
Jay Cross helps people work smarter. And live smarter. Jay is the Johnny Appleseed of informal learning. He wrote the book on it. He was the first person to use the term eLearning on the web. He has challenged conventional wisdom about how adults learn since designing the first business degree program offered by the University of Phoenix.
A champion of informal learning and systems thinking, Jay's calling is to help people improve their satisfaction in life and performance on the job (they're not unrelated). His philosophies on the power of informal learning and net-work have fundamentally changed the world of learning in organizations. More

Working Smarter Jay is currently collecting stories for a new book, this one the business case for injecting what we know about learning into how managers create value. Work and learning are becoming so intertwined you can't tell one from the other. Working smarter -- collaboratively -- is the key to sustainability and renewal.
Internet Time Alliance
Jay works in concert with the Internet Time Alliance, a multidisciplinary think tank. The Alliance develops learning architectures that reduce time-to-performance, chop overhead, and increase innovation.

The Berkeley Diet
Jay's new food blog. Someday, it will morph into a best-selling diet book. Still in alpha now.
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