Taking your first steps with elearning? Rob Hubbard gives some advice on where it works well - and when you should consider other training methods.
My two-year-old son loves 'Bob The Builder': the cartoon handyman who can turn his hand to anything. He has a positive 'can-do' attitude and attacks each job with great gusto. As Bob will tell you, the key to doing a job well is choosing the right tool.
In the training industry many of us are like Bob. Every project or training need is different. We often have limited time and resources, there are many pressures upon us, and we need to choose the best tool or training method to get the job done.
When times are tough and budgets are tight, it is tempting to look to elearning as a panacea for meeting training requirements. The economies of scale apply - the cost of training 10,000 people is virtually the same as 100. It is flexible, fast to deliver, and it can be very quick to build.
Many organisations are now considering building their own elearning content in-house, using rapid elearning authoring tools, or outsourcing content development to external providers. These can both be very effective approaches for many training needs.
However, elearning is not a fix-all solution. It is simply another tool in the trainer's toolbox. So how do you know if elearning is the right tool for the job? There are no hard-and-fast rules. However, here are some guidelines that will help you decide. It works well when:
You should consider other training methods when:
Remember, elearning does not have to be a structured course that people work through. It could be a blend of electronic training methods - for example, a podcast, an online quiz, a video clip, an intranet page, documents, interactive scenarios, SMS messages or a virtual classroom session. This further array of tools should be selected on a project-by-project basis. We'll look at how to utilise this 'blended' approach in another article.
As a producer of bespoke elearning you may be wondering why I'm encouraging you to consider other training methods. The answer is that when you take your first steps with elearning I want you to get it right first time. With the right knowledge at the outset you will have a much greater chance of making elearning a success within your organisation.
Rob Hubbard is an elearning architect and founder of LearningAge Solutions, which offers consultancy, design, content development and project management services in elearning and blended learning. For more information, visit: www.learningagesolutions.com