7 Best Practices For Effective Custom eLearning Content Development

7 Best Practices For Effective Custom eLearning Content Development

7 Best Practices For Effective Custom eLearning Content Development

Custom eLearning Content Development: 7 Tips For Effective Outcomes

Every project begins the same way: with an identified client need. Sometimes this need is clearly defined from the outset, but often a bit of analysis is required to get a handle on its true scope. Generally, we whittle away at our shared challenge and create a roadmap towards an appropriate solution. At Obsidian Learning, we’ve spent over 20 years honing our process, always adapting it slightly to adjust to client and project specificities. In this article, we’ll let you in on what we’ve discovered to be some best practices in navigating your way through custom eLearning content development.

Discovery Phase

The discovery phase always begins with a kickoff meeting where we embark on our exploration of the task at hand. This is where Subject Matter Experts and learning strategists meet to hash out learning objectives, competency levels, and possible delivery methods.

1. Create A Design Document For Your Custom eLearning

The main deliverable of a kickoff meeting is a design document. This document is the roadmap for the course and clearly lays out what we are doing, why we are doing it, and how we intend to accomplish our goals. This document highlights the current business needs and puts the project into context. We, then, help define specific training goals. We gather content and/or arrange to interview appropriate Subject Matter Experts to generate content.

2. Determine Competency Level For Your Custom eLearning

A key component of the design document is determining the competency level that will be expected of participants as a result of the training. The 3 levels of competency are:

Deciding what level of mastery is required can shape your course objectives.

3. Determine Delivery Methods For Your Custom eLearning

To effectively address the competency requirements, determine the appropriate delivery methods for the content. Below, we describe various options and the needs for which they are best suited.

Of course, you must also consider schedule, budget, and infrastructure when selecting delivery methods of custom eLearning.

Development

Once you’ve nailed down the content and determined the best delivery strategy, you’ll need to move on to developing your deliverables. Here are a few best practices associated with a specific deliverable type.

4. WBT - Define Objectives

When developing a course, it is important to define both course level objectives and lesson level objectives. What will the learner be able to do or know after taking the course? Once the course level objectives are identified, we develop related lesson-learning objectives. If your course is divided into modules or units, you may consider developing 2-3 lesson-level objectives for each module. For more information about writing objectives for custom eLearning, see our recent blog post.

5. Video - Follow the Process

When developing custom animation, it’s important to follow a process to reduce the amount of time used on edits later in the development. Every step builds upon the last one, so ensuring that each phase has been approved before moving forward is critical. Begin with a solid script and move to a static visual storyboard. The storyboard will help see if there are any holes in the script, or if it needs to be edited in any way. If at all possible, script edits should be made prior to the time-intensive animation process. Editing the script after animating the first draft, though sometimes unavoidable, will eat up costly production time.

6. Learning Portal - Structure

One of the main advantages of this delivery method is the ability to structure the content with usability at the forefront of the design. It is helpful to begin the development process with an Excel spreadsheet mapping out the content and aligning it with specific learning objectives. This supports the development of the initial wireframe and informs the programmer’s decisions on User Experience.

7. All eLearning - Collaborate And React

Throughout the development process of custom eLearning, it can be helpful to think of the design document as evergreen. We never quite end up with the course that we imagined at the outset. The process is extremely collaborative. There is a necessary, and often extremely productive, push and pull between what the SME deems to be absolutely essential information and what the course developer knows is necessary for course pacing and to maintain participant interest. Your role is to listen to your SME and provide solutions for transmitting that essential information. It doesn’t always have to be embedded in the course; it can be supporting material, for example.

Much as we provide our clients with custom roadmaps that outline client need, learning objectives, and proposed solutions, we hope that the best practices that we’ve outlined here provide you with a roadmap toward producing effective and engaging custom eLearning deliverables.

Exit mobile version