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How to Create Successful Training

Successful training is more than putting a bunch of content on slides & adding multiple choice quiz. This post looks at what makes successful training.

8 min read
Tom Kuhlman blog post

When e-learning content doesn鈥檛 work

I was chatting with someone recently who was complaining that the organization鈥檚 e-learning courses weren鈥檛 successful. After some conversation, it turns out that the courses were mostly information-based courses. The organization did a great job pulling content together, but outside of the content (and some nice looking slides) there wasn鈥檛 much to the courses.

We talked a bit more about what it takes for a training course to be successful.

Successful training defines success

There are different reasons why organizations create e-learning courses. And with that, the measure of success various. Many courses have no performance expectations tied to their e-learning courses. They鈥檙e mostly information that needs to be shared for one reason or another. And often the learner has no control over whether or not to take the course because they鈥檙e mandatory (and usually not relevant or applicable to the learner).

That鈥檚 why I usually sort courses into one of two buckets:聽information or performance. A course without performance expectations has fuzzy metrics and no clear understanding of success.

Articulate Rapid E-Learning Blog - successful training means performance versus information

Another consideration is the before and after gap. The learner (or organization) is at point X and I need to get them to point Y. For this to happen, I need to understand the difference between X and Y and why the learner isn鈥檛 currently at Y.

Why is there a gap? Sometimes the gap is training-related, but often it isn鈥檛. It doesn鈥檛 help to build training to close a gap that isn鈥檛 cause by a deficiency in training. The challenge is getting your client or subject matter expert to see that.

For this post, we鈥檒l assume that the course you鈥檙e building has clearly defined performance goals.

Successful training needs the right content

Successful training focuses on the right content to meet specific goals. We usually have plenty of content. If you have a problem I have some information to help. That鈥檚 good. However, sometimes we have too much information and the gap in training usually isn鈥檛 lack of information, especially in this day and age of instant access to everything.

Articulate Rapid E-Learning Blog - successful training means getting rid of excess content

What are the objectives and what do they need to be able to do to meet them? And what information do they need to know to be able to do what they need to do? That鈥檚 the content you need. Of course, the challenge is聽getting your client to see that they don鈥檛 need all 300 PowerPoint slides in the course.

Successful training provides practice and feedback

Having the right content is part of it, but for people to learn they need to practice applying what they learn in the course to relevant situations. How will they use the learning at work and when?

I see a lot of courses that skip relevant practice activities and use simple multiple choice quizzes. In some cases, simple quiz questions work, especially when they鈥檙e built around a case study. However, they usually don鈥檛 do more than assess the person鈥檚 recall of the content. And for performance-related courses, this is not adequate.

Articulate Rapid E-Learning Blog - successful training means focusing on performance and action

When you do create the activities keep in mind that they can be inside or outside of the course. I鈥檝e worked on projects where we streamlined the presentation of information in an e-learning module and then built practice activities with peer coaches on the floor. In either case, successful training focuses on relevant practice activities.聽Remember: Tell, Show, Do, Practice & Review!

Successful training demonstrates understanding and skills

The ultimate goal of the course shouldn鈥檛 be completion. Instead it鈥檚 learner鈥檚 ability to meet the organization鈥檚 performance goals. The course is just a means to get them to that point. Again, we鈥檙e trying to span that gap from X to Y.

The goal is to get them to demonstrate their understanding & skills related to the training. We do this by focusing on relevant content and getting them to practice applying what they learn to real world situations. Then we provide the feedback that helps them make the appropriate adjustments.

One serious challenge many of us have is that success is define by course completion and an end-of-year report from the learning management system. Of course we want people to complete the course. But a completed course means little if the organization isn鈥檛 meeting its goals. We need changed behavior or improved performance.

Often this is difficult for those of us who build e-learning courses because we don鈥檛 have access to the metrics or level of management to really know if what we build has been effective. In that case here are two pieces of advice:

  • Get a seat at the table. Don鈥檛 sit passively taking e-learning orders. Learn more about the organization鈥檚 objectives and聽be proactive in finding ways to use your skills to help them get there. You鈥檒l be seen as an ally and have some influence on training expectations.
  • Measure what you can. If you don鈥檛 have access to performance metrics, you need to find other聽ways to measure how what you鈥檙e doing contributes to success. You may contribute by lower production costs or asynchronous access to the content (which lowers travel costs and create more flexible learning opportunities). Build relevant practice activities so you can at least state that during the practice activities the learner demonstrated understanding and skills required for success.

Successful training includes successful learners

You can build a great course, but you can鈥檛 control the person taking the course. Their motivation and commitment to the course plays a big role in your success. While you can鈥檛 control their motivation and attitude there are things you can do to frame a perspective of the course that is more beneficial. Here are a few:

  • Create and communicate clear goals and expectations. People like to know what鈥檚 expected, what they鈥檙e going to learn, and how long it鈥檚 going to take.
  • Make the content relevant. If it鈥檚 relevant it鈥檚 more meaningful. Make it real world.
  • Set a tone that is conversational. Many courses are too formal and sterile. The course should seem like it鈥檚 coming from a real person and not the organization鈥檚 legal team.
  • Make the course look nice. The look and feel of the course are important. If it looks bad, it says that the course is a waste of time. If it looks great, then you鈥檝e started to engage them.
  • Get the learners touching the screen. Get them to do things on the screen right away so that they鈥檙e engaged with what鈥檚 going on.
  • Throw them in the pool. Instead of giving a bunch of information, give them a bunch of problems to solve. They can pull the information they need to solve the problem.
  • Get rid of the next button. Building off of the point above, let their decisions control the course navigation rather than the next button.

Obviously there are a lot more things you can do. The key point is that while you can鈥檛 control the person鈥檚 disposition towards the course, you can influence it in how it鈥檚 built and presented to them. Ultimately, the goal is that they can apply what they鈥檙e learning to the real world and demonstrate their understanding and changed behavior.

The e-learning courses we build are only one part of what makes successful training. It also requires crafting objectives tied to real performance expectations and creating courses that are interesting, and engaging, as well as effective.

What advice do you have for someone who wants to create successful e-learning?

8 min read

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