(CNN) It's a nation made up of only 5.2 million people , but as far as the Winter Olympics goes Norway is on top of the world.

Norway has dominated not only PyeongChang 2018, but has also won more medals than any other nation since the first Winter Olympics in 1924 -- with 330 in total according to data compiled by Sports Reference

But that's not all. Norway won a staggering 39 medals -- 14 of those being gold in Pyeongchang -- as it topped the overall medal table.

That's 10 medals more than Canada overall and eight clear of Germany, which also has 14 golds to sit second in the medal table. Team USA is 16 medals behind Norway.

Norway's latest medal, Marit Bjoergen's gold in cross-country skiing, moved its tally two clear of USA's record of 37 medals set at Vancouver in 2010. It is also equaled Canada's mark of 14 golds, also set at Vancouver.

"I knew that if we won a medal today we would make history for Norway," said Leif Kristian Nestvold-Haugen, part of the Norway skiing team.

"Even underneath the suit I get goosebumps talking about it, that the Alpine team could get that 38th medal."

Norway fans pose at the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games.

Born with skis on their feet?

With Norway's population roughly the same size as the US city of Atlanta, the Scandinavian country has has one great advantage over its Olympic rivals -- it has almost unlimited access to snow with 30,000 kilometers of marked trails

Team Norway's Johannes Høsflot Klæbo -- who has won three gold medals at these Games -- told CNN Sport that skiing is a part of Norwegians' lives.

"We always say you are born with your skis on," said the 21-year-old cross-country skier. "On Sundays everyone goes into the woods with their skis on ... everyone wants to do it."

Team Norway's Johannes Høsflot Klæbo has won three gold medals.

Winning by focusing on not winning

However, developing talent is never an easy process -- often children can be pressured by coaches and parents and sometimes fail to realize their early promise.

In Norway, children are encouraged to join local sport clubs to help with their social development but there's strict rules which prevents anyone from keeping score -- no one can be ranked first to last until they turn 13.

"We want them to be in sports because they want to be," Tore Øvrebø, head of the Norwegian team, explained to CNN Sport. The focus is on other aspects, he says, not the competitive side.

"Instead (of winning) they want to have fun and they want to develop not only as athletes but as social people."

He says the Nordic nation's focus is to let children create and navigate their own path.

"The point is to ask what is in a sport for kids," he said. "We have a responsibility to give kids a nice sport to develop in so we're thinking the other way around -- not, 'OK, we need so many kids to make a national team.'"

Team Norway celebrate after the men's team pursuit speed skating final.

Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg pointed out that the country's sporting infrastructure has also played its part in Norway's Winter Olympic success.

"I think we are very good at organizing events early on. You don't get a fully fledged downhill skier or cross country skier in a short while. It starts when you're young.

"There's a large focus on sports and athletics among young people (in Norway) and some of them get very good because they're living close to downhill ski arenas or have parents who will drive them a long way to get to training."

Strategic Competing?

Gold medallists Norway's Daniel Andre Tande, Andreas Stjernen, Johann Andre Forfang and Robert Johansson celebrate during the victory ceremony in the men's large hill team ski jumping final round.

At PyeongChang 2018, Norway has dominated cross-country skiing and won medals in alpine skiing, biathlon, curling, freestyle skiing, ski jumping and speed skating.

Many Team Norway athletes have also competed in more than just one event.

While that can be seen as a strategic way of competing -- given it arguably increases the country's chances of winning more medals -- Øvrebø says that's more of a happy coincidence.

"They're the most popular sports in Norway," he explained. "We didn't have to do that strategically -- we just kept on and professionalized the sports that we were already in love with. So that makes the recruitment process quite easy.

"It's an organic system because we're doing what we like to do and we're doing it well."

Of the athletes who competed in Korea, 16 of them have won more than one medal.

Norwegian skier, Marit Bjoergen, is among them -- and now holds the title of most decorated Winter Olympian of all time -- after earning golds in the ladies' 4 x 5km relay and women's cross-country 30-km mass start, silver in the 15km skiathlon, and bronze in both the 10km freestyle and team ski sprint.

By applying her skills in more than one event, she was able to help secure the Nordic country five medals in total.

Norway's gold medallists Ingvild Flugstad Oestberg, Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen, Ragnhild Haga and Marit Bjeorgen pose on the podium after the cross country women's 4x5km relay at the Pyeongchang.

Bjoergen's success in the women's cross-country 30-km mass start increased her Olympic medal haul to eight golds and 15 in total -- the most of any Winter Olympian in history.

Her achievements mean the country now has the top three most decorated Winter Olympians of all time -- just behind Bjoergen's 15 medals is biathlete Ole Einar Bjoerndalen with 13, and cross-country skier Bjorn Daehlie with 12.

All of them competed in sports which had multiple events and relays.

Investment

Despite being the current leader in Winter Olympic medals, there have been times when Norway suffered dismal results -- notably at the Calgary 1988 Winter Olympics. Here, it failed to win even one gold.

That's when Norway's sporting body restructured and before hosting the Winter Games in Lillehammer in 1994, it established a national elite sports center -- the Olympiatoppen -- to train and develop Norway's best athletes.

"When there was a crisis something had to happen," Øvrebø explained. "The sporting systems in the rest of the world were more and more professionalized and we didn't do the same in Norway."

He said there was a huge change after the center was set up.

"It was a new way of thinking for sports. (Federation) presidents were not that important any more and we wanted to have professional people working directly with high performance."

Since 1994, the establishment of Olympiatoppen has overseen 20 years of significant improvement -- most particularly in cross-country skiing.

Martin Johnsrud Sundby of Norway (1-1) and Marcus Hellner of Sweden (16-1) compete during the Cross Country Men's Team Sprint Free Final.

Funding for the Olympatoppen has also increased exponentially.

In 1990, it had a budget of $2.4 million -- with 73 per cent of its expenditure going towards support for athletes and teams. By 2001, the budget had increased to $12.3 million and now it's over $24.2 million.

While funding helps, Øvrebø also says Norway's high standard of living also plays a part in creating world-class athletes, notably in offering free healthcare and education. According to the World Economic Forum, Norway "is a star performer across almost every one of the OECD's indicators both for material conditions and quality of life."

"That makes people quite well off at the beginning," adds Øvrebø. "It means they can follow their interests -- it's a very humanistic approach."

As a result, he says, many kids are choosing to play sport. "That makes the population that we can recruit athletes from quite high -- we have all these people doing sport and the possibility to do it because they're healthy and are being taken care of."

Team Norway celebrate winning gold during the victory ceremony on the podium during the men's 4x10kms classic freestyle cross country relay.

As the Winter Olympics come to an end, cross-country skier Klæbo said Team Norway had built strong relationships among the athletes who went to Pyeongchang.

"It's quite cool to be a part of it because everyone inspires everyone," he said. "Back at the hotel we are friends hanging around and just trying to compete with each other and having fun."

Now, the world must brace itself for what Norway might do at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.