How to Launch an eLearning Project in 7 Steps

Kseniya Ibraeva
13 min readMay 7, 2019

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Launching eLearning in a company is like launching a spacecraft — it requires a detailed strategy, teamwork, investment, and much more.

In this article, together with eLearning experts, we’ll analyze the whole cycle of implementing digital learning and explain how to put eLearning into orbit in 7 steps.

Step 1. Define the Learning Objective

A rocket may be launched into space for various reasons: to explore a new planet, to put a satellite into orbit, or, for example, deliver a payload to astronauts. There must always be a goal. It’s the same with digital learning — there’s no sense in using it simply because it’s fashionable. If you’ve opened this page, it means that you already realize ​​why your company needs online training. Just try to transform your idea into a clear objective.

For example, Johnson & Johnson had a challenge to shorten the time for employee certification. After transitioning from a paper exam to an online exam, they’ve reduced the certification period from three months to two days.

Dodo Pizza wanted to create a single system for franchisee training. The company moved a part of their training online, and now they’re educating employees at 320 pizza stores under a unified program.

What do you want to achieve with eLearning? The more specific the goal, the more likely you are to make it happen.

After your goal is set, think what other benefits you hope to get from online training. That’ll better prepare you for the next step, which is choosing eLearning tools.

Leslie Cutter, global digital marketing manager at Moxa Inc.

“The mission of our Global Digital Marketing Department is to build marketing automation capability at Moxa on a global scale. We set a goal to simultaneously train marketing teams from different countries on the basics of content marketing and social media marketing. Before moving forward, we also identified our key training needs:

  • Train at the time convenience of our learners.
  • Provide a depository where they could refer back to training.
  • Record and track training records.
  • Manage the comings and goings of a dynamic training audience.
  • Add new training quickly and easily.
  • Communicate to our learners through the training system.”

Outcomes of Step 1: You’ve set your learning objectives and identified your training needs.

Step 2. Choose the Right Training Tools

How is a spacecraft made? Experienced rocket scientists would say something like this: “Various rockets are constructed in different ways. It all depends on the task.” For example, the American Space Shuttle has starter boosters, a fuel tank, and an orbital module. This is enough to achieve a low Earth orbit. But if you want to get to Mars, you need a spaceship of different construction.

The eLearning arsenal also depends on the goals. As a rule, companies use one of these two types of tools, or the whole set at once:

  • learning management system (LMS)
  • eLearning course authoring tool

Let’s take a closer look at each of them.

Learning Management System (LMS)

An LMS is a virtual school where you can teach your staff from anywhere in the world: assign courses and tests to learners, keep track of their performance, and analyze their results.

With an LMS you can:

  • Create a knowledge base. Your e-courses, assessments, videos, and other learning materials are stored in one place. This is a much more reliable and convenient way of storing content than using flash drives. At any time, employees can enter the portal and review the material.
  • Train your staff remotely. You can assign a course to a particular employee, department, or the whole staff in a couple of clicks.
  • Monitor the quality of training. An LMS collects detailed statistics on each content item, user, and group. You’ll always know exactly how your employees are learning and evaluate their progress.
  • Keep in touch with students. An internal chat or forum is a place where employees can exchange their ideas and share their opinions on which materials were especially useful, what to improve, and what topics to cover.

When it comes to selecting an LMS, choose between a locally hosted or a cloud-based system.

Jeff Dalto, Senior L&D Specialist at Convergence Training

“For most companies, a cloud-based LMS is going to be the best fit.

The first consideration is speed and effort: you’re going to find set-up and implementation of a cloud-based platform to be faster and easier than you would with a locally hosted LMS. Employees will generally find it more user-friendly, meaning they’ll spend less time learning how to use the system and more time using the LMS to acquire valuable work skills. Updates will also be faster and easier, as your LMS provider can simply push updates to the web-based system.

The second set of benefits revolves around your IT department and, most specifically, not having to make requests of them. The LMS provider will set-up, update, monitor, and maintain the LMS for you, meaning you won’t have to bother IT for this. And IT will appreciate being able to save bandwidth on your internal servers for other mission-critical tasks.

If these benefits aren’t reason enough, there are still other reasons to go with a cloud-based solution, including increased mobile friendliness; faster delivery of training, better data security, and more effective disaster recovery. See our benefits of a cloud-based LMS article for more on all of these points.”

eLearning Course Authoring Tool

In addition to an LMS, you’ll require software for building courses. You can buy an easy-to-use tool with all the necessary modules for rapid authoring, or a powerful solution with a software simulation editor or even capabilities for creating VR projects. It all depends on your learning objectives, and the time and energy you’re ready to spend on training how to use the tool.

To choose the right software, you need to focus on the demands for the tool.

“How quick and intuitive should the learning development suite or tool be? Should it have an option for embedding video and other assets? Сan you start with simple PowerPoints and build from that? What about gamification? Ideally, you should build a features checklist for the content creation capabilities you need.

Please remember assessments and quizzes are important features that support learning and play a huge part in learning and knowledge transfer. Creating meaningful questions in an engaging manner is a real skill that is too often neglected in my view.

Don’t neglect to understand learning standards and learning analytics, make sure the tool you choose is flexible enough to cover your demands for the eLearning modules to work in your LMS.”

David Patterson, Director of Learning Light

For instance, you can create an e-course in the iSpring Suite toolkit.

After you’ve installed iSpring Suite on your computer, you’ll see a special toolbar in PowerPoint.

Right from the iSpring Suite toolbar, you can enhance your presentation with tests, interactions, images, audio, video, and dialogue simulations. Then, you can publish it to your LMS and assign it to your team members.

Your employees can view the content at any time and from any device: a desktop, a tablet, or a smartphone.

Jill Brown, quality management coordinator at Villa St. Vincent

“With iSpring, our company creates online courses for new employees to become Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs).

Our training program consists of 15 Units, and within each Unit are Modules. All in all, there are 58 actual modules — or PowerPoints.

I use iSpring Suite to enhance the modules with a variety of teaching methods: lectures, simulations, videos from the web, instructor-led video teaching, web links for additional references, essays, and quizzes. Each unit also includes handouts, practice quizzes, etc. In addition, iSpring Suite provides many design features to keep the content interesting.

Depending on the length and detail of the materials, it takes me approximately 4–8 hours to complete a working module, including simulations, video, and tests. The other authoring tools I tried took at least twice the time.”

Outcomes of Step 2: You’ve defined what kind of eLearning tools you need, analyzed the eLearning market, and selected the solutions that meet your requirements.

Step 3. Produce a Budget and Action Plan

How much does it cost to launch a spacecraft? For example, the average price for launching a Falcon 9 rocket is about $62 million per mission, and the NASA SLS system costs around $500 million to launch each time. The price depends on the objectives and resources that you use.

After you’ve set a goal and selected the tools, it’s much easier to estimate your future eLearning investments. The expense sheets should include not only the cost of eLearning software, but also the salary for your team, investments in course development and, in some cases, buying new computers for your employees.

After your budget is established, it’s time to create an action plan. Break down your current goal (launching eLearning) into clear, actionable steps and set deadlines for each step.

Example: A vendor needs two days to implement an LMS; it’ll take you five days to create a course and five days to run the pilot project.

The next step is to present the plan to your senior managers. You need to explain to them what eLearning is, how it can drive the business, and what resources are required. The information should be brief and carefully worded.

You need to present the following information:

  • Project goals from a business perspective. For example, reduce face-to-face training by 40%, shorten the time for new hire onboarding from 30 to 20 working days, and so on.
  • The benefit to the company — how much money it will save or earn. For instance, let’s say a company called Sweet Life is about to introduce a new chocolate bar, and now you need to tell 3,000 sales representatives. Face-to-face training will take you two months and x dollars. To train your employees with eLearning, you’ll need only five days and y dollars. How much is y? It all depends on how much money you were already spending on transportation, accommodations, office space, and other logistics.
  • Necessary resources: an LMS, an authoring tool, computers for employees at affiliates, and a course developer.
  • The project budget: implementing eLearning will cost you x dollars.
  • When to expect the result: the project will be launched in x days.

Outcomes of Step 3: You know the approximate cost of your eLearning project, your management has approved the budget, you have an action plan, and you know the eLearning launch date. It’s high time to buy training tools and get to work.

Step 3. Prepare the Learning Content

An LMS without content is like a spacecraft without fuel. After the system is installed, you need to upload the learning content to your platform: presentations, books, instruction manuals, videos, and online courses.

Ideally, you should have an eLearning development plan for a year or two in advance and a list of training materials that your learners should view. But first, it’s enough to create one e-course to test the learning experience and conduct a technical run-through.

If you’re planning to build new courses regularly, you’ll need at least one instructional designer who will decide what type of learning materials to develop, and how a course should look, and then create the course using an authoring tool. You’ll also need a coach and one or more SMEs who will provide the instructional designer with relevant learning content.

Shanavaz SF, Senior L&D Manager at Mycoach Learning

“If you have content which is proprietary/confidential by nature (pharmacy, personal finance) or requires frequent updates (compliance), you’re likely to decide to build an eLearning team internally.

If your organization’s learning content doesn’t change much over a considerable period of time, you probably decide to outsource eLearning content creation. It may also be due to delivering generic content to your employees (soft skills, technology) which is not confidential and poses no threat when shared with outsiders. Also, you may opt for such avenues when you feel the learning content on the required topics is available off the shelf from eLearning service providers.

But when you opt for this channel, take care in selecting the right vendor to entrust the task as changing the service providers in the middle of the project is quite cumbersome and you wouldn’t want to take that route in any given situation. So evaluate before committing.”

Outcomes of Step 4: You’ve uploaded one or two e-courses to your LMS for a pilot project.

Step 5. Run a Pilot eLearning Project

Before launching a rocket, engineers do a dry run. They let the craft follow a ballistic trajectory without putting it into orbit. This helps them identify any potential errors before the real flight.

Instead of assigning a course to all your employees, ask a small group to view it. The pilot will help you define the constraints and difficulties in using your LMS and understand if your course is effective.

Brian Simms, Director of Digital Content and Learning Services at Learning Tree International

“When kickstarting your eLearning project, you need to form a steering committee of decision makers in the organization, course authors, and some employees with instructional design and eLearning experience. This can be a group consisting of about 10 people. That feels a bit large when there’s disagreement but, since you have a good mix of those directing and doing the work, it helps to propel you forward once the agreement is reached.

While learners are taking a pilot e-course, it’s important to survey them on how they feel about eLearning to rate their confidence in what they’re studying and describe things that are still not clear to them. After the course, it would be good to present this information again and verify that the students are leaving the course satisfied.

This data can serve the creator as a gauge for the effectiveness of the specific modules within the course. This insight also provides validation for the student’s organization that investing in learning for their employees is a worthwhile effort. Most importantly, it offers proof to the student that they haven’t wasted their time if they can sit back and say, “I really have learned something here.”

Outcomes of Step 5: You’ve run the pilot eLearning project, gotten a list of valuable comments from the focus group, and gone through the error correction process. Now, you’re ready to launch your full-fledged eLearning project.

Step 6. Motivate and Support Employees to Access eLearning

Like any new project, eLearning needs advertising support. If employees sign up for your course only by orders from on high, that means your project has failed. How can you boost your learners’ engagement?

At first, involve your management in eLearning. Your senior employees should take a couple of courses and give an honest review, ideally something like, “Online training is great!” If the idea of eLearning is approved by your leaders, other team members will automatically support it. After all, this is your senior management who’s encouraging employees to learn.

Also, don’t forget about internal PR: news, announcements, course trailers, video greetings, awards, and ratings.

Once online training is underway, motivate your employees to access eLearning. You can do this using the following techniques:

Barbara Davis Robinson, Learning and Talent Development Leader
  • Make access easy. Nothing is more frustrating than not knowing where to go and how to access a class you need or want. Keep sign-on as simple as possible, including password resets when needed.
  • Offer variety. In addition to the class’s employees have to take, host or offer classes focused on other topics your employees are interested in.
  • Keep the class short, if you can. Learning “nuggets” help students retain content and motivate them to watch again when they need to. Drudging through a 90-minute class looking for information you need again, is frustrating and most of the time isn’t going to happen.
  • Draw your staff in quickly. Use strong openings, and provide valuable information early on in a dynamic way.
  • Keep employees interested. Use multi-media methods such as video and audio. This sets the tone that it’s not just another boring, required class they have to take.
  • Provide recognition and feedback. Most people love to be recognized. Know what you can do with your learning technology to recognize people creatively. Depending on the class, instructor feedback to students, or discussion between students, can expand and clarify learning.
  • Share success stories. How did your employees use what they learned to help them both professionally and personally? In one example, a company offered weight loss classes and an employee lost over 100 pounds. The person was recognized later in the company newsletter as someone who benefited from what was offered.
  • Use humor. Humor can be very beneficial to making people laugh and motivate them to keep watching. Often, followed by conversing positively with others about their experience which helps create interest among other employees. The key is to use proper and appropriate humor so that you’re not insulting anyone. Be sure to get approvals and consensus with your leadership on any humor you’re using.”

Outcomes of Step 6: All the employees support eLearning and actively take courses.

Step 7. Evaluate eLearning Effectiveness

The spacecraft known as eLearning is now leaving the Earth’s atmosphere. You’re at the helm. Now, your main task is to stay the course.

Here’s how you can understand that you’re flying in the right direction:

  • Collect feedback from your employees.
  • Compare the achievements of learners who attend face-to-face classes and those who study online.
  • Assess your employees’ knowledge regularly.
  • Keep track of the learning process, and monitor how your employees’ work performance improves.

To learn more about how to measure eLearning effectiveness, read our blog post about training metrics.

You can be confident that your eLearning has reached orbit if you’ve solved your real business tasks, helped your employees gain new skills faster, or reduced training costs. Once you’ve done that, you can choose another heading and boldly go where no one has gone before.

Takeaways

  • Before you start eLearning, define the direction: where and why you’re flying.
  • The construction of your eLearning rocket (an LMS and a course authoring tool) depends on the goals and objectives of the stellar campaign.
  • A detailed action plan will help you “sell” the idea to your senior management and get a budget for the flight.
  • A dry run will help you identify any errors and debug your eLearning rocket.
  • For a space expedition to succeed, it must solve a real business task.
  • Check the course often: collect feedback from employees, assess their knowledge regularly, and compare training results with business performance.

Would you like to be a part of iSpring eLearning community? No IT background is required to become an eLearning Pro!

Original post, — https://www.ispringsolutions.com/blog/how-to-launch-an-elearning-project-in-7-steps

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Kseniya Ibraeva
Kseniya Ibraeva

Written by Kseniya Ibraeva

Digital Marketing Specialist at iSpring Solutions www.ispringsolutions.com

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