the-learningcoach.com
How successful we are at anything in life will be determined by how well we learn to do that thing. Most people never figure this out. Gregg teaches you how.
Learning how to learn is, indeed, the most powerful success tool available to any person, team, or organization.
The Core Thesis
Talent is not a fixed quantity. It is the result of a specific, learnable process that most people never discover. Cognitive and behavioral neuroscience now shows us exactly how the brain builds skill — and it's very different from how most people train, practice, and develop.
Gregg Goodhart has spent over three decades studying this gap. He translates the research into practical, immediately usable frameworks that transform how individuals and teams acquire skill, retain knowledge, and perform under pressure.
In a world where the shelf life of skills is shrinking, the ability to learn — fast, deeply, and durably — is the only sustainable competitive advantage. Gregg shows teams how to build it.
Most corporate training produces the illusion of learning — short-term performance that evaporates within weeks. Neuroscience reveals why, and what actually creates durable skill change.
Doing something repeatedly is not the same as learning it. The specific conditions required for genuine skill acquisition are well-documented — and almost universally ignored in professional development.
Self-regulation, focus, and the ability to sustain effortful attention are trainable capacities. Leaders who develop these in themselves — and cultivate them in teams — consistently outperform those who don't.
Decades of research in cognitive and behavioral neuroscience have given us a precise picture of how skill is encoded in the brain — through myelination, contextual interference, desirable difficulty, and the prefrontal mechanisms of executive control.
Gregg translates this research into frameworks that are immediately usable. Not theory. Not inspiration. A clear map of how learning actually works — and how to engineer your environment to produce it.
The game slows down when the brain speeds up. Brain speed is built through a specific process now described in cognitive and behavioral neuroscience — and it is very different from the way most people go about developing skill.
— Gregg Goodhart, The Learning Coach
The organizations that will dominate the next decade are not the ones with the biggest budgets — they're the ones that learn fastest. Gregg works with corporate teams, leaders, and organizations to build genuine learning cultures grounded in neuroscience, not wishful thinking.
Whether you're onboarding new talent, upskilling a department, or trying to build leaders who can actually adapt — the frameworks are the same. And they work.
Athletic excellence today happens above the neck more than below it. The physical ceiling separating elite athletes from everyone else is far lower than most coaches believe. What separates the great from the merely good is the quality of their learning — and how fast they can make their brains process and respond.
Jerry Rice was drafted 16th in the first round. Fifteen teams with professional scouts missed one of the greatest talents in NFL history — because his talent wasn't visible in the conventional places. It was in how he learned, how he practiced, and how relentlessly he developed the edges most athletes never think about.
Most musicians and artists practice the wrong way — not because they're lazy, but because no one has ever shown them what right looks like. "Play it again" is not a practice method. It is wishful repetition. The neuroscience of skill acquisition tells us exactly what conditions are required for the brain to actually encode a skill — and almost no one practices this way.
Gregg has worked with conservatories, university music schools, and pre-college programs across the country. Students who worked with him have universally reported the same thing: their plateaus broke faster than they thought possible.
School administrators already know that teacher quality is the single biggest driver of student outcomes. What most don't know is that teacher quality is largely a function of how well teachers learn — and that learning, like any other skill, can be systematically improved.
Gregg has presented at institutions ranging from the Orange County Department of Education to the American String Teachers Association national convention. He has worked with principals, department chairs, and entire teaching staffs. The feedback is consistent: this is the most immediately actionable professional development they have received.
Gregg Goodhart has been teaching for over 30 years. For 13 of those years he chaired and developed a department at one of the most prestigious high schools in the country. In his relentless pursuit of better results for his students, he found his answers not in conventional pedagogy — but in cognitive and behavioral neuroscience.
What he discovered changed everything. The way the brain learns best is profoundly different from the way most people practice and teach. A small number of people figure this out intuitively. Everyone else assumes the gap is talent.
He began applying these principles in classrooms, music studios, and athletic programs — and the results were consistent and dramatic. Students who had been stuck for years broke through in weeks. Teachers who had plateaued found new capacity. Athletes and performers discovered edges they didn't know existed.
You are a dynamic conduit between research and practice, and that is a vital link. The people I admire most at IU have each mentioned how much they loved your talk and are using your ideas.
Dr. Brenda Brenner
Executive Associate Dean, Chair of Music Education
Indiana University at Bloomington
You have provided one of the most beneficial presentations to my teachers I think they have attended since I began working with the school. It's not often when you meet someone who understands time maximization properly to achieve positive results.
Principal Christian Ahanger
Academy of Excellence South Campus
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Gregg brings a wealth of knowledge and understanding to the discussion of learning, accurately conveying the close connections among mindset, willpower, habit formation, and deliberate practice.
Kevin Poston
St. John's Lutheran School
Lannon, Wisconsin
Truly phenomenal. He coached me on everything from habit development and optimal practice structure, to expectations and mindset — it totally super-charged my training.
Dr. Evan Szu, PhD
Science Education
Stanford University
What a fantastic presentation at IU. There's so much cheap inspiration out there — this was the real kind. Seeing such a clear and detailed road map of how to effectively coach our brains gave me and will give my students a feeling of being enabled.
Ian Snyder
Violin Instructor & Chamber Music Lecturer
University of Minnesota
His unique application of neuroscience in performance puts him at the forefront of his field. Based on my knowledge and experience, I believe Mr. Gregg Goodhart to be an educator and lecturer of extraordinary ability.
Russ De Angelo
Executive Director
La Guitarra California Festival
Every engagement is grounded in the same science. The application is customized to your audience, context, and goals. Pre-built and fully customized programs available.
A compelling, research-grounded presentation on how learning actually works — and what your organization can do immediately to improve it. Designed for conferences, all-hands meetings, leadership retreats, and professional development days. Highly customizable for any industry.
Inquire →Interactive, hands-on workshops that move beyond inspiration into implementation. Participants leave with concrete frameworks they can apply immediately. Available as half-day, full-day, or multi-day programs. Customized to your team's specific skill development challenges.
Inquire →One-on-one or small group coaching for executives and leaders who want to develop their own learning capacity — and build it in their teams. Session-by-session, highly personalized. Remote or in-person available.
Inquire →A structured evaluation of how your organization currently develops skill — and a detailed roadmap for closing the gap between your training investment and actual performance outcomes. Based on decades of applied learning science.
Inquire →Selected Institutions & Organizations
The Most Powerful Success Tool
Every meaningful outcome in your organization depends on how well your people can learn and adapt. Let's have a conversation about what that could look like for yours.