Two weeks ago I got the wonderful opportunity to speak in OZ, specifically Melbourne, Australia.
What I found was an extensive group of people hungry for anything e-learning. They were hungry to know more information. Hungry to learn as much as they could and hungry to see what was in the space.
My sense of it all, was that regardless of the location the buzz is all e-learning.
I wasn’t surprised on the e-learning excitement.
I’ve been watching the market for a long time and seeing the growth that exists in the country. Mind you the same vibe exists in New Zealand.
It was awesome. Just as awesome as finding the AC/DC lane.
I wasn’t thunderstruck, but what I was surprised at was the number of folks who had or were about to purchase the well known authoring tools in the market, Articulate, Captive and Lectora.
If they are unfamiliar with the size and scope of the authoring tool market as many people are, then it makes sense to do what others do – and buy the well known brands.
When people think authoring tools, three products typically come to mind
- Articulate
- Adobe Captivate
- Lectora
Articulate Studio
I’ve always found this product to be the top of the line for PowerPoint to Flash course builds. It is easy to use and once you learn it, easy to push out content. Two components are the shining stars – Presenter and Quizmaker.
Articulate loves to say that Engage is used often, but from folks I have spoken with who use the product, that doesn’t seem to be the case.
Engage is the only product you can edit the HTML – using a HTML Kit. Granted the changes are limited but at least it is something. The rest you can’t.
Their video encode program is lackluster, you are better off using Audacity – which is free.
A strong pro is that it can generate a table of contents and can be outputted into various LMSs.
The Cons – Articulate Studio
You can only go so far with this product. At some point you will hit the glass ceiling, much like Charlie did in the the Chocolate Factory. Sure he blasted through it, but with this product you can’t.
The two biggest negatives IMO, is that it just isn’t robust enough for e-learning developers and its whole focus on PPT into converting to a course doesn’t help.
Yeah, people love it. Yeah people buy it. But people love to buy fast food, it doesn’t mean that it is on par with a five star restaurant.
And this product is by no means a five star solution.
Adobe Captivate
The king of authoring tools. Long held as a sacred course development product that can achieve greatness for the masses and for some people achieve the same with e-learning developers (I disagree, but that was a previous post).
Case in point:
- Use of the term “slides”. Any e-learning developer would know that the proper term is pages, as in Chapter-Pages. No e-learning developer or instructional designer would ever say “slides”. If they did, they would have to walk the plank.
- Themes. I love themes, but let’s face facts – themes are geared for the masses – again, nothing against that, but as noted above, an e-learning developer will often cringe at themes. It reminds them of templates, and speaking of which
- Templates. Anytime a pre-built offering is available with your product, you cannot honestly tell me that it is geared towards e-learning developers and hardcore instructional designers. Again, I’m a big fan of templates, when it comes to the masses or when you are working in Excel and have desire to build a spreadsheet with macros and pivot charts in it.
Templates in the past have been seen as the winning component, and it it true in the rapid content authoring market today. In fact, I consider it a huge negative if your authoring tool doesn’t have it, especially those that are robust simulation templates.
But, from an e-learning developer standpoint, the thought of using a template is the same as painting with numbers. Blue is number 2, red is number four and so on.
Pros
Feature rich.
HTML5 output, publish to the iPad and text to speech functionality. I also love that they are ADA 508 compliant, which many authoring tools are not.
That said, in general their features are no longer leaders. Rather they are followers.
What do I mean by that?
- Avatars – actors – as noted a new feature trend. Nothing like jumping on the bandwagon
- Templates – trend
- Interactive elements
- Screen capture – more and more vendors are adding it
- Scenario branching – this should be a standard in every product, and thankfully it is becoming more so
- Collaborative – yeah they are expanding on it, but its in trend mode
Could it happen?
Although there is no indicator that it is in the works or they have even considered it, I have to wonder whether Adobe sees this product as eventually becoming part of the CS Cloud.
I’m a big fan of SaaS solutions so for me it would be a logical next step and a smart one at that.
However, there are plenty of people who have come to rely on the desktop version and by doing so, would it hurt sales?
I’m unsure, but if it was to happen there is no doubt in my mind that having the same product in essence competing against it self, wouldn’t be a smart business edition.
Lectora
Another well used product in the space. Just as with Captivate and Articulate, Lectora has a huge following of loyal customers and they continue to attract more customers all the time.
In comparison to the other products listed here, I’ve never been a fan of the authoring tool. I have always seen it as lackluster in comparison to other products in the market. At one time, Lectora was ideal for both developers and the masses, but I’m unsure today.
Yes they were one of the first ones to output to HTML5, but they were not the first.
And unlike some of their competitors they clearly see themselves as forward thinking but I’m just not sold.
From my angle they are falling into the same trap that so many other vendors in this space are already in – having features that just are the same ol same with lots of others in the space.
My gerbil in the wheel mentality.
Bottom Line
Articulate, Adobe Captivate and Trivantis are going to continue selling a large quantity of product. They are going to continue to generate huge followings and very loyal customers.
But that doesn’t mean they don’t have faults nor does it mean that they should always deserve your praise.
Because they don’t.
E-Learning 24/7
Hi from Australia Craig
I am an avid reader of your posts – Keep them coming.
I am disappointed to have missed you in Melbourne.
What Conference did you speak at?
Are you coming back to Oz any time soon?
Marco Piazza Senior Lecturer
Marco,
There is a strong likelihood that I will be back in 2013, speaking at LearnX in Sydney.
I was one of the keynoters at LearnX
I can’t see them moving Captivate to the cloud in the near future unless they packaged it with Adobe Edge. Edge represents the only cloud service that currently would help Captivate, so it would be better, I think, to keep Captivate out of the SaaS model for now to promote use of the Cloud. It is somewhat sad that just as CS6 is approaching almost a single interface that can do almost anything, elements start disappearing into the cloud…
It would be fantastic if Captivate went into the cloud, but I would be skeptical until I tested it thoroughly. I’m a fan of Lectora, for example, but I really dislike their online version (slow, clunky etc).
Hi Craig,
Saw you speak at LearnX – It was very informative. Now I’m checking your blog and came across your article about top 10 Authoring tools. Have you done an update in 2012? The tools are changing so fast it’s hard to keep up. I would be interested in an update particularly whether your top 3 have changed.
Yes. I provide an update at the end of the year, typically first of December, but this year it will be in November.
What’s your opinion on Articulate Storyline?
http://elearninfo247.com/2012/06/04/product-review-articulate-storyline/
Here is the product review, but I really like the product. It is better suited for e-learning developers and ID folks, not the masses, although Articulate says otherwise
Craig, thank you for great posts. Do you know if there is any changes in market share of authoring tools? Adobe Captivate is still the leader? Storyline has helped to Articulate to take a significant market share from Adobe?
Excluding Articulate, Captivate, yes there is changes in market share. Rapid Intake is growing – positively and doing damage against Lectora. Other tools are across the board. I’ve seen upswing with Claro too
As a fan of Lectora, I’d like to respond to your comments about it, but I’m having difficulty doing that because you didn’t really specify what you thought was “lackluster” about it. I see Articulate, Captivate, and Lectora as each having different uses in one’s e-learning authoring “toolkit.” Captivate is best used for software training and Articulate and the other PowerPoint-based tools are fine for short, simple e-presentations. But if you want to create engaging e-learning on more complex conceptual topics, then you need a tool like Lectora that will allow you to use custom variables and actions to go beyond the out-of-the-box functionality.
I think your reviews of Articulate and Captivate were useful — you provided some pros and cons for each and a decent general analysis, but it’s a shame that you didn’t do something similar for Lectora, instead just making vague statements that do nothing but leave your readers with a vaguely negative gut feeling about Lectora.
I should mention that, when I first started using Lectora 7 years (or so) ago, I wasn’t a fan either — it seemed kind of anemic compared to the tool I had been using, Toolbook. But, over the years, Trivantis has really listened to its customers and made many significant improvements. There’s a reason why its customer base has been steadily growing and why it’s outlasted many of its previously more popular rivals. Perhaps you should consider giving it another look — spend some real time with it to begin to appreciate everything it can do (including allowing users to extend what it can do by adding external JavaScript and other kinds of standard coding).
Rapid Intake is, I believe, a rapid development tool, more akin to Articulate or Adobe Presenter or the Snap! tools than to Lectora. These tools definitely have their place (I sometimes use Adobe Presenter, myself), but generally are not robust enough to develop lengthy, complex e-courses. At this point, I’m also leary of getting too invested in any new tool that’s Flash-based, since the future of flash is uncertain. (Fortunately, although you can certainly embed Flash stuff into a Lectora course if you want to, Lectora ‘s output is HTML-based.)
Actually it is not. And their m-learning tool can output to HTML5 as well. What is nice about their eLearning unison product is it can work for both the masses and as well as developers. I found their m-learning tool geared towards the masses, but the fact you can output to HTML5 is a big plus. If you are seeking another tool that can output to HTML5, I’d recommend Claro by dominKnow, which offers a lot of features.
The sad reality is that the vast majority of tools are targeting the masses. A product you may want to take a look at is Courselab or MOS Solo, both are free.
So what tools would you recommend Craig? Any without the huge price tag of the ones you mention?
Depends on what you are looking for, but
Courselab – offers free and paid version, free is robust enough for most folks and it is ADL SCORM 2004 certified, there are ALOT of commercial vendors who are not
Scate Ignite – I love the Professional edition, Standard is okay – range is $199 to $499
iSpring Pro Suite – rate i think is $249 or so, they offer other tools for less
Qarbon Viewlet – solid product, not uber awesome but works with Mac OS and Linux OS besides Windows OS
Lecturnity $189