moving from standalone to collaborative content authoring · moving from standalone to...
TRANSCRIPT
David Grebow October 2013
Research Brief
The Business Case for LCMS: Moving From Standalone to
Collaborative Content Authoring
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The Business Case for LCMS
Research Brief
The Business Case for LCMS: Moving from Standalone to Collaborative Content Authoring
By:
David Grebow, Principal Learning Analyst
October 2013
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The Business Case for LCMS
Introduction
The widespread adoption of Learning Content Management Systems (LCMS) to author
content is changing the way companies operate by changing the cost structure, speed of
development, management and communication of content. Perhaps even more
profound is the change in the relationship between the content creator and consumer.
The once dependent connection between author and reader, in which the author
published content and the reader consumed the content, has dramatically changed.
Today, LCMS has enabled the readers to easily publish and in turn become the co-
contributors and writers.
LCMS software collapses authoring, publishing and using content into one activity. In
addition, it has enabled the creation and dissemination of content to be easily
accomplished on a variety of devices, quickly switching from desktop to laptop to tablet
in mid-sentence. This process of disintermediation has enormously increased how fast
and accurately content is used, and has resulted in dramatic increases in performance
and productivity. The key difference is that the pre-LCMS environment was focused
exclusively on the content. In the LCMS world, the learner is the focus.
Content is driven by an anytime/anywhere need to access content. It is defined by what
end-users of the content need in real-time to perform their work. It is no longer as
useful or valuable to provide content focused on a process or procedure with a short
shelf-life, or knowledge or know-how that does not help users do their jobs. The LCMS
can provide all or any specific part of a course that the learner needs. Relevancy and
immediacy are the new bars which need to be cleared for the authoring and delivery of
content. The impact on the L&D departments and their training programs has been
most powerful. The system brings the people who have the knowledge and know-how
into direct contact with the people who need their knowledge.
The result is a company that is more agile, adaptive and able to change and adjust to
market conditions -- using content that is as current as possible; content that can be
delivered in a variety of formats from formal to informal, classroom to eLearning or
performance support; able to be more productive, innovative, and responsive. As this
report will show, organizations that use their LCMS will be more successful in a rapidly
changing, more competitive marketplace.
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The Business Case for LCMS
The Adaptive Business Model Defined
The traditional business model developed pre-determined content that demanded
consensus, often by committee, and absolute compliance. The model was created
during an era when the business environment was more stable, and the products and
services, and resulting skills and knowledge, often had a shelf life of up to several years.
The new, more flexible adaptive business model requires communication and
collaboration which creates new content on an as-needed basis. New businesses
operate in a flat, hypercompetitive world market and experience a more rapid pace of
change. Even the characteristics of change are dramatically different. Change today is
dynamic and discontinuous. Change happens with greater frequency and is
unpredictable based on real-time events within the company and with their customers,
vendors, and suppliers.
Organizations need to adapt quickly and correctly to these changes. For example:
A software company needs to provide customized upgrades to their clients, who
are adapting to rapidly changing market conditions.
A healthcare organization is constantly updating their policies and procedures
based on rapidly changing guidelines and regulations.
Two companies are merging and need to quickly rationalize the different ways of
doing business in order to keep moving forward.
A multinational fast-food company is constantly bringing in new products to
different markets and regions and must provide information and directions
about food safety, preparation and marketing.
All of these examples result in changes in learning content and in the training based on
that content. The adaptive business model means that the company has the tools and
culture to be able to quickly adapt to changes in their marketplace.
Most organizations today have been built upon a traditional corporate culture with a
number of well-known and accepted corporate procedures regarding content and
content-sharing. The adaptive business requires new ways of communicating and
collaborating. Transitioning into an adaptive business model requires the right tools, a
supportive culture, a new mindset, good strategy and high-level commitment. The goal
is to find the intersections where the traditional model no longer produces the optimum
results, and can be improved using an adaptive model that views content and content-
sharing.
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The Business Case for LCMS
Traditional Business Model Adaptive Business Model Content has a longer shelf life often measured
over a year or longer
Content has a shorter shelf life, often measured in
months or less
Training content can be developed and delivered
over longer time periods that can be measured in
months
Training content needs to be developed and
delivered within weeks and occasionally in real
time
Training materials are delivered using more
traditional training approaches (e.g. ILT, VLT)
Training materials are delivered using new non-
traditional approaches (e.g. mobile, social, videos,
performance support (one specific of a course,
chapter, check list, etc.)
One-size-fits-many, off-the-shelf programs One-size-fits-one personal learning path for one
person at a specific point-in-time
The adaptive business model is based on the capability to share content instantly, and
work collaboratively across the enterprise regardless of the department or division in
which you are working.
The adaptive business model incorporates several business practices that enable the
kind of content creation, communication and collaboration required to respond and
move to meet the rapid and discontinuous change.
Progressive organizations utilize a content creation and management tool that has the
capability of developing content using subject matter experts from across the company
and often with the input of customers, suppliers and vendors as well.
The content creation and management tool employs a number of social and
other collaborative features and functions.
The implementation of the new system starts out small and builds on the success
of the program it supports.
The adaptive organization includes workspaces that cross department and
division lines and incorporate.
o Company-wide secure access to files
o Enterprise-level social network features
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The Business Case for LCMS
o Real-time collaboration tools (e.g. virtual meetings and shared editing
capabilities).
The organization fully embraces methods to facilitate real-time discussion and to
reduce unnecessary emails using instant messaging for on-screen and mobile
chats between everyone across the enterprise.
The Value of an Adaptive Business Model Using an LCMS
There are a number of ways the LCMS develops a new mindset that supports an
adaptive business model. That new LCMS-based adaptive model produces a number of
benefits for the organization:
Contextual Learning. No two learners are alike, nor do they usually need the
same information at the same time. The content needs to adapt to their needs in
order to be most useable and useful. The LCMS takes knowledge objects and
places them into a learning path that is proscribed by what the learner needs to
know. These learning paths not only provide the learning that is most relevant; it
also captures the learning objectives determined by the organization.
This approach means that learners will find what they need when they need it
instead of waiting for that piece of knowledge to be shared as they patiently
wade through lots of content they do not need. Adaptive learners are able to
search and find what they need in the same way that a person can search for
specific information on Google. The difference is that the information is more
focused and linked to additional knowledge learners might need to do their job.
Core and Custom Knowledge. In addition to tacit and explicit knowledge, the
adaptive organization using an LCMS also recognizes that there is core and
custom knowledge. Core knowledge tends to have a longer shelf life and can be
used by many people. Custom knowledge often has a very limited shelf life and
focuses on a specific audience.
Knowledge Objects are Adaptable. The adaptive organization needs to keep up
with the way technology impacts on the delivery of content. Mobile is a great
example of an emerging technology that once delivered only telephone calls and
today, with smartphones, can provide content through a variety of networks and
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The Business Case for LCMS
apps. Content developed as an object can be reused and delivered on a mobile
device without having to redevelop the content from scratch. As content
delivery technology changes, the adaptive organization can change without the
time-consuming and expensive effort of re-developing content for mobile.
Faster Time-to-Performance. One key goal of any learning content is to speed up
the time to performance. This is especially true for new employees. In
organizations that need to adapt to high turnover or frequently changing rules
and regulations, even the core content that was previously developed can be
more readily revised and repurposed than creating new content from scratch.
Core legacy content, which might have become obsolete, can still be converted
and becomes an asset that reduces the cost of new content development.
Self-paced, anytime and anywhere. Another advantage the LCMS affords the
adaptive organization is to enable employees to also be as adaptive as possible.
This means that employees have the capability to choose small units of content
from which to learn. This is useful for new employees who learn what they need
to perform a new job and then go back and learn more advanced skills, as well as
more experienced employees who simply need a refresher on a single subject.
Finally there is another benefit that using an LCMS in an adaptive business
environment can produce. Delivering a high-performance learning culture begins
by understanding that smart and agile employees, with the tools they need to
succeed, are also the most engaged employees. Numerous studies show that
providing up-to-date performance support content and learning programs will
have a dramatic effect on a company’s customer service and satisfaction,
productivity and ultimately profitability. The LCMS enables a learning culture
that can produce these benefits.
Moving from Standalone to Collaborative Content Authoring
Until the emergence of the LCMS, standalone authoring was the norm. Standalone
authoring meant that the content in a training program was defined, designed, and
developed by a single person or single design team with initial input from a Subject
Matter Expert (SME). The team or person acted independently of the learners and
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The Business Case for LCMS
interpreted and translated the content into learning materials. Content authoring
software and tools were designed to support this model.
Collaborative content authoring is a relatively new concept and practice. Collaborative
content authoring opens the content development to many people outside the
development team, traditionally composed of instructional designers, writers, graphic
artists and others, as well as the SMEs. The new collaborative content teams are
composed of anyone who has knowledge and know-how to contribute to the content.
This includes everyone from product developers to customers. The only way this type of
wide-ranging collaborative content authoring can be achieved is through an LCMS.
Collaborative authoring uses an LCMS to ‘free’ all the learning that went into the
standalone content. LCMS builds a repository of many learning objects that have been
created by many people collaborating on the content. These learning objects contain
content that is tagged by metadata, for example objects about “product overview” or
“product service.” These learning objects can be assembled into individual learning
paths with the objects in the order needed by the learner. Each object can also be
Collaborative Authoring
Collaborative authoring is dynamic and produces content containing many
elements. Content is organized in a branching fashion. It is designed so learners
can assemble their own customized learning paths. The content is assembled on-
the-fly as needed and remains open for quick changes or updates.
Standalone Authoring
Standalone authoring is static and produces content that can be viewed as a single
learning element. Content is organized in a linear fashion. The content is also usually
designed so the learner is led through the content by an actual or virtual instructor.
The content is pre-assembled and closed to quick changes or revisions.
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The Business Case for LCMS
revised as needed by anyone who has the new content which needs to be added. A
learning path can deliver up-to-the-minute knowledge because it is put together in real-
time by the learners who are the most current on what is happening in the workplace
and not taken off the shelf with a “use by” date.
The LCMS enables the addition of informal or social content (the 80%) coming from
many sources to the more traditional formal standalone content (the 20%) producing
learning content that is closer to a 100% solution. Content developed in this fashion
allows room for the informal content; it can be stretched or adjusted to fit the needs of
informal learning.
The LCMS authoring tool, used to create new learning objects, can use everything from
PowerPoint presentations to Word documents and memos as content. Many LCMS
authoring tools use templates, storyboards, and other forms which enable almost
anyone to easily create learning objects without the long and often steep learning curve
required by other authoring tools. The most sophisticated LCMS also incorporate
version control, multiple authoring capabilities, and learning project management.
Relevant Content is a Mission-Critical Business Tool
Business today changes faster than ever and needs to have the capability to transfer
content for learning at the same speed. The older model of knowledge transfer had the
luxury of time. People could queue up for a class that took months to develop, and what
was taught over a long period of time was still enough to be relevant. Companies
practicing that approach now will be out of business very quickly because the content
people need to do their jobs will be no longer relevant. Content that is not current, that
is out-of-date, has no real bearing on current business problems, wastes time, prolongs
decisions, reduces innovation and increases time-to-performance impacts directly and
negatively on the bottom line. Current content does the opposite and enables
companies to more quickly meet customer demands, innovate more readily, change
processes and procedures more quickly, and improve time-to-performance and
productivity and more.
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The Business Case for LCMS
Why Today’s Workforce Needs to Create and own Their Content
Today’s workers are increasingly global and mobile. They expect content to be relevant,
up-to-date and able to help them perform when needed. Their experience is that the
explosion of knowledge has made it impossible for any one person to be The Expert on
any subject. For them the team is the new expert.
Content in their digital world is a function of disintermediation, which means the
content is often developed and published by them, rather than from some distant and
centrally controlled location. They are a generation used to blogging, commenting,
posting and publishing. Content is not something that is delivered to them; it is created
by them. They expect to be a part of rather, than apart from, the conversation about,
development of, and dissemination of content. There is also another important reason
why they need to own their own content.
They do the work and know what is happening with regard to the business, products
and services. They live in a world where content is always there, on a PC, a tablet or
smartphone. The idea of waiting for content to be drawn from an SME and translated
into a course that takes less than 10-20 minutes to learn is unacceptable. Sitting through
a lot of content that they do not need is unacceptable. Spending time in a classroom
listening to an instructor talk about a lot of content that is not immediately relevant is
unacceptable. The bottom line: They want ownership; if not of the actual content then
of the way it is developed and delivered. And that means an LCMS needs to be in place
to provide the technology to make that happen.
Limitations of Desktop Standalone Learning Content Authoring
As we previously discussed, desktop standalone authoring was useful when content had
a long shelf-life and was being used to transfer knowledge in analog formats. Learners
expected the output in the form of an instructor-led course that was carefully
developed by professional instructional developers and placed in an LMS catalog.
Content created this way worked when there was time to leave the workplace – travel
was expected. The distinction at a basic level is that the content people needed was
explicit and not tacit. Here’s the difference between the two types of knowledge:
Explicit knowledge is what is externalized and captured as content. Explicit knowledge is
at the heart of traditional learning content. Explicit knowledge comes as a rehearsed
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The Business Case for LCMS
presentation or off-the-shelf courses. Knowledge transfer is fixed and can transcend the
boundaries of time and space. Explicit knowledge can be developed at the desktop of a
professional course developer and packaged as a course.
Tacit knowledge is internalized and kept by the person with the knowledge or know-
how. Tacit knowledge is the basis for informal knowledge sharing. Tacit knowledge has
no wrapper, is off-the-cuff and must be transferred in real-time. Instant messages,
telephone conversations, and live forums with a Community of Practice are examples of
tacit knowledge. Tacit knowledge has no development timeline and cannot be created
and later transferred from a desktop.
Since tacit knowledge constitutes the largest percentage of the content which today’s
learners need, then standalone desktop authoring, created to develop content that is by
nature explicit, is of limited value in a fast-paced highly mobile world. Content
developed using an LCMS has greater value because the content can be developed
quickly, provided in focused, discrete learning objects, delivered to any mobile device,
revised and corrected in real-time, and created with the input of the people who best
know what the content needs to contain.
Content: From Centrally Developed to Widely Distributed
Organizations today are very different than they were even 10 years ago. They are hiring
more temporary workers and it is too expensive to provide the same type of centrally
developed formal training that employees used to attend. Any other employees are too
busy to spend time in a classroom. Plus, the demand for centrally developed content
depended on the Boomer generation, for whom it was originally developed, and those
employees will be leaving companies in droves over the next few years. Their
knowledge and subject matter expertise will soon no longer be available to even
develop content that goes through a central location such as a training department. It’s
not impossible to imagine a point in the near future when the acronym “SME” is no
longer used.
In addition, companies today are more open to sharing content development with all of
their supply and value-chains (e.g., suppliers, partners, vendors and customers). The
LCMS needs to be used to enable the connections between all these widely distributed
and different learners. There is another important reason that widely distributed
development and delivery of content is becoming more accepted. In addition to
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The Business Case for LCMS
reducing the cost of training, the learning objects provided by the LCMS can be
distributed across the enterprise instead of being closely held by the L&D organization.
This enables a learning object to be previewed, viewed, reviewed many times and kept
as current as possible by people working in other countries. Revising an object about a
change in a manufacturing process, for example, can happen the day the change is
instituted. In a central repository far away from the source of the change, the revision
would take considerably longer. It would not have the value as an asset for the company
that a widely distributed learning object can afford.
The issue of consistency arises when discussing the ability of almost anyone to develop
or revise a widely distributed learning object. The issue is resolved in an LCMS by the
use of templates which are branded and vetted by the company. These templates-as-
learning-objects can be used to develop an entire course by assembling learning objects
in the repository, creating new learning objects, or using a combination of old and new
objects. Authors may be subject matter experts, instructional designers, media
production artists, or community of practice leaders.
The LCMS authoring tool may also be used to rapidly convert “libraries” of an
organization’s existing content, typically adding media, customized interfaces, and
instructional methodologies. Widely distributed content can mean that an author may
work internally or be located at externally. For some companies, authors can today
include key customers, vendors and suppliers. Everyone with a contribution to the
learning content can be a contributor. The traditional process of identifying subject
matter experts, interviewing them and extracting their relevant knowledge is now
placed directly into the hands of the people throughout the enterprise who have
knowledge and know-how to contribute. This is obviously faster and more effective
since it adds in the most current and useable content. Plus, a complex program can be
much more readily pieced together when many people who know the content can work
together as a team from any device.
Case in Point: Allscripts
Kenexa LCMS Helps Allscripts Expand Content and Reduce Development Time
There are more than 180,000 physicians that rely on Allscripts for healthcare software
solutions. Based in Chicago, the company serves 1,500 hospitals and 10,000 post-acute
care organizations on four continents. This includes homecare providers and
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The Business Case for LCMS
organizations, one of Allscripts’ fastest growing clients. Allscripts’ goal is to deliver the
most trusted, innovative software programs that enable healthcare providers to use
technology to achieve world-class outcomes. Allscripts solutions help these
organizations to automate certain aspects of their business – such as scheduling and
specific administrative and clinical tasks – that helps improve the quality of care and
operational control.
Allscripts Education Services supports internal and external client education
requirements for their healthcare software solutions. Each solution is managed by
various product owners and teams; timelines and deliverables are developed and
negotiated by these respective teams. Education Services represents the single face of
Allscripts education offerings, regardless of the product being supported. Its curriculums
incorporate various approaches, including formal instructor-led classes, web-based
instructor-led classes, and eLearning.
To keep pace with the increased demand for solutions, the Homecare Group at
Allscripts needed a solution that could update training material in a timely manner and
do it in such a way that similar content across many customized programs and learning
modules would be revised at the same time. This would not only save Allscripts’
instructional designers valuable time and resources, it would enable clients to get the
most up-to-date training in the fastest and easiest way possible. With at least four new
releases each year, and each release requiring up to 20 eLearning courses, that added
up to content for 80 or more training programs.
The answer for Allscipts was the Learning Content Management System (LCMS) by
Kenexa, an IBM company. Allscripts Education Services elected to implement a hosted
solution to ensure the collaborative workspace solution is available from all locations via
the internet. This approach made it possible for content to be available and reusable
when it was needed for Homecare Group Education Services team members at any
location.
Wanda Clark is a senior education technologist at Allscripts and one of the people
responsible for training on the LCMS. According to Wanda, “You have to create a
perspective of seeing training content as individual business assets with an associated
cost of development and maintenance. Eliminating redundancy is where the ROI comes
from.” She added that with a typical Allscripts curriculum, 30% of the content can be
reused when the learning objectives are reviewed.
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The Business Case for LCMS
The Learning Content Management System met many of Allscripts’ immediate
requirements right out of the box. By utilizing the Member Management capabilities,
instructional designers are able to assign and manage subject matter experts tasked
with reviewing course materials. Both internal and external subject matter experts can
be assigned to review content. These resources do not have access to any of the content
except what is explicitly assigned to them for review. Reviewers are given the ability to
make independent comments for each element within the content assigned to them.
The system catalogs all of the comments for each element so that updates can be
performed quickly and effectively.
Shortly after implementing the Kenexa LCMS, Allscripts’ Homecare group was able to
reduce by 66% the time it took to develop content and get it into the hands of the users.
This allows the group to develop new content for clients that are taking just-in-time
release upgrade training.
According to Wanda Clark, “The LCMS made me a much better instructional
designer. Aligning to the discipline made me very conscious to develop to objectives –
and more creative in how I presented the information. From a delivery perspective, it
provided a means to provide more course offerings through packaging versus
development. We are able to grow closer to achieving the J3, just enough, just in time,
and just for me.” When asked about what the company has learned, she added, “At
Allscripts, we are just beginning to implement the single sourcing opportunities that the
LCMS can provide. The challenge is not the mechanics of how to metadata tag content
for single-sourcing, but defining and teaching how to design and develop training
keeping multiple outputs in mind.”
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The Business Case for LCMS
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