Good To Great

article thumbnail

Three steps to compliance greatness | Good To Great

Good To Great

Here are my three tips for making them care: Create a fresh, surprising, eye-catching design or concept to make users sit up and take notice; use the visual design to help overcome any compliance preconceptions they might have. Showing them it matters Put yourself in the learners’ shoes. Image: ?????

article thumbnail

A panel podcast on compliance training

Good To Great

→ A panel podcast on compliance training Posted on March 10, 2011 by Stephanie Dedhar | 1 Comment Yesterday I was invited to join a small panel podcast hosted by Craig Taylor to discuss compliance training – what’s wrong with it, what’s right with it and what we need to do to make it even better.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

How I used Wordle as a basic TNA tool | Good To Great

Good To Great

In preparation for my session, I asked Good To Great readers, the Twitter community and eLN event attendees to sum up their last compliance e-learning experience in three words. I then asked people to describe the compliance e-learning they want to see more of.

article thumbnail

Have you done your good deed for the day?

Good To Great

Good To Great In pursuit of excellence: my view on the world of learning and training Skip to content Home A bit about me ← A panel podcast on compliance training Two great ideas for your next sustainability course → Have you done your good deed for the day? Thanks for your support! Bookmark the permalink.

article thumbnail

Excellent instructional design: a 10-tip beginners' guide | Good.

Good To Great

← The bad reputation and rehabilitation of compliance training Help me write a Wordle → Like Be the first to like this post. Bookmark the permalink.

article thumbnail

A ‘very important’ writing tip

Good To Great

” How often do we make the mistake of telling our learners that something is ‘very important’ – especially in compliance courses? You see, all those words (horrifying, wonderful, hideous, exquisite) are only like saying to your readers, “Please will you do my job for me.”

Tips 65
article thumbnail

In memory of Hanif Sazen | Good To Great

Good To Great

← 15 tips for energising your e-learning The bad reputation and rehabilitation of compliance training → Like Be the first to like this post. Saffron will not be the same without Hanif, but everything he did to create the Saffron family means that the things he worked so hard for will continue to grow and make him proud.