Online Learning Increases Employee Engagement: How to Create Online Training Programs That Work
In my last two posts, I discussed why it’s important to incorporate the seven learning styles into adult learning and how online learning programs can do that effectively. In this post, we’ll look at some best practices for creating effective online learning programs that work in your organization, as well as practical steps to help you get started.
Training Magazine recognized the Top 125 Training Programs and Initiatives; these were my top two:
Baptist Health Care created the Be Ready Suite of Educational Tools to improve patient-centered care by increasing compliance with an accrediting body for health care institutions. Though initial phases consisted of town hall meetings to discover patient-care opportunities and training needs, the suite of tools pulled from a variety of educational learning styles. An initial survey helped leaders develop action plans that allowed employees to engage in learning through simulations, role-play, online training, “Blue Tube” videos, and demonstrations evaluating and measuring success for each goal.
Sprint Nextel Corp has created an online training portal, i-Comply, that is time and cost efficient as well as easy to access. Since implementation, compliance has gone up to 100%! Now employees are able to find all policies and learn how to apply them. The portal is described as including, “interactive puzzles, a graphic novel, a comic strip, a game show, a scenario-based video, a news show, a virtual superhero, a soap opera, a digital short, and podcasts employees can download to mobile devices. i-Comply learning is sometimes viral as employees talk and share e-mails about their favorite components.”
Eight Ways to Incorporate Online Learning in Your Organization
Now that you see what industry leaders are doing in this area, let’s look at what you can do to get started.- Take a look at your current training programs. Determine which of your current 2-4 hour training courses could be created as an online program. Start simple: which topics could be easily taught through videos, audio, or online journals?
- Focus. Pick one course that you’d like to develop into online learning.
- Analyze the content of that course and determine how many modules are in the course. For example, if you chose a coaching course, you might discover that you cover three modules, or key topics, in the 2-4 hour live training, such as: 1) why coaching is important, 2) the needed qualities of a coach and, 3) how to ask open-ended questions.
- Integrate multimedia. Find a video, audio, or PowerPoint that explains the concept you want to convey for each module/key topic.
- Create a sequencing of the modules online.
- Pilot Test. Run a pilot group of 8-10 people through the online modules.
- Elicit Feedback. Evaluate the course through group feedback.
- Constantly Improve. Tweak and improve for the next group of participants.