Why Learning Needs To Go Back To Basics

The simplest choice is often the best one

📨 Subscribe | 🤖 AI Training | 🚀 Courses

 TODAY’S THOUGHTS ☠️

Hey there 👋,

I’ve noticed a trend whenever I share analogue tools online.

I always get a batch of “AI bros” commenting, “you can use AI to help with that”, or “an AI agent can learn that”. These usually come about because they’re trying to get my attention to sell me something, but some just want to do everything with AI.

I find that odd. Everything doesn’t need to be AI-ified.

There are many great analogue tools which are powerful as they are. The obsession with turning everything into an AI solution is not necessary. One of my commitments in 2026 is to share more useful analogue tools that complement your use of AI.

We had some of these a few weeks back with career development strategies.

So today, we’re exploring another analogue tool that brings us back to the most basic of learning experiences, and we’ll unpack how you can use this to amplify connection and capability in the workplace.

Get your tea or beverage of choice ready 🍵.

We've got lots to discuss!

P.S. Your app might clip this edition due to size. If so, read the full edition in all its glory in your browser.

 IN THIS DROP 📔

  • Analogue tools to co-exist with AI

  • The power of cultivating connection in learning

  • Fusing human intelligence with AI to do your best work

TOGETHER WITH COLOSSYAN

Do more with AI Avatars in your L&D experiences

Colossyan was built to make high-quality AI video accessible to training teams, but it quickly became clear that video alone doesn’t solve the bigger challenge.

Colossyan Beyond represents the next step, moving past isolated creation toward a more complete way of building and evolving training content over time.

Be the first to see how Colossyan turns training into a scalable system in a special live webinar this March.

🙋‍♀️ Want to reach over 5,000 L&D pros? Become a Newsletter sponsor in 2026

 THE BIG THOUGHT 👀

Why You Should Build Campfire Learning Experiences in 2026

Come together

Who doesn’t love campfires?

They’re warm, comforting and have crackling sounds to challenge any ASMR track.

They’ve also served as an important destination for centuries, a point for human connection. One where experiences and knowledge are freely shared through stories.

Before the commercialisation of education, in which the rise of the classroom was created. The trusty campfire was the place where most human connections and lessons were centralised.

The water cooler might have something to say about that, yet I’ve mostly seen that as a place for gossip rather than something beneficial.

Centralisation is a strange thing in the world of workplace learning.

Over the course of time, we’ve heralded many things as the one source of truth in classrooms, the LMS, LXP, and now with AI through Large Language Models (be careful with that last one).

The complexity of these attempts at centralisation is no doubt not lost upon those in the industry, nor the participants of said experiences.

We’re still obsessed with crafting one place for people to connect and consume, when the truth is, it never really works that way.

In many ways, we forget the simplicity of learning and the joy of personal growth.

We’ve gone from connecting through stories over warm fires and learning about the world around us to the commodification of content in centralised walled gardens driven by mass marketing and delivered on a soulless conveyor belt of overwhelming consumption with decision fatigue.

I hear and see many, often pointless, debates and bickering on whose methodologies are right or what technology is the best. Often, we focus on who’s right rather than what is right.

I learnt that stepping back and peeling away the veil to ask “What would this look like if it were simple?” is sometimes the most important question one can ask in designing any experience.

Of course, we have fewer real campfires these days.

Instead, we’ve scaled these to the digital world in the current iteration of how we connect in today’s version of a campfire. We share stories and learn from one another in the realms of social media, Slack, Discord and many more.

It’s easy to get lost in thinking that you need to follow a certain methodology or possess certain technology to create a learning experience of value. A strange thought, considering the low-tech campfire served us well for many centuries, and we find ourselves here now with all this knowledge still.

I even tested a modern-day version of a digital-less campfire when I was leading L&D for a tech company.

I would hold monthly “Campfire Learning” events.

When they started, I’m sure most of the workforce population assumed I’d lost my mind. After all, I was promoting a campfire in an office in Central London and taking tech people away from their tech. Just so we’re clear, we had no real campfire, but the sentiment was there.

These events enabled people to come together under a shared topic, and the only guideline was that we shared stories, so no slide decks or any of that jazz.

It’s to this day one of the best things I’ve ever done.

Yes…even better than AI.

What’s my point here?

That I love campfires…perhaps.

Or, rather, it’s not to overcomplicate how we create value for people with learning.

On some levels, the aspects of centralisation, modern technology and frameworks can be useful in one’s pursuit of improving growth for the masses. But in others, these are the things that sabotage the growth of modern workforces the world over.

I’m often asked to walk through my own design process when connecting with fellow industry peeps. I expect that most who ask this question assume I have some dark magic up my sleeve, which allows me to create the things I do.

In reality, the core of it is actually simplicity. The iconic Iggy Pop once said, “It’s important, what not to do”.

This is what I often ponder in my design process.

What should I not do here? It’s easy to say I want to do this and this and that, but far more complex to say, “I shouldn’t do that”.

I’ve discovered in my career thus far that good intentions are killed by poor design.

Never have I seen more evidence of that than in the learning and education industry.

No one sets out to create a bad experience (at least I hope they don’t anyway). It’s something that forms within a design process. For me, the end goal is always about value.

Is what we are creating going to bring value to the end-user? If not, then what are we doing here, folks!

This is what we too often lose sight of: The end-user and the value that they will get from any experience.

Final thoughts

So, this brings me back to campfires.

The simplest of experiences, yet one that has served our society well and nurtured connection and growth over time.

Good design doesn’t need to be complicated, and learning doesn’t need to be hard.

Now go build a campfire.

→ If you’ve found this helpful, please consider sharing it wherever you hang out online, tag me in and share your thoughts.

A MESSAGE FROM HUBSPOT

Want to get the most out of ChatGPT?

ChatGPT is a superpower if you know how to use it correctly.

Discover how HubSpot's guide to AI can elevate both your productivity and creativity to get more things done.

Learn to automate tasks, enhance decision-making, and foster innovation with the power of AI.

 VIDEO THOUGHTS 💾

How I Fuse My Human Intelligence with AI To Do My Best Work

This is still a seriously underrated way to get huge value from AI.

In this video, I break down one of the most underrated skills in the workplace: distilling complex information into clear, actionable insights.

And now, with AI, this skill becomes even more powerful.

I’ll walk you through how to merge human judgment with AI tools like Notebook LM, ChatGPT, and Gemini to enhance your research, challenge assumptions, and present information in a way that truly serves your audience.

Enjoy 😊.

Till next time, you stay classy, learning friend!

PS… If you’re enjoying the newsletter, will you take 4 seconds to forward this edition to a friend? It goes a long way in helping me grow the newsletter (and cut through our industry BS with actionable insights).

And one more thing, I’d love your input on how to make the newsletter even more useful for you!

So please leave a comment with:

  1. Ideas you’d like covered in future editions

  2. Your biggest takeaway from this edition

I read & reply to every single one of them!

🙋‍♀️ Want to reach over 5,000 L&D pros? Become a Newsletter sponsor in 2026

P.S. Wanna build your L&D advantage?

Here’s a few ways I can help:

Reply

or to participate.