Most “learning” inside organisations is really just content delivery. A Professional Learning Community is the opposite — and far more powerful.
Last year I collaborated with Sanne Muller of Capgemini Academy on a paper that tried to answer a deceptively simple question: how do you set up a genuine learning community inside a professional organisation — not a training calendar, not a course catalogue, but a living group that gets better together?
The answer we kept arriving at was the Professional Learning Community Framework (PLCF). It started in education research, but it translates surprisingly well to companies, academies, and partner networks.
What a learning community actually is
A Professional Learning Community is a group of people who take collective responsibility for their own learning and for each other's. The shift sounds small but it's profound: the unit of learning stops being the individual taking a course, and becomes the group improving its shared practice.
Courses transfer knowledge. Communities transfer practice — and practice is what organisations are actually short of.
The pillars we used
When we mapped the PLCF onto a professional setting, a handful of pillars did most of the work:
- Shared values and vision — a clear, collective reason the group exists, beyond “attend the training.”
- Collective responsibility — members own each other's growth, not just their own.
- Reflective professional inquiry — regular, honest reflection on what's actually working in practice.
- Collaboration — real joint work, not parallel solo work in the same room.
- Group and individual learning — the community grows the person, and the person grows the community.
None of these need a new platform or a big budget. They need structure, a bit of facilitation, and the courage to make learning a shared, visible activity rather than a private one. Get those pillars in place and a “training department” quietly becomes something far more durable: a community that keeps teaching itself long after any single course ends.

