Autonomy has become the HR buzzword of the decade.
We tell people to “own their development”, “take charge of their growth”, “be the CEO of their career”.
And then what?
We throw them into a bloated LMS, give them 500+ courses to choose from, and wonder why nothing sticks.
Here’s the truth:
Telling people they’re autonomous without giving them structure is corporate gaslighting.
It’s not autonomy.
It’s abdication.
Real autonomy doesn’t mean giving people total freedom and hoping they do the right thing.
It means giving them:
Clarity — what skills matter for their role
Visibility — how to grow them
Support — from managers, peers and the platform
Feedback — to stay on track and motivated
Without these, self-directed learning becomes self-defeating.
People disengage. Managers lose visibility. And L&D ends up chasing adoption instead of driving performance.
Most platforms pitch self-directed learning as the solution to scale.
Let people explore. Curate their own path. Choose what’s relevant.
In theory, it sounds empowering.
In practice, it creates decision fatigue, inconsistency and frustration.
Employees don’t want more content.
They want progress.
They want to know what good looks like — and how to get there.
This is where the best L&D teams are shifting their focus.
One Learn Amp customer — a mid-sized SaaS company with distributed commercial and CS teams — realised their “empowered” culture was backfiring.
People weren’t taking ownership.
Managers weren’t coaching.
And L&D had no insight into who was developing — or how.
Here’s what they did instead:
Mapped each role to key skills and performance behaviours
Built guided, modular learning journeys with branching paths
Embedded learning nudges, peer feedback and manager check-ins
Made development visible to employees and leadership
Within weeks, usage spiked — not from top-down pressure, but because people finally had something real to own.
They weren’t being told what to learn.
They were being shown how learning moved them forward.
That’s what autonomy looks like.
We help L&D teams design structured learning that doesn’t feel rigid.
It feels relevant, actionable and empowering.
With Learn Amp, you can:
Link skills to roles, journeys and feedback
Give employees real-time visibility on growth
Nudge learning in the flow of work
Let managers track progress and coach better conversations
Autonomy doesn’t mean removing support — it means removing friction.
And that’s where we come in.
Autonomy without structure creates confusion, not confidence
Real learning ownership starts with clarity, support and feedback
Learn Amp helps you build it in, without burning out your teams
Let’s stop pretending autonomy is enough.
Let’s design for real, meaningful ownership.