
EDITOR’S NOTE: Because enterprise learning involves multiple disciplines and perspectives, we regularly invite experts from other organizations to share their insights. Today, Intellum Product Marketing Director, Dr. Anderson Campbell, examines the strategic power of education-led growth.
What is your business growth strategy — and how well is that approach working for you? Too often, the answer looks like this unfortunate scenario:
Company X invests heavily in launching a new product, expecting to drive demand through sophisticated go-to-market strategies. However, customers churn before they recognize value from the product, and partners struggle to sell and support it. Soon, organizational productivity stalls, revenue opportunities slip away and customer retention becomes an uphill battle.
These challenges point to a common issue: a lack of education. When the right knowledge isn’t available to customers and partners at the right time, their performance suffers. Without relevant, structured education, customers get frustrated and partners aren’t able to contribute fully to business growth.
What’s the culprit behind this problem? Simple. Too many organizations treat education as an afterthought rather than a strategic lever for success.
This is where education-led growth comes in. Think of it as an engine that propels business performance by embedding education into every stage of the customer and partner journey. Whether you’re accelerating product adoption, enabling partners to drive revenue, or expanding customer relationships, education-led growth puts learning at the center of your business strategy.
Buying or selling a customer-focused learning system? Get independent insights you can trust, with our in-depth analysis of 16 top solutions. Learn about our Customer LMS Buyer’s Guide
The Business Benefits of Education-Led Growth
As recent research by Intellum reveals, this strategy is much more than just a promising theory. According to The 2025 State of Education-Led Growth Report, organizations are measurably improving business impact by integrating learning into go-to-market motions. Specifically, they target tangible benefits across four key areas:
- Business Growth: 70% of programs aim to increase revenue by nurturing prospects, accelerating sales cycles, and empowering customers and partners to succeed with their products.
- Customer Retention: 84% strive to strengthen adoption, boost renewals and foster positive brand sentiment by ensuring customers fully understand the value of a product.
- Operational Performance: 75% seek to improve internal efficiency and productivity by equipping customers and partners with the right knowledge at the right time. Effective education reduces errors, accelerates onboarding and ensures users perform at their best.
- Cost Savings: 57% want to optimize resources and reduce costs by delivering high-impact learning initiatives at scale. Well-executed external training programs streamline internal processes, reduce support costs and minimize time spent answering repeat questions.
By focusing on these outcomes and aligning educational initiatives with go-to-market goals, customer-minded companies create a cohesive, scalable framework that integrates education across the entire organization — fueling growth, efficiency and long-term success.
Find out how real-world companies are achieving more with learning systems that create business value. Get inspiration from dozens of success stories in our free LMS Case Study Directory…
What Makes Education-Led Growth Work?
Education-led-growth transforms learning into a core driver of business success through scalable, high-impact instructional experiences. It repositions learning from a support function to a growth engine that aligns with business outcomes and enhances every stage of the customer and partner lifecycle. As a result, it boosts customer acquisition, retention and business performance.
Fundamentally, education-led growth is built on seven key pillars that ensure customer learning experiences are intentional, impactful and results-oriented. These pillars include:
- Outcomes: Specify objectives in terms of measurable, meaningful business results such as revenue growth, customer retention and efficiency gains. Anchoring programs to quantifiable outcomes aligns education with organizational goals and positions it as a strategic function.
- Audience: Clarify learner personas and tailor learning experiences to meet the unique needs of customers and partners at each stage of their journey. Targeted, relevant education enhances engagement, adoption, performance and loyalty.
- Initiatives: Define the purpose and scope of each educational program — whether it’s customer onboarding, partner enablement or compliance training. This ensures every initiative meets specific audience needs and supports relevant business outcomes.
- Resources: Provide necessary tools, assets, expertise and support, including instructional design, AI-driven content creation and technical support. Sufficient resources promote scalability, sustainability and measurable impact.
- Delivery: Offer diverse learning formats — self-paced modules, live training and certifications. This makes education accessible and effective for diverse learner interests, preferences and contexts.
- Marketing: Position education as an essential aspect of your brand and business strategy by embedding it into demand generation, sales enablement and customer success initiatives. Consistently promoting education among external audiences reinforces its value and drives adoption.
- Measurement: Track data and metrics that connect education with business outcomes, such as revenue impact, customer retention and operational efficiency. Establish clear reporting roles and practices upfront to ensure continuous improvement.
Working in concert, these pillars help organizations tightly integrate education with go-to-market efforts and create a context for ongoing success.
PREMIUM RESEARCH REPORT
Need Customer LMS Insights You Can Trust?
All customer learning management systems aren’t created equal. Make better buying decisions with our 2025 Customer LMS Buyer’s Guide. Compare the best customer education systems with our independent analysis…
LEARN MORE >>
The Business Case for Education-Led Growth
With so much upside potential, no wonder some of the world’s most successful companies champion education-led growth. To understand its impact, consider programs from software industry giants such as HubSpot, Salesforce and Zendesk.
These education-led growth pioneers continuously invest in academies and other experiences that engage and empower new and existing customers at scale. Along the way, their efforts are reinforcing relationships, boosting brand loyalty and generating incremental revenue.
The performance among these programs is impressive, to say the least. But what happens when we step back and look at a broader set of organizations?
According to Forrester research, customer education among SaaS companies moves the meter in multiple ways. For example, on average, they see an increase of:
- 11.6% in customer satisfaction
- 7.1% in retention
- 7.1% in customer lifetime value
- 6.2% in revenue
At the same time, customer support requests decrease by 16% and support costs drop by 7%. Clearly, these numbers prove that customer education adds measurable value.
The Time Is Right for Education-Led Growth
For too long, organizations viewed customer education as a support function — reactive, fragmented and undervalued. But when companies recognize its business significance, they can outpace competitors and create a sustainable advantage by embedding education with go-to-market strategies.
Now is the time to make education a priority. The cost of inaction is too high, while the rewards of doing it right are transformational. By adopting education-led growth, you can redefine your brand’s customer experience, drive more revenue and create lasting impact.
NOTE: More than two decades ago, Intellum launched one of the world’s first customer and partner education platforms. To learn about the platform’s current capabilities, visit Intellum. And for more insights about education-led growth, download the company’s new report: The 2025 State of Education-Led Growth.
Need a Customer Education LMS? Talk With an Independent Expert
What’s the best way to find the right LMS for your education-led growth strategy? Talk with an independent advisor. Schedule a free 30-minute consult with Talented Learning Lead Analyst, John Leh…
*NOTE TO SALESPEOPLE: Want to sell us something? Please contact us through standard channels. Thanks!
Share This Post
Related Posts
10 Reasons Not to Buy a Talent Suite LMS
Organizations continue to purchase standalone LMS systems every day and rarely consider more than one HR or talent suite LMS products as the starting point.
Tin Can Update – Looking Rusty
Tin Can simplifies the tracking and recording of any learning event – no matter how informal or non-traditional making it easier to use and less limiting than SCORM.
Top 10 High-Tech Extended Enterprise LMS Case Studies
An extended enterprise LMS supports learning efforts for non-employees, including channel partners, customers, prospects, members, franchises, resellers and distributors.
The Mobile LMS Race: Responsive Design vs. Apps
Responsive design is popular because it works on any device and all platforms, thus eliminating the need to test everything on many devices.
Absorb LMS – Review
Absorb is definitely extended enterprise ready and has many features to support external audiences; the interface can be skinned and globalized very neatly with clients’ colors, logos, fonts, language and dynamic group functionality.
Social Learning – How Social is Your LMS?
The integrated social learning features are great for extended enterprise audiences like channel partners and association members because many times you do not know who they are and the integrations automate the account creation and login process.
Can I Use My Employee LMS as My Extended Enterprise LMS?
A common value proposition you will hear from your employee LMS provider is that there are economies of scale in licensing, maintenance and implementation, so from a cost standpoint, it makes sense to expand the existing LMS to external audiences.
ASTD 2014: Top Learning Technology Take-a-Ways
Gamification is extremely relevant for extended enterprise solutions because the users participate voluntarily and anything you can do to make the experience and content engaging and sticky is key.
LMS Review: Saba LMS – Learning@Work
Saba is the first extended enterprise webinar or whitepaper by one of the large integrated talent management providers in 2014.



















FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL