The two-pager on Coorpacademy in the latest special issue of Capital Magazine

“Coorpacademy: the Netflix of knowledge. Say goodbye to boring training! This Franco-Swiss startup is revolutionizing corporate training by putting the user back at the center of a collaborative and playful experience.”

This is how the article from Benjamin Janssens starts in the latest special issue of Capital Magazine. By interviewing Frédérick Bénichou, co-founder of Coorpacademy, he showcases the stand-out factors of the platform, from ‘simplexity’ to the soft skills catalogue, from the ludic and addictive features to the engaging and individualized learning paths.

Discover this article (translated from French):

“When La Redoute definitely went from paper catalogue to focus solely on digital, they had to train their employees on digital culture and tools and on the latest trends of e-commerce. And what better way to do this than through proposing… online training! The retailer chose Coorpacademy to conceive a digital learning branded platform with tailored content meeting their needs. In 6 months, 800 employees were connected on the platform and – most notably – 88% of started courses got completed. Way faster and more efficient than the old ways – when face-to-face training were needed for each and everyone of the employees. 

Moreover, traditional training usually focus on developing ‘hard skills’, technical skills, at the expense of ‘soft skills’, those more human and cross-sectional skills – the ones robots can’t acquire – which are more and more sought after by employers and recruiters. It is with the idea to fill that void that Jean-Marc Tassetto, Arnauld Mitre and Frédérick Bénichou, two former Google executives and one serial web entrepreneur, launched Coorpacademy in 2013. This Franco-Swiss startup, which won a lot of awards since then, started to put together a disruptive pedagogical method  based on soft skills assimilation. The concept? ‘Simplexity’. Behind this portmanteau word is a very easy-to-use, ludic and engaging user interface, but giving access to targeted and relevant content. 

“We’ve conceived a flexible tool which adapts to the user: our content pieces can be consumed everywhere at any time, in 20 minutes on average, or even in 5 minutes thanks to microlearning”, Frédérick Bénichou, one of the co-founders, says. 

More specifically, how does it work? “We use the flipped pedagogy. The learner watches a 2 minute video or answers questions, and it is only just after that the learner will access to the pedagogical content. This content allows learners to either correct themselves, or go further, and the whole thing infuses a new dynamic to the learning process.

The success amongst employees can also be explained by the playful aspect of the platform: we score points at each levels, progressively. Numbers prove that offering gaming elements creates high engagement rates and a healthy competition between coworkers. “For a company, it is also a good way to find hidden talents within the company, people that will potentially turn very helpful for the company”, Frédérick Bénichou adds. At Pernod Ricard for example, the employee who had the best score on digital culture was a storekeeper in Cognac; his knowledge on the topic and the fact that his bosses realized this brought him to coach the Chief Marketing Officer.” While having fun, one develops his digital culture and his emotional intelligence with the possibility to challenge his peers or to be helped and coached by another learner within his organization. 

So what’s the link with Netflix? Training modules, short and playful videos are all accessible anytime from any support (smartphone, tablet, computer). And thanks to machine learning, played content pieces help to recommend others – the startup created 27 distinct learners’ profiles. 

After having tried at the beginning to target individuals, Coorpacademy revised its business model since then and only works in B2B for large accounts (Crédit agricole, Renault, Auchan, L’Oréal, Engie, Michelin…). Companies pay a subscription which allow their employees to access the training catalogue. Rates are decreasing depending on the number of users: from 9,90 euros a month for less than 100 employees to less than 7,90 euros from 300 employees, without any fixed-term appointment. It can be specific training content made for the company or the more general catalogue with soft skills oriented training – or a mix of both.  

Coorpacademy recently implemented an internal control training program for Pernod Ricard, or a platform to make ‘La vie en bleu’ – a program around healthy good, health and wellbeing – known to all 350 000 employees at the Auchan Retail group. For soft skills training that are proposed to all companies, Coorpacademy is relying on a network of more than 40 partners and experts, including Capital and Management magazines, but also Dunod, Bescherelle, Video Arts, IBM. The website offers more than 1,000 videos and 8,000 questions (digital culture, management and leadership, future of work…) and covers more than 90% of soft skills identified by the World Economic Forum. A 10 million euros fundraising in 2016 allowed Coorpacademy to go abroad, by translating the training content in English.”

Benjamin Janssens

HR leaders: what’s coming in the next 10 years? Key insights from Gartner Reimagine HR London 2019

 

At the Park Plaza London on September 18-19th, 500+ HR professionals gathered during the Gartner ReimagineHR 2-day event around 7 tracks reimagining the future of HR. HR Executives from all across Europe had the chance to attend 28 Gartner-led, insight-driven presentations.

Insightful keynotes: what’s next in the future of work and HR?

Brian Kropp, GVP and Chief of HR Research Gartner, did an opening keynote on ‘How HR Can Reimagine Work to Drive Performance.’ He said: ‘While important, things like artificial intelligence and automation are only part of the future of work story. Along with these conspicuous shifts comes a number of underlying trends — like rising transparency, or new work habits — with the potential to fundamentally change how work gets done.’

He did advise HR leaders to shift the focus on more important and new questions.

For Ethics, ‘How do we ethically use the data we collect?’ In the field of Skills, ‘How do we develop all skills as AI eliminates learning opportunities?’ When it comes to Information, ‘How do we meet employees’ expectations for information transparency?’ In the Managerial space, ‘How is technology changing what it means to be a manager?’ and – in terms of Jobs – ‘How can we use AI to increase access to jobs?’

Thought-provoking questions, such as the one on Skills. We realize that facing the rise of AI, it is vital to ‘learn how to learn’, especially with soft skills. As Alvin Toffler said, ‘the illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.’

‘Building critical skills and competencies is a top priority for 73% of CHROs. Every organization leverages on-the-job training for employee learning and development,’ said Gartner expert Brian Kropp. ‘Learning in the flow of work’ – as Josh Bersin puts it –  is also becoming critical. We need to keep in mind that 85% of the jobs of 2030 haven’t been invented yet. We’ve entered into an era of lifelong learning. Employees have to learn ‘in the moment’, ‘in the flow of work’. The ability to gain new knowledge, to learn how to learn, is becoming more valuable than the knowledge itself.

This feeling was also shared by HR leaders present at the event; as one of the top HR executive of a big pharmaceutical company said during a discussion at Coorpacademy’s booth: ‘We have looked deeply into skills and learning to realize that most of our managers and leaders were very well equipped for a world that stopped existing about 10 years ago.’ 

As the pace of business and automation speeds up, demand for employees to be able to think outside of the box, to learn how to learn the next skill sets, the ones needed in 10 years and not 10 years ago is moving to the foreground!

How to upskill and reskill a whole nation?

On September 19th, Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, and Stéphan Bruno, Head of Human Resources for the Government of the Principality of Monaco, were presenting their keynote ‘The Big Bet on Learners’ Engagement’ – taking the business case of the Principality of Monaco as an example in front of 50+ HR leaders.

‘We started 6 years ago, not sure about what to do but certain we wanted to put the users back at the center of the learning process. As the only certainty about the jobs of tomorrow is uncertainty, it was the right bet and the right path to follow,’ said Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy.

Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, speaking about the big bet on learners' engagement

Stéphan Bruno showcased the learning success story of the Principality of Monaco: ‘If we want to change the culture within our government, we need to offer an experience in digital tools that’s as good as what the GAFA can offer. We want to transform into a learning organization, and Coorpacademy offers us a unique way to do that while upskilling our people’, said Stéphan on how to upskill and reskill a country.

How to upskill and reskill a whole nation? ‘As head of HR I envision to create a learning culture, providing the opportunity for everyone to learn what matters most for our country’s future, whilst making them owners of their personal development. Consider who they are and not only what they do!’ Stéphan Bruno concluded. 

Stéphan Bruno presenting the learning success story of the Principality of Monaco

A country, like any organization, needs to keep one step ahead. The public services have to be modernized and digitized for all citizens, the country needs to keep on attracting investors and companies while facing a stiff and international competition. By relieving Monaco from its territorial constraints, digital technology is an opportunity to virtually ‘extend’ the country and generate a new development cycle; in the end, to keep that step ahead. 

This is what Coorpacademy is helping the Government of the Principality of Monaco to do with its user-centric Learning Experience Platform providing hyper-individualization of learning paths, to any of the 3,600 civil servants in Monaco. Helping the country to become a learning organization and prepare it to the future of HR… happening now!

Food for thoughts.

Gartner expert De’Onn Griffin outlined in this article 6 ideas about the future direction of the workplace and how organizations can prepare for it

One of the 6 ways the workplace will change in the next 10 years is that constant upskilling and digital dexterity will outweigh tenure and experience

She says: “In today’s digital economy, the demand for new ideas, new information and new business models that continually expand, combine and shift into new ventures and new businesses will increase. Employees must consistently refresh their digital dexterity to meet these needs.” “By 2028, the most high-value work will be cognitive in nature. Employees will have to apply creativity, critical thinking and constant digital upskilling to solve complex problems.”

Did you know that you could find in the Coorpacademy course catalogue 189 courses on digital culture, 67 on digital dexterity, 36 on creativity, 36 on complex problem solving and 17 on critical thinking? And counting!

 

A new heart, infinite lives, to love learning a hundredfold!

 

This summer, our product team worked hard to give you two new features on the Coorpacademy platform. Here’s a short article to unveil them to you!

A new heart to love learning.

Cats have 7 (or 9), you had 3 to complete a course chapter on the Coorpacademy platform. Do you know what we are talking about? Lives, of course.

As a reminder, if you give a wrong answer, you lose a life. Once you’ve lost all 3 lives, you have 2 choices: you can watch the course video to win back one life, or you can start the chapter again. But that was before!

You have now 4 lives for each level, all the time, on Coorpacademy.

Why did we chose to do this?

We’ve observed that the success rate could increase by 50% on a course with one more life! Less stress, more time to focus on answering properly, on “Key Learning Factors” or on “Did you know?”. In the end, bigger chances to succeed in a course and bigger ones to love learning.

4 lives instead of 3 in order to improve, one more chance to answer rightly

Now that you love learning (even more that before), would you have 5 minutes?

5 minutes, it’s the time it takes to water your plants, to cook pasta or to take a shower. It’s now also the time you need to learn or to strengthen your knowledge on a topic. Because our agendas are fully booked, we’ve created 5′ Learning.

The way it works? It’s training, but in very short 5 minute sessions.

It allows you to learn always at the right time, before a meeting, when you really need to acquire some knowledge or – very simply – when you have a little time to satisfy your desire to learn.

Most importantly! There’s no life counting in 5′ Learning courses.

 

What does this mean?

You’ll never be stopped while doing a course, whatever the answers you give, right or wrong. You’ll then have time to focus on the correction of the questions you answered wrongly. Always keeping in mind that the goal is to revise, to learn and to memorize, at your pace.

Would you like a concrete example?

Franck is Digital Marketing Specialist in his company and he knows everything about digital campaigns. When he shows up at the office, he receives a meeting invitation from the SEO (Search Engine Optimization) Specialist, scheduled in 30 minutes, on the Google Ads “Quality Score” topic.

He freaks out a bit, because he doesn’t remember what it is and is afraid to ask someone. He takes his mobile phone, logs in into his company’s Coorpacademy Digital Learning Platform and selects the chapter “Quality Score: Your Adwords Campaign Currency” from  the course “Search”.

4 questions, a 2 minute course video: in 5 minutes, Franck revised the key points of the Quality Score, without pressure because there’s no life tally, and is fully ready for his meeting.

Revise in 5 minutes on the Quality Score

Infinity of lives in 5′ Learning, zero pressure for a maximum of learning benefits. 

4 questions, 1 video, an infinity of lives with 5' Learning

 

The Principality of Monaco success digital learning story will be presented at Gartner ReimagineHR London 2019!

 

Reimagining the Future of Work. 

 

At the Park Plaza London on September 18-19th, 500+ HR professionals will gather during this 2-day event around 7 tracks reimagining the future of HR and HR Executives from all across Europe will have the chance to attend 28 Gartner-led, insight-driven presentations.

Brian Kropp, GVP and Chief of HR Research Gartner, will do the opening keynote on “How HR Can Reimagine Work to Drive Performance.”

He says: “While important, things like artificial intelligence and automation are only part of the future of work story. Along with these conspicuous shifts comes a number of underlying trends — like rising transparency, or new work habits — with the potential to fundamentally change how work gets done.”

Brian will highlight the fundamental HR stakes facing the rise of AI and automation while focusing on the opportunities created by these shifts – opportunities most HR executives are usually unaware of.

During this event, Top HR trends and challenges will be explored in order to reimagine the future of work, through keynotes, one-to-one meetings and roundtables.

  1. Digital business transformation, innovation, the rise of artificial intelligence… These issues are at organizations’ heart talent issues and companies will only succeed at addressing them if they have the right people with the right support. 
  2. We are in a period where we have unemployment rates for critical roles that are as low as 1% in some cases. For many roles, employers can’t find enough candidates. 
  3. Artificial intelligence, the gig worker, candidate and employee transparency, analytics carry a potential to fundamentally reshape the HR function. 
  4. There is more visibility than ever before – through channels like Glassdoor and Indeed, but also through internal communication tools – into things like compensation, manager quality, and what it’s like in general to work at an organization. 
  5. Talent management issues have hit the agenda of the C-Suite and the boardroom in ways they haven’t historically – through issues like workplace harassment and discrimination, and also through deeper attention from the investor community to the impact of talent management on business performance.

Having the right people with the right set of skills to thrive in this complex new environment.

 

Digital business transformation, AI or automation are creating opportunities. But organizations will manage to thrive in this future only if they have the right people with the right set of skills. Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, was saying in his latest article, published in Finance Derivative: “As a result of the kind of seismic drivers of employment change taking place in all industries […], it is becoming more imperative that we all manage our long-term employability. Businesses, public institutions, large and small organizations – everyone’s at risk – that don’t equip their workforces with the tools to help will not be able to compete – shrinking, or even disappearing, as disruptive new players better prepared to help their teams develop the skills they need will take their place.”

A success Learning story. 

The Monaco Digital Academy: a Learning Success Story

That is why the Government of the Principality of Monaco has confirmed Coorpacademy as its new digital training platform to underpin Monaco’s strategic transformation programme, Extended Monaco – a plan to digitise all of its public sector and economy.

In this context, the Principality’s government is launching a digital university, the Monaco Digital Academy, with a detailed training syllabus for its 3,600 public servants and agents in order to help them transition successfully to new way of working and processes.

Stéphan Bruno, Head of Human Resources for the Government of the Principality of Monaco, and Jean-Marc Tassetto, CEO of Coorpacademy, will present the project to the audience during a keynote on September 19th à 11:30, under the theme of Hyper-individualized Learning. 

Stéphan Bruno explained the choice of Coorpacademy: “We wanted to create a training offer for our public service teams that is accessible, fun and diversified, and not limited to job skills. The user-centric learning experience offered by the Coorpacademy platform and the depth of its catalogue of courses elaborated with experts offered what we were looking for.”

“We are proud to have been selected as a core training supplier for this strategic digital plan that will impact all Monaco’s public policies,” adds Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy. “The importance of training in the strategy of the Principality’s government and leaders demonstrates the ambition of this plan and their global understanding of the issue of digital transformation.”

Discover insights about this training project.

If you’re in London on September 18-19th, comme meet the Coorpacademy Team!

“Hyper-individualized learning – How are the best companies and organisations in the world reskilling at scale their entire workforce for the jobs of tomorrow”, on Thursday 19th September at 11.30 – 12.00, Park Plaza London.

We’re looking forward to seeing you at this event!

Understanding cryptocurrencies with Challenges and Coorpacademy

 

From the 5th to the 11th September 2019, Challenges edited a special report on new currencies and the bet of Facebook with libra.

These pieces of news didn’t go unnoticed: Facebook launched its new cryptocurrency, libra. China is about to launch its own national cryptocurrency. Even the Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao will launch his own.

Cryptocurrencies are proliferating: from bitcoin to monero, there are now several thousand of them, and all those shifts might be hard to understand or follow. Is bitcoin only an object of unbridled speculation? Where can cryptocurrencies be acquired? What are their possible contributions to the corporate world?

Challenges experts answered all these questions – and many more – in this course co-edited with Coorpacademy.

Understanding cryptocurrencies: the new course co-edited with Challenges and Coorpacademy

The famous French economic magazine also gave our course a one-pager in their special report. Bitcoin, ripple, ethereum or monero won’t have any secrets for you anymore!

Stop Violence Against Women: Make.org and Coorpacademy are working on the Action Plan.

 

Coorpacademy is proud to work with the CivicTech Make.org on one of the eight actions of the “Stop Violence Against Woman” Civil Action Plan.

Coorpacademy is putting its digital expertise to the service of a training plan for professionals – especially policemen – in charge of helping women that have been victim to violence.

Discover the Action Plan (in French).

The Skills Gap And What It Means For The 21st Century Financial Services Worker – an article from Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, in Finance Derivative

 

Coorpacademy’s Jean-Marc Tassetto discusses the importance of cultivating soft skills and how financial services firms like BNP Paribas are leading the way in upskilling and reskilling their employees.

This article was originally published in Finance Derivative, a global financial and business analysis magazine, published by FM.Publishing. It is a yearly print and online magazine providing broad coverage and analysis of the financial industry, international business and the global economy. Finance Derivative brings the latest News & Analysis from the finance world and corporate excellence. The magazine targets an audience of finance professionals, and corporate and private investors.

You can find the original article here!

Here are some extracts of the article:

“More and more experts tell us that soft skills in particular will end up in greater demand, in contrast to skills more reliant on fact-retention. Soft skills-based occupations may account for two-thirds of all jobs by 2030, according to Deloitte, while the Manpower 2018 Talent Shortage Survey underlines how transferable soft skills are gaining greater importance – with more than half of employers saying communication skills, both written and verbal, are their most valued employee attributes, followed by collaboration and problem solving.

The World Economic Forum’s recent Future of Jobs study says creativity is one of the top three skills workers will need and while robots may help us get to where we want faster, they cannot as yet be as creative as homo sapiens.”

[…]

“The financial services sector is not exempt from these trends. After all, superior customer service is quickly becoming an increasingly important competitive differentiator in the financial services field. That means that the development of soft skills such as empathy, emotional intelligence, motivation and effective communication can help brands elevate customer interactions and the customer experience overall. Financial services organisations may also overcome many of the obstacles limiting their growth by cultivating leaders with a strong set of key ‘human’ skills that can help them engage workers in digital transformation initiatives. A June article in the FT argues that ethics and navigating ethical dilemmas will also take centre stage as an important skill for future finance leaders, for instance.”

[…]

Making corporate learning relevant again.

“Learning and having fun are a good way of starting to encourage the development and practice of soft skills, as play and learning are both based on the desire to progress, to work with others and to have a social experience. Neuroscience has also shown us that playing stimulates curiosity and the desire to progress, for example, and play creates a congenial learning experience. Constant upskilling in things closely related to our daily job activities is a natural human goal to desire that we should be capitalising on.

To be successful, a modern workplace learning experience in the financial services universe should be deeply integrated with a job position and be directly useful to the learner. Modern workplace learning methods like microlearning are a powerful way to make this happen, for example, and this is an approach that can be easily integrated into the learning experience, allowing the employee to dynamically look for the knowledge she needs in situ. At the same time, the contribution of wider communities of learners can encourage uptake, as the ability to interact and measure up to others increases learning capacity.

 One customer of ours has achieved this. BNP Paribas Asset Management employs these modern e-learning techniques, including pedagogical videos, online learning modules and games on digital platforms deployed across the entire network worldwide to update the skills of its workforce and to keep its advisors fully up-to-date on its suite of financial products.”

[…]

“For an approach that puts the user centre stage, user support is everything. Some comments HR at the bank has received suggest it’s doing this right: “The platform is user-friendly thanks to the battles, much better than traditional online learning;” “Very clear, the videos are graphically pleasing, and just the right length;” “A way of revising that is quick and efficient, very succinct content, a congenial platform.”

As a result of the kind of seismic drivers of employment change taking place in all industries including financial services, it is becoming more imperative that we all manage our long-term employability. Businesses that don’t equip their workforces with the tools to help will not be able to compete – shrinking, or even disappearing, as disruptive new players better prepared to help their teams develop the skills they need will take their place. Don’t let that happen to you.”

Discover the full article here!

You can also discover other articles from Jean-Marc Tassetto in the press!

Why acquiring soft skills is not as hard as you think – RealBusiness

Let’s start using a whole new class of meaningful HR KPIs – HRReview

How to Stop Worrying About a Jobless Future? – Bdaily Business News

ROI of continuous training: HR Directors’ unsolvable problem?

 

For many years, calculating ROI (return on investment) of continuous training has been difficult, especially with the pressure of Direction Committees and stakeholders, with expenses sometimes hard to justify with actual and tangible results. 

‘The main issue for Human Resources is the calculation of its return on investment.’ Catherine Benet, former HRD of Paris Airports (Aéroports de Paris). 

How do we calculate the ROI of continuous training?

In the 50s, PHD and former president of the American Society for Training and Development Donald Kirkpatrick described an evaluation model of training efficiency in a 4 levels pyramid: The Four Levels of Training Evaluation. Jack Phillips then completed this model in the 90s in order to calculate ROI, with a 5th layer. 

However and despite the evolution of HR practices over the years, the attendance sheet is – way too often – the method used to follow how people train and to see how many employees attended a course.

In this article, I’ll try to show you how asking yourself 12 questions can help nurturing the debate on the return on investment of continuous training. Food for thoughts and maybe a few leads to start calculating a tangible return on investment.

This is 7 minutes read. But there is a summary at the end of the page, for people in a rush 😉

Which ROI? For whom?

The 1st issue with return on investment comes from each and everyone’s expectations. When expectations are different, the calculation of ROI is different as well. Let’s take a few examples:

The stakeholder: If I invest 1€ in training, I need to get 1€ + interests back.’

The senior executive: ‘To measure the return on investment, I need to see the training’s added value to business. How does it impact my business results?’

The HR Director: ‘In order to improve the return on investment of continuous training I can use digital learning tools. It’ll allow me to deploy our training content to the whole company very quickly, and to reduce face-to-face training times. My costs will be reduced, I’ll improve the return on investment.’

The Chief Learning Officer: How can I measure my coworkers’ real learning impact? How can I measure with tangible results what they actually learnt?’

The managers: Are these training programs concrete? My team doesn’t have any time to waste.’

The employees: I hope the training content will be interesting.’

12 steps to calculate the ROI of training

In the end, the calculation of the ROI comes from a group of questions to be answered first.

These 12 questions aims at obtaining a positive and lasting return on investment with corporate continuous training.

  1. How many employees like to train?
  2. How many employees really train?
  3. How many employees train with qualitative content?
  4. How many employees remember what they learnt?
  5. How many employees apply what they learnt in their day-to-day jobs?
  6. How many employees are more efficient thanks to what they learnt?
  7. On how many professional tasks are these employees more efficient?
  8. How are these employees performing better?
  9. Is the company seeing the result of this better performance thanks to tangible and measurable results?
  10. Is these results important to senior executives and management?
  11. Is the Direction Committee rewarding these results?
  12. Is the reward valorized by the employee?

If you apply a conversion rate to each of these questions, you will obtain a ROI calculation and an estimate of this feedback loop efficiency. Obviously, the more your conversion rates will be high, the better will be your ROI. 

Does this solve the main problem of HRs?

Does this solve the main issue for HR? No.

No.

The calculation is complex. These tasks cannot be completed by HR executives only. HR executives cannot impact all of these elements. Learning, learning tools, content, pedagogy, trainers, senior executives are also playing an important part in this cycle. We also know there will be loss at each step. 

To illustrate what I’m saying, let’s say we apply a 70% conversion rate to each steps. 

On the 70% of employees who like to train, 70% are actually training for real. 70% of those former 70% are training with qualitative content, 70% of those remember it… And so on – you get it!

At the end of the 10th question, it’s easy to understand how it is complicated for a HR Director to justify the return on investment of continuous training.. The direction will only look at the result in the end: here, it’s a 2,82% performance (70%^10).

How to maximize your impact as a HR Director?

On which key performance indicators do you have the most impact?

Basically, on the first 4 steps of this cycle: make people enjoy learning, make training more accessible, provide qualitative content and improve how people memorize and learn. 

If – thanks to you – you achieve getting 75% people enjoying training and learning instead of 70%, with 75% of them actually and effectively training,  with then 75% of them training with qualitative content and 75% of them – the ones who train with qualitative content – memorizing better, then your impact will almost be perceived as twice as better than previously: 4,96% of performance! This is the KPI the Direction Committee will study and see as important!

The 4 key steps

MAKE PEOPLE ENJOY LEARNING!

To transmit the will to learn to someone is often a balance between what’s mandatory to learn and the will to give knowledge as a trainer, whether the trainer is a parent, friend, teacher, manager, coworker of HR manager.

To say that a student or a coworker doesn’t want to learn is a mistake. Everybody enjoys learning, but not on all topics and not if the learning process is boring, annoying or sometimes humiliating. It’s normal that the school system or some training programs are disregarded because of these observations.

A very few of us wake up in the morning wishing to learn theories we won’t be able to apply in real life, for hours, before to be tested via a quiz that won’t explain the notions we might have not understood previously.

A good User Experience is the essential basis in any training programs, whether it is in face-to-face learning or e-learning. Do you want to learn in a freezing classroom with boring teachers? Do you want to learn on a e-learning platform full of bugs where you can easily get lost? NO.

To exit the scheme of traditional learning and understand what really drives learners, we need to understand the Facebook quiz scheme. Why does a Facebook quiz engage students more than a lecture course in a large classroom, on a topic students voluntarily chosen?

Answer: format and methodology. 

When Facebook asks you 10 questions to see which country would be the most suitable for you, your brain understands it’s a game, without challenges, in which you will probably learn something. Used in pedagogical ends, reverse questioning can be very efficient.

We need to deeply change the way we see training, and the solution doesn’t lay in what we were used to at school. Gamification can bring us a part of the answer. If you’re skeptical about the benefits of gaming, I invite you to take a look at the proportions of video games players per age ranks in France in 2018. The good balance between the game aspects and the learning ones is still to be found though. 

MAKE TRAINING MORE ACCESSIBLE!

When does someone want to train? The morning before going to work, or going to work? When facing a business challenge? During a meeting? In the evening? Between two meetings?

Like any desires, it can happen anytime! We’re not robots: the urge or the desire to learn something new can pretty much happen all the time.

What is fuelling this desire?

Sometimes it’s a life goal, sometimes it’s a weak stimulus, something that got you curious at the coffee machine: ‘Did you hear about the latest scandal of misappropriation of funds by top executives of this famous international bank?’

10 minutes after, you’ll probably be reading press articles about the case, on your laptop or your smartphone. 

From the beginning of content conception, we need to think it – the training content – to be as accessible as possible, on any support, at any time, from wherever we are. 

PROVIDE QUALITATIVE CONTENT!

Would you rather look for information yourself among thousands of possible results or receive the most accurate information, summarized? 

Don’t make the mistake of seeking volume over quality. By doing this – volume over quality – you’ll reduce your coworkers’ engagement, lose their trust and it’ll be way more difficult to monitor their progress on a large volume of content. Without mentioning how difficult it would be to update all content pieces.

2 options are available if you’re looking for qualitative content: look for the experts in each skill fields or look for training players who chose the quality of content as the main part of their editorial lines.

In order to massively and internationally deploy your training programs, keep in mind that your main constraint will be the cost of deployment of your training courses. For this reason, digital learning is a very interesting tool to massively and instantly deploy your content all over the world, at reduced costs. 

IMPROVE HOW PEOPLE MEMORIZE AND LEARN!

What are the best practices to memorize information?

Some use the ‘Method of loci‘ to improve memorization, others simply follow training programs.

To repeat several times is a well-known technique to improve memorization. Right now, the buzz word is blended learning: mixing training methods to repeat information while avoiding the monotony of repetitions. Blended learning became very popular among large corporations but might not be enough to ensure information retention. 

Well-thought quizzes where each right answer can get you a bigger bonus of points than previously will motivate you to repeat your actions without feeling it is boring or annoying. It’s the art of gaming: making you better while having fun.

The challenges – ‘Battle’ on the Coorpacademy platform –  between learners are  a good example of efficient gamified repetitions, especially for people who like to challenge themselves and others. It particularly suits salespeople. 

At last, pedagogy need to stay at the heart of the learning system. Forcing someone to learn doesn’t guarantee – at all – the memorization of information. Sometimes we think we know the topic already and we don’t want to go through the ‘learning step’ before answering questions and actually test our knowledge. Why then force a learner to watch a video, learning material before answering any question? The learner could simply answer, make a mistake, relearn, redo it a bit later. This counts already for 2 repetitions, while it’s not more expensive, and the key learning factors will probably be way more memorized by the learner than if he/she was working on a classical learning format (the course, then the questions, then the evaluation).

To improve information retention, memorization, one needs to master the art of repeating while making the experience pleasant and enjoyable for the learner.

To sum up…

The return on investment of training is still hard to measure. A lot of factors – and most of the times factors that you can’t impact as a HR leader – need to be taken into account. But it is possible – still as a HR leader – to impact positively the ROI. 

At the Human Resources level, it’s by making people enjoy learning, making training more accessible, providing qualitative content and improving how people memorize and learn that you’ll increase significantly the impact of continuous training on teams’ performance.

A few ingredients are essential to a good learning process: desire, pedagogy, repetition, top-notch user experience.

For an efficient international deployment for organizations of +1000 employees, e-learning and more particularly Learning Experience Platforms (LEP/LXP) became the essential tool which guarantees instant deployment at reduced costs.

Continuous training is even more important today as new jobs are created and others disappear before we even invented the right training for them. Learning how to learn is becoming essential in order to maintain one’s future employability. Training on soft skills is becoming more and more important as studies from the World Economic Forum and McKinsey show it.

BONUS

Why companies serious about training need to embrace a new generation of e-learning tools? – An article of Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, published in Computer Business Review.

By the way, last but not least…

If you Googled the ‘Method of loci‘, you’re among the learners that are proactive in the way they learn. Congratulations!

If you haven’t but now want to Google it while reading this, it proves that it just takes a small stimulus to make people wanting to learn 😉

Will you accept this challenge? The Battle requests are becoming terrific!

 

After we rewarded Sory Fofana with a prize for being the player of the millionth Battle on Coorpacademy, we decided to redesign the Battles on the platform. We started redesigning the Battle requests. Let’s see how! But before diving in, just a quick reminder on Battles…

1 battle  = 2 players + an average of 6 questions on 1 course level

 

A Battle is launched by a player to another, randomly or strategically chosen, your choice! The one who has the more right answers, or the fastest one in the event of a tie, wins the Battle. But not only, this player also wins stars to climb up the ranking and improves his or her knowledge base. Not mentioning the feeling of pride you receive after winning a Battle!

The redesign of battle requests

 

What are the objectives? The player who receives Battle requests…

1. …Is now better notified of being challenged

2. …Can choose better the Battles he wants to play and the opponents – they are well displayed on each Battle request cards.

3. …Can review the course before accepting the battle to get more chances to win!

Just see for yourself!

The new design of Battle requests on Coorpacademy

It’s time to play!

Learners Vote Coorpacademy as Top Gartner FrontRunner® for Learning Management – Press Release

 

Corporate Digital Learning expert Coorpacademy is pleased to announce that it has been recognised as the leading ‘FrontRunner® for Learning Management’ by The Gartner Digital Markets Research Team.

Software users voted Coorpacademy top in the entire category, based on Usability and Customer Satisfaction, beating 22 other providers including Cornerstone LMS, OpenEdX and Lessonly.

Coorpacademy is a major force in the provision of user-centric corporate digital learning solutions. Coorpacademy makes in-work training always about the user, connecting back with the learner to find a better way to deliver what they want, as well as encouraging staff to develop their skills, especially ‘soft’ ones, to future-proof both their careers and the corporate knowledge base.

It is a leader in the next generation of Workplace Learning tools, the ‘Learning Experience Platform (LEP),’ which work by enhancing learner interaction and engagement as well as offering a wide range of training content. In Coorpacademy’s case, this translates into new digital functionalities, such as gamification and mobile learning, the latest teaching innovations including reverse pedagogy and 5-minute targeted ‘micro’ training modules, individualised learning paths and multiple forms of high value content via a catalogue of over 1,000 courses.

Commenting on the news, Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, noted that, “We are extremely proud to be recognised by the learners themselves as a leader in Usability and Customer Satisfaction, as we are all about the user experience and the fact that users rate our platform so highly is testament to that. This reflects our determination to only ever offer training that suits the learner and which engages them enough to keep them coming back for more!”

About Coorpacademy

An Edtech startup and the European leader in Corporate Digital Learning, Coorpacademy is revolutionising online training with a Learning Experience Platform that integrates the latest innovations in instructional design, including gamification, microlearning and adaptive and social learning. Coorpacademy offers tailor-made content for its B2B customers and their 800,000 employees, but also a catalogue of over 1,000 courses produced with top industry experts like Forbes, IBM, IBM Think Academy, Wolters Kluwer and Video Arts.

Founded in 2013, the company is based at the EPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)’s Lausanne campus, and also has commercial offices in Paris and London.

About Gartner Frontrunner®

FrontRunner®’s Learning Management Quadrant tool is 100% data-driven and has been architected to help businesses easily identify top software products in a particular category, based on verified user reviews across three websites – Capterra, Software Advice and GetApp, which operate under the overall Gartner Digital Markets umbrella. The final rank is derived from user reviews to highlight users’ current most-favoured Learning Management software: products qualify as FrontRunners if they have received 20 unique user reviews in the last 24 month and earned the top scores for Usability and Customer Satisfaction, as well as offering the core learning management functionalities of course tracking and course management.

Voir l'étude de cas