Have you ever taken an eLearning course and found it to be less than what you expected when you had it completed? You were hoping to learn more, or even felt your precious time consumed without benefit to your mind?
At one point in time or another, we all have! However, your learners can be the exceptions to this rule! By maintaining the 6-Ps of eLearning, your audience will never waste their precious time! And they will continue to enjoy and come back to your courses – from the first course to the hundredth!
Let’s start by mentioning what these 6 - Ps are:
Let’s start by mentioning what these 6 - Ps are:
It makes sense when you see the 6 -P's together, to note that each works closely with the others. Also, it is easy to note that as they each are interdependent upon the others if one of these elements were to be overlooked or missed, the design of your eLearning course might not prove fruitful.
Even before start designing your eLearning course, it is essential to have the reason for the online course wholly defined. The more in-depth you can describe your project, the better your project will become.
Some of the best ways to determine the purpose of your eLearning course are to insert yourself into the different roles of the parties looking to gain value from your project.
By putting yourself into the role of the employer, you can define the materials of the course. Employers seek to have eLearning courses designed for several reasons:
To be sure, there are many more reasons for employers to contract eLearning course designs.
Next, you should consider inserting yourself into the role of the audience. As an audience participant, what would your expectations be? With this in mind, you will be better able to control the narrative, when you resume your role as the designer of the project.
Perhaps, as the designer, you already have your PURPOSE defined. By adding the other perspectives, your course design will take on your right tone and direction.
It is important to state that without the proper PURPOSE, even with the best eLearning authoring tool, the goal of the eLearning course will fall short. Acknowledging the PURPOSE and following it adds value to your eLearning course, that without it, your session might not resonate with your audience and might not make the impact on your company, for which it was intended.
When thinking of your target audience, you need to answer three primary questions:
By merely answering these first two questions, you can define the “persona” of the participating audience. By answering the third question, you will be able to design the needs and expectations of your future user groups.
The creation of your learner “personas” should be a realistic representation of real-to-life people and groups, with all their various social and economic backgrounds, their learning habits, their goals and both their personal & professional values.
Read more: These 27 Questions Will Help You (Really) Know Your Learners
When designing the eLearning course, a strategic plan should provide answers to questions relating to the following:
Read more: Proactive eLearning Design: 10 Essential Questions You Should Ask Before Starting
Also recommended: A List of Questions to Help You Draft a Winning eLearning Strategy
What you present in your eLearning course is important, however, how you present it is equally critical to the success of the initiative. It is necessary to implement a “method to the madness” or an “order to the chaos” of learning. As a designer, you should never let your processes be accidental or haphazard.
To handle the demands of the design process, here are a couple of golden tidbits to ease the complication of the eLearning instructional design process, for both you and your design team.
Golden Tidbit 1: The Step-by-Step Guide to Conducting a Content Inventory for eLearning
Prior to beginning the creation of any new eLearning course, your design and creation team should work up an inventory assessment of all current resources and content. Completing this assessment “religiously” will assist your efforts of course creation workflow more unassuming.
Compiling a resource material and content assessment provides real-time accounting, both of what you already have and what you can reuse. Additionally, it will give you the insight into the content yet to be created.
Golden Tidbit 2: Free Storyboard Template
The graphic design aspect of the project is favoured by eLearning designers, as are the exciting multimedia options and slide decks. Surprisingly, it is very common oversight to verify that the external elements such as charts, video, audio, YouTube links or website links, or any other type of secondary media will deploy when necessary throughout the course.
It is for this reason that great course designers intermingle the required content of the course with the secondary media and consistently test the performance of the course as the content in real-time through the creation process.
Great course designers ALWAYS create a storyboard first – to act as a roadmap and to assist in the placement of the information and the secondary media, which in turn, creates the desired flow of the curriculum.
Your eLearning course is complete! All your fantastic design work and content work is about to pay off… Or is it?
Many companies realize the importance of employee continued education. Many of those same companies also recognize that the re-launch of previous online course materials and new course materials requires a plan to “market” the eLearning materials to both potential consumers and employees. The marketing plan covers incentives for employees to consume the course and also includes identifying rewards offered by the company for the consumption of the course content.
Your marketing plan should also manage the expectations of the course performance, including expectations which might be too high, too low or just ill-informed for any reason. Your marketing plan should be clear and concise and make your audience aware of the courses available to them because you are competing with untold other forces for their time and attention.
Your marketing plan is the only means of transportation you have of taking your online learning course out of the garage and onto the highway to your learners. For this reason, your plan must you appeal to your target market on EVERY level.
Read more: Want Your eLearning Courses to Deliver Results? Avoid These Mistakes
Recommended: Marketing Tips to Market Your eLearning Program Internally
When you keep the 6-Ps of eLearning, as an interlocking and interactive collaboration, the eLearning course develops into a progressive program, whereby the corporate message is relayed to the learners in a cohesive and open language, and the learners become more than just an audience for a corporate message. Your learners become the message for the corporation, by actively using the information gained in your eLearning course! And this is the successful path for both the course and the designer, which benefits the corporate body and the students of the course, alike!