Remove elearning company Remove Learning Company Remove Sound Remove vendor
article thumbnail

7 Red Flags in a Learning Partner That You Should Never Ignore

Maestro

How’s your relationship with your partner in learning? Learning companies are often viewed as transactional vendors or production houses for L&D and HR groups. Right away, that mindset lowers the bar for what you should expect from your partners in learning. Has your vendor done their research?

Metrics 52
article thumbnail

Cammy Beans Learning Visions: The Rise of Rapid e-Learning

Learning Visions

This sounds like a bit of an overstatement to me. Are they producing high-quality e-Learning? Why should companies go with e-Learning vendors when rapid e-Learning tools are available? Have the e-Learning vendor create the first few custom programs. How adept are these SMEs really getting?

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 to Use an E-learning Company to Develop Training Assets

CommLab India

Tools Used: Sound Forge, Audacity are examples of tools that can be used for Podcasts, but there are several other options that can be explored online. All you have to do is decide the types of resources that you need and outsource the requirement to an external online training development vendor.

article thumbnail

6 Tips to Select the Right Online Compliance Training Provider

CommLab India

Are you thinking of an online training provider that exactly suits your company’s compliance requirements? You have to look for an eLearning company, who can turn your complex compliance subject into instructionally sound, visually appealing and engaging online learning. Check this blog. See how it looks like.

article thumbnail

Why Corporate Training is Broken And How to Fix It

Jay Cross

Forward-looking companies established corporate universities and tried to become Learning Organizations. eLearning was born. Venture capitalists funded scores of eLearning companies, most of which disappeared in the dot-com crash a few years later. Vendors churned out page-turners and shovelware.