Rethinking Learning and Development Analytics with Databricks Genie
Fractal
Most teams rely on dashboards to understand what is happening in their business. But dashboards are built around fixed questions. As soon as people want to explore beyond those views, things slow down. New filters, new reports, or manual analysis become necessary. This is true across many functions, including learning and development (L&D), where questions change frequently based on programs, audiences, and priorities.
What teams need is a simpler way to interact with their data as questions evolve.
A more conversational approach with Databricks Genie
Databricks Genie enables teams to ask questions in plain language and get answers from governed data in the lakehouse. Instead of navigating complex reports, users can explore data through conversation. Because Genie works on curated datasets and shared definitions, answers remain accurate and consistent. Users can ask follow‑up questions, refine their understanding, and stay within context without starting over.
This moves analytics from static reporting to active exploration.
Applying this to learning and development analytics
L&D teams deal with constant questions about engagement, completion, and effectiveness. Traditional reports help track activity, but they struggle to support deeper exploration. This solution applies conversational analytics to L&D data, bringing together learner activity, course metadata, and program metrics in one place.
It allows L&D teams to move faster from insight to action without relying on constant report updates.
How Databricks Genie is used in this solution
Genie acts as the primary way L&D teams explore their data. Users ask natural language questions about learner participation, course completion trends, or changes over time. When an answer raises another question, they continue the conversation instead of switching tools or creating a new report.
Genie works on governed datasets registered in Unity Catalog, so responses align with approved metrics and definitions. It can also be used alongside dashboards. Teams review existing views and then ask follow‑up questions to understand drivers behind changes or compare patterns across groups. This makes analysis more flexible and supports real discussions during reviews and planning sessions.
This approach works well for L&D teams that deal with frequent questions and evolving programs. It is especially useful when teams want flexibility without adding technical complexity or analyst dependency. If you want to learn more about our solutions built on Genie, feel free to contact us.
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