Issue 4 reviews several perspectives of organisational learning touching on the positions organisations take in the current world and how they might adapt to contribute to society in the most effective ways. Since the global context and priorities are changing, and motivations of individuals are also undergoing transformations, companies need to reflect which of their practices and goals need keeping, changing or even dropping altogether and what is their purpose in the world. It is essential for organisations not just to invest in organisational learning (OL) but also think carefully what exactly needs to be learned, since bad, unsustainable and non-inclusive practices can also be learned effectively and actually limit transformational change (Hsu, 2021). There is a call for organisations to reflect on their nature and engage in deeper double-loop learning (Argyris & Schön, 1996) guided by values that contribute to solving global challenges (United Nations, 2015) rather than negatively impacting communities, even if financially successful. Some might call such learning "tripleloop", but understanding and uses of that term differ and the concept might not add more to the potentiality of the original double-loop learning (Tosey, Visser, & Saunders, 2012;Fahrenbach & Kragulj, 2019). But a deep value-driven double-loop learning re-examining the purpose of each organisation in the current society is needed. This article summarises key implications for practitioners from articles included in this Issue 4, starting from double feature by Somaskandan, Arulandu, and Parayitam (2022a, 2022b) exploring individual learning, organisational learning and organisational commitment elements; Barbosa, Carvalho, Choo, Versiani, and Pedron (2022) exploring organisational memory in projectbased organisations (PBOs); Acharya and Mishra (2022) interviewing Prof Eric Tsang on organisational unlearning; Rubin and Ohlsson (2022) investigating interim managers (IMs) impact on OL; Avby (2022) offering pragmatist perspectives on ambidextrous organisations and finishing with a study on US higher education institutions (HEIs) response to COVID19 early pandemic and how it affected their learning. This implications paper is structured around the themes of changing organisational commitment, organisational memory and the balance between different types of learning in times of change.Why do we stay in a company? Current Issue 4 includes a longer contribution split over two articles (Somaskandan et al., 2022a(Somaskandan et al., , 2022b focussing on conceptual development of their model and its empirical testing in the context of South Indian hospitals, respectively. The papers explore the relationship between individual and organisational learning on the one hand and different aspects of organisational commitment on the other. Notably, the authors further explore the nature of TLO 29,4 408