Published On: November 30, 2016By
What does a successful LMS selection process look like? Independent learning tech analyst John Leh illustrates in this real-world case

At Talented Learning, we help all kinds of organizations big and small find the right LMS for their needs. With more than 20 years combined in LMS sales and selection, I’ve been directly involved deals totally more than $150 million. But what factors make the LMS selection process more successful for some than others?

Through practical, front-line experience, I’ve identified the information and steps that are most effective in defining requirements and formulating a shortlist of highly qualified vendors for any type of business-oriented learning management scenario.

People often ask me, “What exactly should I expect from your LMS selection process and services?” The answer is easier to follow if we walk through a real-world example. So fasten your seatbelt and read on, as I share a story about the hyper-competitive nature of the LMS market, and the logic needed to identify, compare and choose the ideal solution.

LMS Selection Process:  The Challenge

One of today’s hottest LMS market segments is continuing education. Associations, universities and commercial training companies are offering courses that help professionals of all types advance their work-related knowledge and skills. Recently, I completed an LMS selection project for a national association with this objective.

The association is dedicated to enabling and encouraging community service at the state and local level. Its “members” include approximately 1000 community service organizations. Each member organization has 5-150 employees, contractors and volunteers who need job-related training.

Within these organizations, individual knowledge and experience varies, as do learning needs and preferences for formal continuing education (CEU) credits, programs of study, books, courses, videos, files, templates, audio recordings, group discussions, expert forums, regional meetings, training/coaching telephone calls, and mini-nuggets of just-in-time performance support.

During the last decade, the association has accumulated a wealth of learning-related content in its LMS. However, finding the desired content type, format and size — on-demand — was a struggle. Learners who couldn’t locate desired content in the moment of need either abandoned the LMS or called the association for personalized assistance.

 


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LMS Selection Process:  The Steps

The association decided to replace its inadequate open-source learning solution with a modern association-oriented LMS.  Association LMSs are different from corporate or academic LMSs because they are designed to attract people who voluntarily pursue learning.

They’re built to find content, support mobile devices, gamification and social interactions. They must easily integrate with association management systems (AMS), ecommerce systems, single sign-on (SSO) technology, virtual classrooms, marketing automation tools, CRMs and event production systems.

So, we worked with the buyer to define requirements and identify four strong vendor matches. After verbally confirming requirements with each of the vendor candidates, we invited them to participate in our exclusive request for proposal (RFP) process.

All four vendors were qualified from an experience, functional, technical, service, and fiscal perspective so the association had to get serious to determine a winner. When all things are equal, price and subjective things like eagerness, attention to detail, understanding of business need, responsiveness, quality demonstrations and references will contribute to the decision process.

As is always the case, each vendor had strengths and weaknesses relative to the competition, so we fine-tuned the analysis during the final selection phase.

For each strength or weakness, we attempted to quantify incremental benefits in terms of potential revenue generation, cost reduction or improvement in learner experience. In other words, we used quantitative analysis to determine if extra non-critical features were worth the cost premium.

The answer emerged after we completed the following 4-step comparative LMS selection process:

Step 1: Compare Annual License Models

In addition to delivering training to member users, the association also sells courses to non-members, hoping the value of educational content will lead them to join.

This means they needed an LMS with a “usage-based” license model that lets them provide access and create learning records for many potential learners — both known and unknown — but charge the association only for learners who actually register or buy a course in an annual period.

We asked vendors to submit pricing for 15,000 “active” users/year so we could compare “apples-to-apples” bids, as illustrated below:

lms-license-models_talentedlearning

As you can see, among these comparable solutions the price difference between lowest and highest was $135,000, with an average bid of $143,750. Vendor 2 quickly emerged as the option to beat.

Step 2:  Compare One-Time Implementation and Setup Pricing

For one-time setup, implementation and administrative training, we asked each vendor for a tailored implementation and setup package that included these elements:

  • Full-service implementation process and services, including an upfront onsite workshop.
  • Migration of 50 online courses, 10 years of discussion group forums and posts, and a digital document library with thousands of documents.
  • Two-way integration with NetFORUM AMS — including data shared with the AMS for single sign-on, course. purchase/progress/completion and CEU credits earned — as well as detailed profile, organization, member status and other non-training data passed to the LMS to facilitate grouping, content recommendations, promotions and reporting.
  • Integration with Google Analytics for tracking learner usage patterns and technical footprint.
  • Integration with Adobe Connect so association administrators create a course once in the LMS, and it is automatically created in Adobe.  Also, Adobe must share attendance and participation records with the LMS.
  • A discretionary development account with 100 hours for potential enhancements.
  • Virtual or onsite administrative training.

It is important to specify your needs as an LMS buyer, so vendors respond to your RFP with a complete solution price, rather than a base price with detailed scoping (and costs) to be determined.  It’s foolish to delay scoping and pricing to the first step in implementation because you lose all buying leverage.  Why needlessly put yourself at the mercy of any vendor?  There’s no time like the sales process to get the best deal.

In this case, the four shortlist vendors provided the following one-time implementation and setup pricing:

lms-implementation-price_talentedlearning

These one-time implementation bids averaged $75,250 with a $40,000 range from lowest to highest. This did not change the status of Vendor 2 as the price leader.

However, for the clearest financial comparison, it’s important to evaluate competing solutions in a 1st-year and 3rd-year total cost of ownership (TCO) time/cost horizon.

Step 3:  Compare Total Cost of Ownership

Putting it all together, the chart below summarizes one-time setup and implementation costs, annual costs, and first-year and third-year total cost of ownership:

Among vendors that could meet or exceed all stated requirements, vendor 2 clearly was the most economical solution and it met all requirements. Unless there were compelling reasons to eliminate vendor 2, vendors 1, 3 and 4 needed to justify their premium (whether they realized it or not).

Was there measurable value in spending 2x or 3x for other solutions? Sizzle features are great, but are they $200,000 great? If not, the client would be wise to save the money and invest it in quality content development, promotion and other related needs. The next step revealed the answer.

Step 4: Demo Drilldown

Each vendor was invited to present its solution to association decision-makers in a virtual demonstration. As it turned out, vendor 2 was the most prepared, delivered the most compelling value proposition and tightest demonstration creating even more clear separation from the competition. Done deal.

All three higher price contenders displayed some innovation “sizzle” that swayed the selection team in the moment but never realistically. (I’ll discuss these demo performances in an upcoming blog post).

After the demos underscored the value of all four solutions, our rigorous upfront comparative analysis made it easy for the association to confidently choose a new LMS vendor. In this particular case, price and prudence won.


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LMS Selection Process:  The Takeaway

There are hundreds of viable LMS solutions in the market. Many will “work” for any given opportunity, just as many vehicles will “work” as your family car.

Sure, you can squeeze your family of four into a speedy, two-door coupe, but for daily errands and long-haul trips, the practicality and affordability of a minivan wins the day. It all depends on your needs.

Similarly, with LMS selection, it pays to define your requirements and spend time evaluating only qualified short-listed vendors. For companies that design, develop and sell learning systems, this is bad news.

The days of coasting to a victory based on product strengths and minimal sales effort are over. When competing against qualified specialists — or anybody for that matter — price, value, reputation and service matter.

Thanks for reading!

 


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About the Author: John Leh

John Leh is Founder, CEO and Lead Analyst at Talented Learning and the Talented Learning Center. John is a fiercely independent consultant, blogger, podcaster, speaker and educator who helps organizations select and implement learning technology strategies, primarily for extended enterprise applications. His advice is based upon more than 25+years of learning-tech industry experience, serving as a trusted LMS selection and sales adviser to hundreds of learning organizations with a total technology spend of more than $100+ million and growing. John would love to connect with you on Twitter or on LinkedIn.

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