Custom eLearning Development: 4 Tips To Deliver Compelling And Engaging Content

Custom eLearning Development: 4 Tips To Deliver Compelling And Engaging Content

Custom eLearning Content Development - Custom eLearning Development: 4 Tips To Deliver Compelling And Engaging Content

How Custom eLearning Development  Can Help You Deliver Compelling And Engaging Content

In all seriousness, any conscientious designer who creates training or learning assets designed to influence human behavior or elicit change perpetually seeks the ways and means to make the content more compelling and more engaging.

There are several proven strategies:

This is just a short sampling of the methods available. A quick search for “engaging and compelling” brings up 58 million hits on a search engine. So I’m obviously not the first to take a stab at the topic, but I’m hoping to provide you with a few insights. Here’s my take…

Over the holidays, (don’t tell my boss) I spent some time resting and senselessly browsing the ever-growing libraries of fantastic (and not so fantastic) shows, movies, and documentaries brought to me by all the content-creating powerhouses such as Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, and HBO (to name a few). As I was diving into a show or a movie, I found myself – more often than I would have expected – just as quickly jumping out because what I was watching just didn’t do it for me. I clicked play, browsed some more, tried a new show, different provider… And then a vision hit: the film libraries transformed into an LMS and the individual visual assets (movies, series, etc.) morphed into courses. Nobody forced me to watch any given piece but I could find what I needed when I needed it. So here is the first recommendation I can confidently make based on my analysis of the streaming services model as it applies to the learning game.

If you want your content to be compelling and engaging:

1. Make It Easy To Find

The movie analogy is apt: the algorithm that suggests movies or shows learns from my viewing behavior and preferences and suggests topics that might correspond to my needs. Think of it as a flexible curriculum. But what happens if I want to explore something different? That’s where categories came in.

You might be thinking that finding where a course is located has nothing to do with the content itself, but the ease of access is critical. Of course, if there is training your employees must take, you can just send them a direct link and that’s that. The opportunity cost is that the learner consumes the content without any context in terms of related learning assets.

Just imagine a user-friendly, visual, and intuitively organized library containing all of your available courses versus a cluttered, outdated, often locked or restricted LMS or SharePoint. Generally speaking, not being able to find something you’re looking for (your car in a parking lot, your shoes) creates frustration and a general souring of mood, and the same is true of learners. You can influence their experience by simply providing an easy, intuitive path to the learning they need.

2. Pull Them In

I love movie previews. Time is precious, and previews help me decide if a movie is worth the investment. I’m aware that previews are designed expressly to lure me in, so I know I’ll see the flashiest scenes and best acting snippets, but the preview still helps me form an impression of what’s coming and prepares me for the viewing experience.

How does this translate to learning? The similarities are striking. Imagine distilling the gist of a learning program or even a single course or workshop into a short 2-3 minute long preview (infomercial?). It would include messages such as:

From our experience, these learning videos or explainer videos have inherent positive value, but none as powerful as the attitude change. With a short preview such as this, you can turn a skeptical, busy, and maybe even frustrated reluctant learner into an employee who understands the context for the training and knows exactly what to expect. And the bonus is that, if designed and executed correctly, this short clip can deliver the most important learning points in a very visual and compelling way, such that if this were the only asset your learner laid eyes on they would still walk out with new knowledge or skills.

3. Now, Deliver

I found what I think is the perfect show. I really liked the preview…I am all in. Press 'Play'! This is where the rubber meets the road. It is unfortunate that sometimes the preview looks good, the ratings are high…but the expectation just doesn’t match the reality. It happens, and it will very likely happen to you with your online learning assets. But every now and then, you’ll find the film or series that just sucks you in. Hours (sometimes days!) go by, and you cannot get enough of it. In my experience as a learning strategist, this can definitely be achieved in the learning sphere as well. Binge learning – it’s really a thing?! It is, though one must follow a couple of proven principles:

Make Me Care

I remember watching HBO’s True Detective (Season 1) and realizing how much I wanted to learn more about almost every single character in that show. Though a good part of that was due to the brilliant performances, the storytelling (storyboarding), the even distribution of plots and subplots (design), and the captivating dialogue (script) certainly helped.

How do you translate this into a tangible learning strategy?

Make Me Think

Even though watching a movie may seem, and often is, to be a passive form of entertainment and learning, it can actually be one of the most stimulating and hyper-effective entertainment and learning methods. You know, that feeling of being genuinely confused about the plot, and you’re trying to figure things out!? You’re often provided with a trail of clues which make you think, search, and explore just to get to a dead end as new facts or characters come into light. The ability to engage at this fundamental level (vs. through drag-and-drop or similar basic interactions) can be achieved in corporate Learning and Development. Here are a couple of approaches:

4. Make It Easy And Fun

This one is relatively simple. In movie making, there are proven and tested methods of storytelling, scriptwriting, camera work, etc. In the learning industry, we too have proven methods of ensuring the easiest possible way to learn new knowledge or skills. Some of the more obvious and effective ones are:

Custom eLearning content development is not exactly Hollywood, and your LMS may not ever be as sexy as Netflix, but the parallels are clear. Thinking about what entices us in our daily life and attempting to apply those lessons in the never-ending quest for the perfect eLearning course can be in itself a stimulating learning experience.

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