Coorpacademy number 2 of the top Learning Experience Platforms for 2019!

The American expert on digital learning Craig Weiss ranked Coorpacademy 2nd in the top Learning Experience Platforms for 2019!

Who is Craig Weiss?

Craig Weiss is the CEO of The Craig Weiss Group, an American research and advisory company. He was recently named the most influential person in the world for the digital learning space.

Last June, he was already speaking about Coorpacademy: « This LXP (Coorpacademy) is definitely a fast riser. UI/UX is excellent. Analytical data is quite good. Gamification battles – are very cool. Admin is good and learning environment is strong. Mobile plays well. Video management is superb. » 

What is the full ranking?

  1. Learn Amp (UK)
  2. Coorpacademy (CH-FR)
  3. Degreed (US)
  4. EdCast LXP (US)
  5. Percipio by Skillsoft (US)
  6. 360Learning (FR)
  7. Looop (UK)
  8. TILE by Toolwire (US)
  9. magpipe by Filtered (UK)
  10. me:time by Lumesse (racheté par Saba) (UK)

Discover here Craig Weiss’s newsletter which announced the ranking.

A good way to start off 2019 right!

Improving workplace e-learning for employees

 

This article written by Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy, has been originally published in Education Technology. To read it in its original form, it’s here.

Coorpacademy co-founder Jean-Marc Tassetto discusses workplace learning, and why technology is essential in supporting employee upskilling.

Sapiens author Yuval Harari has written that the kinds of skills we need in the workplace are radically shifting, with Artificial Intelligence (AI), bioengineering and other emerging technologies making both our lives and what we do between 9 to 5 look very different.

In his latest book, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, Harari is also now warning us that the future of education is going to be as equally disrupted, given how young people already have far too much information, and that what’s needed instead is to coach people in “the ability to make sense of information, to tell the difference between what is important and what is unimportant, and above all to combine many bits of information into a broad picture of the world.”

Of course, it’s not just futurologists like Harari who are warning the training sector change is afoot. Another is learning industry analyst Edmund Monk, who warns that “The current school student sees learning now as not being about fact retention, but synthesis and analysis of those facts,” and that A-level students will soon be allowed to take their smartphones into their final examinations, as we move away from memory testing into synthesis challenging.

Whether or not that really will happen that soon, surely what we can agree on is that the whole concept of skills, as well as the more crucial question of which ones really matter for employer now and in the near future, is under the microscope.

The rising value of the soft skill

As we continue deeper into the new century, ‘soft’ skills such as critical thinking, communication, working better with other people and creative thinking will end up more in demand, in contrast to the ‘hard’ skills and technical skills that are more reliant on fact-retention.

Indeed, occupations that rely on such soft skills 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 – written and verbal – are their most valued employee attributes, followed by collaboration and problem solving.

Another study, the World Economic Forum’s recent Future of Jobs study, gives us even more clues as to we can expect. Creativity is one of the top three skills workers will need, it says, and while robots may help us get to where we want to be faster, they cannot as yet beat humans at creative tasks. (Intriguingly, emotional intelligence, an attribute that did not feature in the top 10 in its last (2015) report, has somehow become one of the most desired skills needed in the workplace.)

Learning and Development (L&D) leaders need to accelerate their efforts to upskill and reskill employees – plus say goodbye to long, boring training sessions that are too general to be personalised.

The critical question, then, is how organisations will learn or re-acquire these increasingly desirable new capabilities? Learning and Development (L&D) leaders need to accelerate their efforts to upskill and reskill employees – plus say goodbye to long, boring training sessions that are too general to be personalised, and not at all engaging to today’s learner.

The LXP difference

The good news is that a new generation of digital tools is making training relevant and exciting, delivering what the learning organisation of tomorrow says it will need: the learner at the centre of the learning experience. There is undoubtedly a shift happening from an administrator-centric approach to one of a learner-centric approach, or a Learning Centric Platform (LXP or LEP). For example, analyst group Gartner defines an LXP as an additional portal layer that simultaneously expands (i.e. range of content) and enhances (i.e. delivers greater personalisation) the learner’s interaction.

Given how, when done well, such LXPs provide “a better learner experience through improved personalisation via adaptive learning, recommendations and individual learning paths,” it’s clearly time L&D leaders heeded the cue to get the learning experience back to the top of their list when they think about education technologies.

They also need to re-think training to be more like what people really want to engage with now – think, content that is diverse, interesting and very easily accessible, mobile, always on, always available – delivered in engaging, bite-sized chunks that are engaging and fill gaps in knowledge where they exist.

And, where appropriate, L&D teams should exploit the engagement potential of techniques like gamification, online competitions and quizzes between learners. Neuroscience has shown us that playing stimulates curiosity and the desire to progress, for example, as ‘play’ in the widest sense creates a positive, reinforcing learning experience.

To be successful, a modern workplace learning experience should be deeply integrated with a job position and be directly useful to the learner. Microlearning is a very powerful way to make this happen, and should therefore be well integrated into the learning experience, allowing the employee to directly look for the knowledge she really needs before a meeting, for example. At the same time, the contribution of wider communities of learners should not be underestimated; the ability to interact and measure up to others increases learning capacity.

As a result of the kind of dramatic employment changes people like Harari and organisations like the World Economic Forum predict, it is becoming essential we all examine our long-term employability. Businesses who let up-skilling their staff fall by the wayside because they haven’t revisited training technology requirements will find themselves in a perilous position going forward. So now is the time, perhaps, to think again about your whole position vis-a-vis technology for training.

W: coorpacademy.com

Source : Education Technology, Sunday 11th November 2018. Discover the original article here: https://edtechnology.co.uk/Blog/improving-workplace-e-learning-for-employees/

Is e-learning about to go through a major transformation?

By Jean-Marc Tassetto, co-founder of Coorpacademy.

This article has been originally published in IT Pro Portal, one of the UK’s leading and most respected technology information resources. To read it in its original and complete form, it’s here.

Here are some extracts of the article:

“E-learning has hit the doldrums. Practitioners and customers can protest all they like, but e-learning isn’t delivering on the educational revolution it promised. You only have to look at the student dropout statistics to see that something needs to be done to put it back on the rails.”

[…]

“There are a large number of people that just aren’t completing courses their organisations have paid for and engagement rates are worryingly low. Our data suggests that 2 and 3 per cent is not unusual for a large proportion of corporate training modules on offer.

So why do we have this black cloud sitting over e-learning? The simple reason is that we have ignored content in e-learning at the expense of the way we deliver and administer it. This means that the Learning Management System (LMS), which is seen as an enormous benefit by the HR administrator, offers little for the learner. This is a crucial point as if the learner isn’t engaged there is absolutely no learning taking place.”

[…]

“LEPs (i.e. Learning Experience Platforms) deliver a consumer-like experience. Firstly, learners recognise their way around from the applications they use on their own devices on a daily basis. Tailored training recommendations prepare their skill sets for individual roles they may take up in the future.

This directly connects e-learning requirements with a learners’ personal goals and experiences – and shows them how they are part of the wider organisational picture. LEPs can achieve this by embedding learning into the learner’s daily activities or the applications on which learners spend the most time.

Employees today are looking at intuitive interfaces they recognise that fit seamlessly into the workflow. They expect a Netflix-like experience in their e-learning solution, for example. Traditional e-Learning just can’t deliver on these expectations.”

[…]

“Organisations need to get the learning experience back to the top of the list. They need to re-think training as a very similar experience to the ones employees look for in their own apps – content that is diverse, interesting and very easily accessible. Mobile, always on, always available, delivered in engaging, bite-sized chunks that are engaging and fill gaps in knowledge where they exist. And where appropriate, utilise engagement techniques like gamification, online competitions and quizzes between learners. Both designed to end the isolated e-learning experiences that lead to users dropping off e-Learning courses.”

Find out more by reading the complete article on IT Pro Portal.

 

 

Sitting down with James Lawrence, Founder and CEO of Knightsbridge Trading Academy

 

Knightsbridge Trading Academy aims at developing the trading skills of their students by equipping them with the latest strategies and technology. Their programmes will help students learn to earn from the elite traders, CISI accredited tutors, brokers and financial analysts in the industry, who have worked for some of the most prestigious institutions in the world. Their tutors have a combined experience of over 75 working years in the financial sector. Their mission is to improve clients’ understanding of trading and investing, along with their general understanding of financial markets. Knightsbridge Trading Academy – in association with the London Stock Exchange Group Academy – has developed a programme designed to improve investment strategies using fundamental and technical analysis, investment psychology, risk management, asset allocation and how to interpret news.

It’s a new recent addition to the Coorpacademy catalogue. Knightsbridge Trading Academy has co-edited two courses on the platform, which aim at explaining to learners the key principles of trading, from the stock exchange to the different types of asset class. These courses are also giving tips and techniques for traders. Following the release of these two courses, we had the chance to sit down with James Lawrence, Chief Executive Officer of the trading academy, who answered our questions.

“Thanks a lot for your time. Before joining and founding Knightsbridge Trading Academy, what were you doing and what made you want to create a trading academy?

Prior to founding Knightsbridge Trading Academy I worked in financial markets as a FX & Equities broker, working with mainly private clients and corporate customers. I decided to found Knightsbridge Trading Academy largely due to becoming frustrated in the poor quality professional education available in the marketplace, more specifically FX (Forex – Foreign Exchange Market) related education designed for retail customers. Unfortunately financial education is not a regulated activity in the U.K. (it is in Australia). This leads to many FX educators making wild and misleading statements and have a “get rich quick” style theme.

I decided to work towards operating in a highly professional and expert manner only providing factual information, providing complete transparency. Today our programmes are fully accredited, some by multiple accreditation bodies and Knightsridge Trading Academy is accredited by the British Accreditation Council for Independent Further and Higher Education as a Short Course Provider unlike any other company which sits within our competitive landscape.

For a lot of people, trading can be unknown, sometimes obscure. How do you think your courses are creating a new, fresh way of looking at trading?

All our programmes are designed for people with little or no experience. Financial trading can seem daunting, this is one reason we ensure our trading programmes are accredited. We provide our students the assurance our programmes have been laid out in a format a student can understand and digest.

We provide a methodology whereby delivering small bite size video programmes followed by short exams, and once students understand the basics we move into a more intermediate learning process. Our programmes are a mix of theory and practical based learning, so students can adopt what they learn into live trading environments.  There is still some demystification needed to break down perceptions to who can learn financial trading. We have trained hundreds of students all from varied walks of life.

In the actual – and future economy – how do you think trading will evolve?

Trading is currently moving into a new future at a extremely fast pace with the use of technology and fintech. Today it’s easier than ever to create strategies and use Machine learning & Artificial Intelligence to trade more efficiently without human errors.

We work alongside several universities creating strategies designed in Machine learning & Artificial Intelligence. Whereby training robots via Artificial Intelligence allows a trader to trade the markets seamlessly, create strict risk parameters, create rules based systems without technical errors made via counterparts…

Do you think a better common knowledge in trading – for everyone – can help avoiding further economic crisis?

I think that general people and businesses will make better informed decisions if they fully understand the risks associated across all asset classes of finance including what drives these assets & markets.

Your training include accredited, 2 day classroom bootcamps, 5 day classroom programme and 5 week online trading programme. What do you think about short micro-learning Corporate Digital Learning and how it can be complementary with your programmes?

It’s a great concept and allows users to digest smaller content in there own time, either during or after work hours. The digital learning programme provides a great foundation to our more dedicated industry specific programmes we offer. In this two courses, learners can train on the principles of trading, but also some tips and techniques, using new teaching methods. By using flipped pedagogy, learners start with the questions – if they know, they pass the questions, if they don’t, they access the video lesson from Knightsbridge Trading Academy. The fun and social aspect of the course also allows learners to access knowledge in a more engaging way, by competing with their peers on the different types of asset class, for example.

Thanks a lot for your time, James!

Thank you!

Employers buy into ‘Netflixisation’ of executive education – an article in the Financial Times

 

To read the article “Employers buy into ‘Netflixisation’ of executive education” published in the Financial Times, it’s here!

Brandon Hall Group HCM Excellence Awards awarded the Faurecia Learning Lab by Coorpacademy Lab

3 years ago, Faurecia and Coorpacademy partnered to create the Faurecia University Learning Lab.

3 years after, this digital corporate learning initiative supports Faurecia’s digital transformation and trains more than 47,000 coworkers. Brandon Hall Group HCM Excellence Awards awarded the Learning Lab a Silver Award in Best Advance in Learning Technology Implementation: this is great recognition for the work we have been doing together for the past few years.

You can see this Award following this link : https://www.brandonhall.com/excellenceawards/excellence-learning.php?year=2018

Congratulations to the team!

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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