Is E-Learning On The Brink Of An Engagement Revolution?

This piece written by Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy and former Google France CEO, has been originally published on Computer Business Review. To read it in its original form, it’s here!

Coorpacademy CEO and former head of Google France Jean-Marc Tassetto on why companies serious about training need to embrace a new generation of elearning

Elearning can pretend all it likes, but its practitioners and more importantly its customers know it’s in trouble.

The current average completion rate for MOOCs, massive open online courses, averages out at a very low 15 percent, while some studies put the drop-out rates for online at about 70 percent compared with an average of 15 percent for classroom training.

That’s a lot of people not completing what you paid for, and engagement rates are perilously low, as well – our data suggests 2 to 3 percent is not uncommon for a lot of corporate training.

That turns your training budget into an expensive resource-wasting tick-boxing exercise, and also makes any attempt to convince your staff you are serious about helping reskilling them to remain competitive for a near future highly-automated fourth industrial age basically non-credible.

The reason is that we have neglected content in elearning at the expense of the way we deliver and administer it – hence the Learning Management System (LMS), which is great for the HR administrator, and less good for the learner. That’s actually critical, as no learner, no learning. As Benjamin Franklin famously said, “Tell me and I forget, show me and I remember, involve me and I learn.”

This is where traditional elearning falls down. It’s all about the telling and showing, but there is not enough involving. So do we need to jettison the LMS? No, they are a hugely useful L&D workhorse, especially in a large MNC context. But they need to be supplemented by new software tools, recently christened by Gartner as the ‘Learning Experience Platform’ (LEP).

As the analyst firm recommends, anyone who wants their team to learn the new skills they need needs to “place the learner’s experience and the solution’s usability at the top of the priority list for any new learning project. Evaluate emerging LEPs to enhance (or extend) existing LMS platforms”.

What is an LEP?

If an LMS is your training management mainstay, how does an LEP differ and more interestingly how does it secure user engagement? An LEP, according to Gartner, is an additional portal layer that expands (i.e., range of content) and enhances (i.e., personalisation) the learner’s interaction. In contrast, the LEP offers “a better learner experience through improved personalisation via adaptive learning, recommendations and individual learning paths.”

Elearning content needs to be consumer-like, intelligent and integrated into the flow of work.

After all, staff need training that informs them of business trends that are going to affect them now, or will ready them for roles they encounter in the near future, helping to build or hone skills that they may personally lack. That means eLearning needs to be directly connected to your learners’ personal goals and experiences – and even better, linked into the wider company vision to show learners how they are an integral part of the wider story.

LEPs can do this by embedding learning into the learner’s daily activities or the applications on which learners spend the most time. Once again, traditional eLearning is not up to the task here, and we need new content creation models – most likely in the form of a ‘Netflix of Learning’, elearning software that will be “consumer-like, intelligent, and integrated into the flow of work”, as Deloitte has put it.

Less show and tell: more engagement

What will that look like in practice? It looks very like what your workforce is doing in their day-to-day lives. They look for content on their phones, filling in dead time, checking out the Internet to plug any lack of understanding as soon as it is identified. To relax, they check Facebook or play a game for a minute or two.

Think of the next generation of training as very similar – mobile, always available, delivered in engaging, bite-sized bursts that only fills in gaps in your knowledge where they exist. And where appropriate, involving fun and proven engagement techniques like gamification, online competitions between learners – thus ending the isolated elearning experiences that lead to user attrition.

To shake off its current malaise and start being useful again, elearning needs to complement its existing LMS and other training support with the best of a customised LEP approach. That’s one that truly involves the learner, rather than a one-size-fits-all course that simply shows and tells her information that not only fails to engage, but fails much more critically: by not equipping her for a very complex workplace future.

Skills development: it’s time to revamp learning culture

 This piece by Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy and former Google France CEO, has been published in Personnel Today. If you want to read it in its original form, it’s here! 

With PwC recently predicting that artificial intelligence will replace seven million jobs by 2037, employees need to learn new skills to reduce the risk of being displaced by new technology. But Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy and former Google France CEO, warns the UK’s current ways of developing employees’ skills are inadequate.

By now it should come as no surprise that employees in all sectors will soon need to work alongside technologies such as artificial intelligence, with many having to change jobs or reskill as technology develops.

But in order to equip employees with the skills needed to thrive, professionals in learning and development need to create a culture that delivers life-long learning at work. This is imperative for developing the skills organisations require now and in the future, and in attracting and retaining talent.

However, there is one problem – we’re not doing it.

Learning teams provide the resources, tools and time to support skills development – considering the career plans of staff, booking the armies of trainers and making hundreds of hours of relevant content available. But many are missing the needs of the recipient.

Traditional training culture seems to assume learners are passive objects that simply get shuffled in and out of training rooms. Yet for any training to succeed, it’s essential that employees buy into the concept and stop seeing training as something forced upon them.

Engagement is low

 

Corporate learning is currently in a state of crisis. According to research from Towards Maturity, 44% of L&D leaders report that staff are reluctant to engage with online learning. Engagement rates are perilously low – as little as 5-10% − and course completion rates can be as low as 2-3%, research by the University of Graz in Austria has found.

Translated into business reality, this means the small number of people who go on training courses or download company-mandated e-learning modules barely complete what HR and L&D teams think they do.

To stop corporate learning being a poor investment, this culture needs to change. In particular, if we are serious about our commitment to reskilling and upskilling workers to prepare them for the future, we need a way to connect with them as learners and find a better way to deliver what they want.

We also need to rethink the way content is delivered. We have to ask ourselves if it’s realistic to expect people to stop everything they’re doing and sit in front of a trainer with a PowerPoint presentation and a laser pointer for eight solid hours.

Plugging the gap between L&D and staff

 

But change is coming and a new generation of digital tools has emerged to plug the gap between L&D teams and the disengaged learner.

Global analyst Gartner found that “learning experience platforms”, which prioritise learners’ experiences and ease of use, will become invaluable as attitudes to learning change.

Training strategies should consider the reality of how people learn; content should always be available remotely – increasingly via mobile – and at the learner’s convenience in bite-sized chunks, making use of video, gamification and collaboration.

What does that look like in practice? Very much like what employees are already doing in their day-to-day lives. We live on our phones: making dead time waiting for a train or a phone call useful, turning to the internet to plug a lack of understanding, and playing a mobile game for a few minutes to let off a bit of steam.

“Training strategies should consider the reality of how people learn; content should always be available remotely”

Imagine if you delivered your training that way – mobile, always available, in short bursts, and, where appropriate, in a quiz format? Need to know about Blockchain? Employees could either be sent on a two-day residential course once a year, or offered a way to consume five to 10 minutes of useful, tailored content when they want or need it.

This is a new, powerful and flexible way for L&D teams to help learners to reach a certain level of knowledge day by day. These methods, alongside more traditional elements, can help develop a more user-centric learning culture.

Of course face-to-face training to hone certain practical skills is still part of that user-centric model. But a customised learning experience platform approach will mean employees are more likely to be thoroughly engaged in the training they need to keep pace with the changing world of work.

This piece by Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy and former Google France CEO, has been published in Personnel Today. If you want to read it in its original form, it’s here! 

Predicting the future: the reason behind this new course with Brightness

 

When Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press in the 15th century, was he aware of the impacts his brilliant invention would have on the transmission of knowledge among people and on the world’s future? Like Thomas Edison in 1879 with the invention of the electric light bulb: was he aware this invention would completely disrupt our ways of living?

What about today? Some specialists are speaking about “several simultaneous Gutenberg”. The world’s transformation gets faster everyday: the world is changing faster than it’s ever been. The evolution of information technologies brought drastic changes in business models, and new technologies such as blockchain or artificial intelligence with machine learning are making the future more and more uncertain. What will happen tomorrow? What will be the next inventions which will transform the world as we know it (like the printing press, the light bulb or the telephone in their times)? How technologies like robotics, biotechnologies or virtual reality will evolve in the coming years? Brightness comes into play to deal with this situation and try to bring answers to those questions.

The story of Brightness starts in 2009 and take its roots in the creation of TEDxParis, the first European TEDx (independent TED events). TEDxParis’ founder, Michel Lévy-Provençal, partners with Nawal Hamitouche to create Brightness. The agency’s goal is to train leaders and their teams to become actors of the world’s transformation thanks to public speaking training, but also to help them understand the stakes of upcoming innovations thanks to workshops and events. In 2013, Brightness created L’Échappée Volée, the first do-tank which puts innovation at the center of society’s common good. A do-tank, from the expression think-tank, combines intellectual work and field experimentations. For its 5th edition in July 2018, L’Échappée Volée gathered 3,000 people and 40 speakers in the Paris area (la Seine Musicale). For its founder, “L’Échappée Volée is developing talents the same way TED is spreading ideas.

After this trade show where inspiring talks, art performances and innovations were intertwined, Brightness and Coorpacademy are releasing a new course on how to predict the future. Fast-paced transformations and ideas’ evolutions brought organizations to realize that it was riskier to have a wait-and-see approach than to experience new methods and start transformations within themselves. Those same organizations have understood than those transformations won’t happen without giving their managers and their teams training to new stakes and new transformations.

Yes, it is impossible to predict the future… But this course will bring you the keys to anticipate it better. This brand new course – the 4th course co-edited with Brightness – will study upcoming transformations to raise awareness: artificial intelligence, between “weak AI” and “strong AI”, business models’ transformations, mutations of society… This future sounds uncertain and thrilling, and needs to be studied. You can see this course as a continuation of L’Échappée Volée, which “created the framework to discover new ideas and exceptional personalities, and to discover “weak signals” that deserve to be recognized and supported because they contribute to invent a new world” according to Michel Lévy-Provençal, co-founder of Brightness.

This course is soon to be available in English. To discover it in French, it’s here. You’ll find keys to better predict the future.

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