21 April 2026
There’s a quiet truth that most L&D teams know but rarely say out loud: the single biggest factor in whether a skills-based learning programme succeeds isn’t the content, the platform, or even the analytics. It’s whether the employee’s line manager is genuinely engaged. In 2026, as organisations race to rebuild their training strategies around capability rather than compliance, managers are emerging as the decisive — and chronically under-leveraged — lever.
For years, L&D has been positioned as a central function that designs and delivers development to the workforce. That model worked when learning was episodic. It struggles badly when development needs to be continuous, role-specific, and tied to real performance outcomes. The organisations pulling ahead aren’t those with the richest content libraries — they’re the ones treating every manager as an active partner in skills development.
The Hidden Lever: Managers as Skills Multipliers
Research across L&D functions consistently points to the same finding: engaged managers are the single biggest predictor of whether learning translates into performance. An employee whose manager supports, discusses, and reinforces development is several times more likely to apply new skills on the job than one whose manager treats training as an HR activity happening somewhere in the background.
The mechanism isn’t mysterious. Managers control the context in which learning is applied. They set the priorities that determine whether there’s time and permission to practise new skills. They give the feedback that tells an employee whether they’re actually getting better. And they decide which opportunities people are stretched into — which, more than any course, is where genuine skill development happens.
Why Managers Often Get Left Out of the L&D Conversation
Despite all of this, most L&D programmes are still built with a gap at the centre: the manager. Learning is assigned by HR systems, completed by employees, reported in dashboards — and the manager is, at best, copied on a completion notification. They know their team member finished the course. They rarely have a clear picture of what skills the person was meant to develop, how they were developing them, or whether the investment is translating into anything the team actually needs.
This isn’t a failure of intent. It’s a failure of design. Most legacy LMS platforms were built to deliver content to individuals and report on completion — not to support ongoing capability conversations between managers and their teams. As a result, the manager-employee relationship, which is where skills development actually lives, has been systematically under-served.

What Manager-Led Skills Development Actually Looks Like
In a skills-based model, the manager’s role shifts from passive observer to active co-architect of development. That shift is grounded in a few core practices:
- A regular development conversation that’s distinct from performance review — focused not on past outputs, but on the capabilities the employee is trying to build next.
- Clear, role-relevant skill goals that both manager and employee can see, discuss, and adjust as the work evolves.
- Visibility into progress — not just whether content has been consumed, but whether capability is demonstrably changing.
- Real opportunities to practise. A manager who assigns a development goal without creating the on-the-job opportunity to apply it has set an employee up to fail.
KnowHow’s Training Goals were designed with exactly this model in mind. Rather than pushing learning at employees and hoping it sticks, Training Goals begin with a structured conversation between manager and employee, anchored in the real requirements of the role. The goals themselves become the focal point — the shared reference that gives both sides clarity, and gives L&D visibility into what’s actually being developed across the organisation.
Equipping Managers — Not Just Employees
One of the most common mistakes in skills-based L&D rollouts is assuming managers will naturally step into this expanded role. They won’t — not without support. Most managers were promoted on the strength of their technical performance, not their coaching ability. Asking them to lead meaningful development conversations without giving them the tools, frameworks, and confidence to do so sets the whole initiative up for uneven execution at best.
This is where the L&D function’s role evolves. Instead of being the sole provider of development, L&D becomes an enabler of a manager-led model: equipping managers with conversation frameworks, surfacing the right data at the right time, and designing platforms that make the manager’s job easier rather than adding to it. The best L&D teams of 2026 aren’t measured on how many courses they’ve delivered — they’re measured on how effectively they’ve activated the thousands of development conversations happening every week across the business.

Proving the Value of a Manager-Led Model
Skills-based programmes where managers are genuinely engaged share a recognisable signature in the data. Skill progression is faster. Development activity is more consistent across teams. Employees report higher clarity about what they’re trying to grow into — and higher confidence that their development actually matters to the business. Those signals are measurable, and they tell a very different story than a completion rate ever could.
The real shift underway in 2026 isn’t just about moving from completion metrics to skills metrics. It’s about where development actually happens — and who drives it. In the organisations pulling ahead, the answer is increasingly clear: development lives in the relationship between manager and employee, and L&D’s job is to make that relationship as productive as possible. Explore how KnowHow helps organisations build a manager-led skills development model.