Often the following question is asked: “How do you convert traditional content to microlearning?”
The answer to that question is, You don’t. Well, not exactly …
What is Microlearning?
Microlearning is an approach to training that delivers content in short, focused bites. To be effective, microlearning must fit naturally into the daily workflow, engage employees in voluntary participation, be based in brain science (how people actually learn), adapt continually to ingrain the knowledge employees need to be successful, and ultimately drive behaviors that impact specific business results.
Many people get hung up on the idea content that is shorter and the instinct is to compress existing courses into smaller modules. However, that’s not microlearning. It is not possible to take a 60-minute eLearning module, break it into six 10-minute modules and expect to get better results. Instead of getting stuck on the first part of the definition, focus on the end: “drive behaviors that impact specific business results.” You should be making the shift to microlearning to address the changing needs of your employees and improve your impact on the business, not just to align your initiatives with a popular trend.
The process of “converting” your existing content into microlearning begins with the question “What is the most crucial issue our business is facing right now?” Focus on the topics that will be most impactful for your organization. As you become more confident in applying microlearning principles, you can expand your content offerings.
Say you have 30 minute online course called “Workplace Safety” that covers literally everything employees need to know about being safe on the job. With so much information thrown at them at once, they walk away not remembering any of it.
Using a microlearning approach, this content can be transformed into a series of short videos that will focus on specific safety behaviors that are critical for new employees in specific roles. These videos, along with reinforcement questions and job aids, would then be delivered over the course of the employee’s first few weeks on the job instead of all at once. The original content is then transformed into formats that better align with the needs of the employee while still addressing the business' requirements.
Next there is a 60-minute classroom session on advanced sales techniques that is very well-received and valued by your stakeholders. There’s no rule that says you have to change this course due to the introduction of microlearning. Rather, you should consider how microlearning can augment your classroom offering to help transfer this new knowledge into on-the-job behavior. For example, you could add a series of short videos for employees to experience before the session to help focus their time in the classroom on discussion and practice. You could then introduce a series of reinforcement exercises after the session to embed their new knowledge long-term. This would also create opportunities to measure knowledge retention and behavior change to further validate the impact of the course.
Today you have a 20-minute online course on food safety that is a bit of a firehose of information. However, this EXACT module is required by your state regulator for all food-handling employees. Therefore, you cannot change the content or delivery method. That said, the introduction of microlearning may give you a few options to improve the employee experience for this topic. For example, if this is a course that must be completed by an employee every year, you may consider adding reinforcement questions to sustain their knowledge and prepare them for the next certification. But, overall, there will be a few instances where your content will stay the same because it’s required in some way.
Today you have a 45-minute online course on active listening that was purchased off the shelf, is not completed very often and has no measurable impact on business results. This content can be retired. I’m not saying active listening isn’t important, but it’s not likely to be at the top of the business priority list. You may eventually come back to this topic as part of another microlearning initiative, but you should not waste time on content that is not delivering clear value to your organization.
L&D must fix its content problem. Too much content lives in hard-to-access places and provides little-to-no value to the employees or the organization. Microlearning provides an opportunity to address this problem by targeting just the right content to the right people at the right time. And you don’t have to start from scratch. That’s because your existing content represents a well of expertise you can draw from to build engaging microlearning content that helps to drive measurable business results. In fact, teams that have successfully introduced microlearning often create a new content challenge: employee knowledge grows so quickly that they soon need more content at greater levels of difficulty. Now that’s the kind of content problem I want to have!
Want to learn more about Microlearning? Get in touch with one of our Digital Solutions Advisors.