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A panel podcast on compliance training

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 ← How to write an award-winning submission Have you done your good deed for the day? My fellow contributors were Sam Borrough and Colin Hawksworth , and you can listen to it on Craig’s blog. Image: ?????Salvatore

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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: ?????

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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.

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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. See you again soon!

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Five tips for e-learning they'll fall in love with

Good To Great

← Three benefits of entering for an award Using a screen type index to create balanced storyboards → Like Be the first to like this post. 2 Responses to Five tips for e-learning they’ll fall in love with Lisa McGonigle | February 14, 2011 at 10:34 am | Reply Hi Stephanie Love this little blog – just tweeted about it.

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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. Dont forget to check out my favourite blogs below, and follow me on Twitter (@StephanieDedhar) for more bite-sized updates. Bookmark the permalink. See you again soon!

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How to write an award-winning submission

Good To Great

Once you’ve decided, here are my tips (some gleaned from my own experience and some based on the wise words of others) for writing an award-winning submission. Give yourself plenty of time 3,000 words might not sound like a lot but, believe me, writing an award submission is a lot more time consuming than you might expect.