experiences, gain insights about themselves and others, they go back to work, take a U-turn and change from autocratic assholes to ideal people managers.

Read more »

Why most initiatives fail to increase employee engagement?

Last week, I attended an CHRO meeting where the debate was about employee engagement. Many companies talked about implementing health programs, flexplaces, table soccer, LTIs, dogs at workplace and many creative ideas. But still, almost all of them complained of high attrition rate, especially in the first year of the employment.

Read more »

A single e-mail is good for nothing

I frequently experience that a manager is awfully surprised when his people fail to deliver what he expects from them in the way he prefers, no matter if they belong to his own team, they are peer managers, project team members or colleagues from other departments.

Read more »