Stop Creating More Content. Start Solving Learning Problems.
By Renée Duncan
Most teams don’t have a “training problem.” They have a clarity problem.
New features ship, processes change, people join, and suddenly your docs, LMS, enablement decks, and Slack threads are all telling different stories. Your team feels overwhelmed. Your customers feel confused. And yet the instinct is always the same: “Let’s create more content.”
The problem is rarely a lack of content
Before building anything new, ask three diagnostic questions about what already exists. The answers determine whether you need to create, reorganize, or retire.
Instead of asking “What should we teach?”, start with “What needs to change in the real world?” Who needs to do what differently, and how will we know it’s working?
For nonprofits, that might mean onboarding new staff in days rather than weeks, so programs deliver impact faster. For SaaS companies, it might mean reducing support tickets by turning your best CSM answers into searchable, AI-ready knowledge. For consultancies, it’s often about turning project chaos into a clear enablement system your clients can sustain.
What changes when you start with the right question
When you design around behavior change rather than content coverage, three things shift. You build fewer assets, and each one does more work. You stop duplicating effort across teams, because the source of truth is findable and trustworthy. And your system gets smarter over time, because maintenance is designed in from the start rather than bolted on after the fact.
The result: fewer one-off trainings, more reusable assets, and a learning ecosystem that gets smarter every time someone uses it.
If you’re tired of investing in courses, playbooks, and “launch enablement” that don’t move the needle, the question to ask isn’t “what should we build next?” The question is “what’s making it hard for people to find, trust, and use what already exists?”
That’s where real learning design starts.


