replay event

How RDI Builds Coachable People

speaker
Chris Griffin
Director of Learning and Development

About the speaker(s)

Chris Griffin leads Learning & Development at RDI Corporation, where he’s spent the past eight years transforming training from a siloed function into a company-wide culture of coaching and growth. With a background that began in sales—and a self-described start as the “worst salesperson” on his team—Chris discovered the power of coaching to drive self-reflection and behavior change.

At RDI, he’s helped shape the company’s “Earn. Learn. Live Well.” culture and built development programs that turn entry-level employees into confident leaders. Passionate about critical thinking, self-driven learning, and universal skill building, Chris believes the best measure of success isn’t a KPI—it’s how coachable your people are.

TL;DR: RDI Corporation treats being coachable as the core competency. Metrics matter, but behavior change powers them. Through a coaching‑first L&D model, a Bench Leadership program that normalizes access to executives, a codified culture of Earn, Learn, Live Well, and an in‑house learning stack with 500+ courses, RDI develops people who grow faster and stay longer. AI removes clicks so humans can connect. The mantra tying it together is simple: start now.


Why “coachable” beats “experienced” for durable performance

Most companies start with the scorecard. RDI starts with the person. Yes, the team tracks revenue and cost, but they refuse to coach the number. They coach the behaviors that move the number.

“Metrics only do two things. They measure revenue up or money saved. People are not numbers.”

This is the quiet unlock. When coaching focuses on incremental, repeatable behaviors, adult learners choose the change for themselves. That is how gains compound. Think $10 saved weekly or 10,000 steps daily. Small, consistent behaviors reshape outcomes.

Why it works:

A coach’s origin story that shaped a program

Chris Griffin began as the “anti‑sales” rep. A great coach reframed his lens from quotas to choices. That shift sparked a career in training and later L&D leadership at RDI. The lesson stuck. Coaching is not remedial—it’s how capable people get compounding returns.

“The first time I was asked to think critically about my behaviors, everything clicked.”

Today that experience informs how RDI trains trainers, designs curriculum, and measures impact. Replicate the behavior insight and performance follows.

How RDI screens for the coachable mindset

RDI hires for potential over pedigree. Experience helps, but mindset is the multiplier. The prompt that reveals it is disarmingly simple:

“What do you want to be when you grow up?”

You’ll hear aspirations, not resumes. People who want to learn will learn fast. In a company with many tracks and sites, that openness matters more than perfect fit on day one.

Signals of coachability

Bench Leadership: access creates acceleration

Within the first 90 days, high‑potential agents can join Bench Leadership. It’s supplemental to the role and voluntary by design. The first course centers on networking. Participants must reach out to leaders across departments, including directors and executives.

Why this matters: the best operational ideas often come from the entry level because they live the systems daily. Bench Leadership legitimizes that truth. It turns organic bottom‑up innovation into a managed pipeline.

“Most of our best ideas start at the front line. Bench makes sure they get heard.”

Results arrived faster than planned. During the first cohort, roughly a third of participants moved into expanded roles within three months as leaders spotted talent early.

Bench mechanics to borrow:

Culture you can practice: Earn, Learn, Live Well

RDI codified its philosophy so it shows up in daily decisions.

“Our culture is our people. Our people are our culture.”

This is how a company retains ambitious people in a job‑hopping market. It turns a job into a trajectory.

Building the internal academy, one problem at a time

RDI didn’t buy a learning library and call it done. The team built an in‑house system that solved real operational pain, then kept layering capability. It started with billing and time logs across many sites. It evolved into Core, the internal platform that now aggregates QA, visual heat maps, and learning.

Courses emerged the same way. Solve a live need. Document it. Turn it into a reusable asset. Repeat. Over time those assets became a 500+ course catalog, ranging from how to change a tire to programming fundamentals.

Why it scales:

“Five hundred problems later, we had five hundred courses.”

Where AI fits: remove clicks so humans can connect

RDI rejects the notion that AI should replace the human on the line. The goal is to remove friction so people can talk to people.

Practical uses that deliver value now:

“AI should remove clicks, not replace connection.”

The principle is consistent: Use AI to speed the path to the human moment. Don’t let it replace the moment.

Train the trainer, then invite dissent

RDI staffs 30–50 trainers across sites and seasons. New trainers earn credentials in public speaking and facilitation. Then they get an unusual prompt from leadership:

“Now tell me what I’m wrong about.”

That invitation keeps the program modern. It encourages the next generation to challenge methods, propose changes, and own outcomes. The training department doesn’t end at the classroom door. It’s an expanded universe of leadership development, culture ambassadors, and AI products that reinforce learning in the flow of work.

Start now: the operating principle behind a coachable culture

Chris’s advice to his younger self is also the simplest operating principle for RDI’s L&D.

“The best time to start is now.”

Not next quarter. Not once the playbook is perfect. Start. If it works, scale it. If it doesn’t, change it. That bias for action is how an internal course library grows from one slide deck to hundreds. It’s how a networking assignment turns into a talent engine. It’s how coachable people become capable leaders.


Practical takeaways for L&D leaders

Recommended next step: make coaching the system

If you’re ready to operationalize mentorship and coaching at scale, see how PlusPlus structures programs, measurement, and matching in this use case: Mentorship & Coaching on PlusPlus. It’s a fast path to a coachable culture with compounding returns.