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4 Ways To Improve Your e-Learning Strategies

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It's easy for our jobs to get in the way of what we do. There's so much work to be cranked out! But as always, work should be about quality, not just quantity...and ultimately it has to be about results. We can't afford to put as much time and money into e-learning as we do, if we don't get a good return on our investment.

ROI is the WHY behind strategy. So your first checkpoint on effective e-learning is: are your courses supporting a well articulated strategy? Unfortunately the usual answer is, at best, only a partial "yes".

Check your own experience: is 90% or more of your sales training just product information? Or is it focused on how to sell the right product to the right cusotmer? Too many times, that's not the case. And while sales training is an easy example, we could be talking about any course that's fat on what and lean on how, why and practice.

This post would be way too long if I were going to cover HOW to incorporate strategy. It's more about WHAT you can be doing strategically, to improve both quality and ROI. But I promise, week-after-week in the coming months we will be talking a lot about the HOW-TO of integrating strategy into your courses.

Let's return specifically to sales training as our example for implementing e-learning strategy, allow me to introduce these additional questions:

  • Do you understand your customer's point of view and are you training from that direction?
  • Are you reusing e-learning content to help customers sell themselves?
  • Is part of your effort working to create word of mouth (WOM) in the marketplace?
  • And finally, does your e-learning support brand preference that leads to repurchasing?

If it never occurred to you that these strategies should be driving your e-learning efforts, that's okay. But when you're measured on the results of your program, as more and more of us are, this might be just the improvement you've been looking for. See you next week!

Please take a look at the work on our site. If you'd like to find out more about what we might do for you, click here.  

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COMMENTS

So, the old saying "Less is more" might really be true when it comes to cranking out e-learning courses. I could see where one really great selling course (where the learner can practice selling) could replace several courses on just product knowledge.

posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 11:48 AM by Helena


I'll give you a yes and a no on "less is more," Helena. And I'll also say that you have some pretty good insight. Between good pre-planning, solid strategic guidelines, and cutting out all the stuff that doesn't really belong in a lot of courses, you really can save some costs. And you certainly increase your ROI.

posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 12:19 PM by Jack Pierce


I have read your blog quite regularly for a few months now and I get what you are saying. But as a lowly training delivery person, how do I get the big shots, the ones with all the decision making power, to pay attention to the ROI and the things that really matter long term. I get it...how can I make them get it?

posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 6:49 PM by Stephanie


Good question, Stephanie! Sometimes it's hard to get a decision maker's attention. But money usually does the trick. A manager with a budget is usually accountable for results, so see if there's a way to measure results in your program. You might want to (click here) to view survey of learners and their managers reported significant sales increases due to our training. It would be hard for a manager to ignore that.

posted @ Tuesday, January 26, 2010 6:29 AM by Jack Pierce


Stephanie, I would add that while dollars made and spent from e-learning are sure to get everybody's attention, it's important to impress that a sound strategy mean better learner engagement. More engaged learners become a better equipped workforce.

posted @ Tuesday, January 26, 2010 8:36 AM by Chris Bintliff


Iam at st john's university of Tanzania so that ineed your material in order to perform well in my studies

posted @ Wednesday, May 05, 2010 12:29 PM by cosmas mwombeki


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