article thumbnail

Acquistions – Someone had an idea

eLearning 24-7

Someone at LTG should score a raise for going up to their boss or being the boss and saying let’s look at buying Rustici. The system used to have a lot of potential, so the first thing to come up with was what they referred to as TIM (think a mentor thing that helps you). TIM I understand is still around and hasn’t evolved.

Ideas 84
article thumbnail

What you need 2 know: 3rd Party Content

eLearning 24-7

Who remembers NetG? NetG, was the evil empire of the days gone past – ok, in my mind. speed with no latency issues would be acquired by NetG and shoved into the Raiders of the Ark storage facility, next to the ark itself. Along will come templates, worksheets, anything to help enhance the learning. Static rules!

Content 46
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

The Growing Role of Microlearning

CLO Magazine

Degreed released a study, “How the Workforce Learns in 2016,” that showed among 500-plus respondents, people rate their training department with a minus 31 percent net promoter score; that’s not good. This market grew rapidly, and the LMS market adapted to help us manage, administer and track these courses.

article thumbnail

A Conversation with Bryan Austin of mLevel

Kapp Notes

We discussed the evolution of the mLevel game-based learning platform and how it has helped a number of companies increase the effectiveness of learning in their organizations. Bryan has had a distinguished career in corporate Learning & Development, including leadership roles with Skillsoft, Kaplan, AchieveGlobal and NETg.

article thumbnail

Why Corporate Training is Broken And How to Fix It

Jay Cross

Venture capitalists funded scores of eLearning companies, most of which disappeared in the dot-com crash a few years later. Remember Digital Think, SmartForce, Pensare, NETg, KnowledgeNet, UNext, Docent, One Touch, Centra, InterWise, and their brethren? In the late 1990s, the web changed everything. eLearning was born.