White Papers & eBooks
Organizations must commit to continually evaluating the employee learning experience and how technology is either making or breaking that experience. Is it disrupting their workflow? Is it hindering productivity? Do learners actually enjoy and find value in the programs they use? Is it making them better at their jobs? Is the work and time spent using systems having a positive impact on the business goals? These are questions that must be asked, assessed and acted upon.
Download this eBook to learn how it’s done.
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In high-consequence industries, accidents can lead to loss of life, general disruptions, or risks to safety. Imagine the business impact if your organization were suddenly unable to meet compliance, service, or production commitments. That’s not a position you want to be in. Keep these six things in mind as you make your contingency plans
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Are games and gamification part of your learning strategy? We hope so.
Game-based learning has been proven to increase employee participation, training enjoyment and knowledge retention. Perhaps your strategy is not quite right and consequently, you’re not seeing the desired results. We get it. The Game Agency interviewed five instructional designers about what could go wrong with a gamification strategy: They shared the 10 most common mistakes you may be making and how to fix them.
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We now understand that gamification is more than throwing points, badges, and leaderboards at a program. And we’ve also peeked into the full potential of gamification with hundreds of possible mechanics, not to mention all the dynamics and other considerations that go into successful gamification.
So where do we start? What do we have to have to create quality gamified programs, and what are the things we can add in later?
This eBook provides some of the fundamental questions to inspire creative gamification design. It includes questions to ask yourself before you begin the gamification process, as well as questions to ask yourself continually throughout the process.
Keep in mind, these questions will not apply to every situation and should be taken in context to what you are gamifying. Also, constant monitoring of feedback and metrics will be required as you slowly make incremental improvements, add new game features, and utilize new game mechanics.
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Organizations that have successful learning programs are very often ones that start learning right away — during the onboarding phase. Having a fully integrated onboarding process and fully integrated technology allows organizations to treat onboarding as part of a holistic process designed to show value to new employees (or employees in new roles), which has an impact on organizational culture, employee resilience and business metrics such as customer satisfaction and even revenue.
Explore these concepts further in OpenSesame's newest eBook, "Onboarding in 2022 - What Has Changed and What Remains Critically Important."
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Your organization’s approach to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion matters, and has for a long time. In recent months, contributing to an employee’s sense of Belonging is proving to be massively important. Belonging is one of the fastest growing influences on how your employees and prospective employees, customers, partners, and others view the organization. This plays an increasingly large role in their decision to pursue a role with the organization or to leave.
This eBook provides guidance on how learning and development can and should play a role to influence how employees experience an organization’s DEI&B. This eBook makes a case for how and why learning and development can be an agent for shaping the culture of an organization. Learning can contribute to a sense of employee belonging by creating a culture of engagement, opportunity within the organization, and productivity. Ultimately, supporting employee belonging can make great strides toward employee retention.
In this eBook, we focus on a few key issues around Belonging:
Tying Belonging to Strategic Talent Outcomes
A Belonging self-assessment guide
Opportunity checklist for ways to improve
Community building
Creating space to respond to changes
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According to a recent study by the Brandon Hall Group, most L&D leaders say their technology ecosystem is falling short - but why?
Cultural changes including a remote/hybrid workplace, the new "metaverse," and the expectation of knowledge on-demand are forcing learning strategies to adapt. Innovations including virtual reality, augmented reality, microlearning, video-based practice, and machine learning are getting better results, so how do you prepare?
If you haven’t already been asked already to implement these newer strategies, expect it. Get a jumpstart on building your next-generation learning technology ecosystem with this eBook.
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For many companies, Learning & Development has taken center stage. In fact, 72% of executives agree that L&D has become a more strategic function in their organization. And among employees, 70% say they would leave their current company for one that invests in employee L&D. With heightened demand for Learning & Development opportunities, many companies are looking for ways to implement a simplified yet effective L&D strategy.
Designed for HR professionals, this essential infographic outlines how to make your L&D strategy a seamless part of your organization, motivate your teams, and drive sustainable growth for your company.
It will help you:
Understand what’s valuable to both your employees and customers
Get to the L&D finish line as quickly as possible
Ensure what you are building results in something your employees and customers actually want
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The "Great Resignation," "Turnover Tsunami" or the "Big Quit," whatever you choose to call it, the trend of job departures in the last few years has been unnerving for organizations. The workforce is taking stock of their careers and reevaluating their priorities. In 2020 alone, 40% of U.S. workers have changed jobs, managers, or roles. Employees are craving new opportunities for personal growth and learning to help them sharpen or build skills. If your people don’t believe those opportunities exist at your organization, they will look elsewhere.
To stem the turnover tide, organizations must connect their people to more personalized learning, critical skills development, and give employees control over their career paths and opportunities for growth. Workers who can see what internal growth opportunities are available within the organization are more likely to stay, as they can chart and track their progress towards the career path they desire.
Exposing your people to a wide variety of roles will help them gain a greater range of skills, be more collaborative across business areas and be more productive. And you’ll experience a massive increase in time-to-productivity as your "new" hires will already have most or all of their corporate onboarding done before even assuming the new role. Using your own people as a talent pool for filling job requisitions has a ton of great benefits.
Use this checklist as a reference guide to ensure your organization has the tools it needs to plan, facilitate and execute a great internal talent mobility program.
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It’s hard to find the perfect vendor in the oversaturated learning technology market (700+ LMS vendors alone). How do you know they’ll be the perfect fit without trying a demo? Who has the time to try hundreds of demos? What’s a Chief Learning Officer (CLO) to do?
You need a cheat sheet.
This guide will help you narrow down the musthave learning technology features to drive business growth. At the end of the day, you don’t need the perfect piece of learning technology, you need the right fit for your business.
Unfortunately, learning technology traditionally focused on only one business segment—employee education. But today, companies use education to build their brands, foster communities, or generate revenue. That’s where traditional learning technologies fall short: they won’t deliver results for these new business models.
There are three broad categories for education in the corporate learning space:
Training companies and associations sell education programs to individuals or businesses to help them master professional skills, sometimes demonstrating mastery through a certification or credential.
Extended enterprise is your network of learners who are not employees but require training on your products or services to be successful. This includes customers, channel partners, contractors, or franchisees.
Employee education programs train the employees working for your business. This may include internally developed or off-the-shelf courses (or both).
With this guide, you’ll be able to identify the non-negotiable features your business needs to be successful.
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