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Blended Learning: What Works™

Blended Learning: What Works?


By Bersin & Associates

Abstract:

After nearly 2 years of research in blended learning, and detailed interviews with
more than 30 companies, we find that blended learning is replacing “e-learning” as
the next big thing. Our research finds that blended learning programs are perhaps
the highest impact, lowest cost way to drive major corporate initiatives. Companies
have discovered unique and powerful methodologies for selecting the “right media”
to solve a given business problem. The biggest challenges companies face include
technology and the change management and business processes required to roll out
major programs. Results: Blended Learning solves the problem of speed, scale, and
impact – and leverages e-learning where it’s most appropriate, without forcing e-
learning into places it does not fit.

Blended Learning is the latest buzzword in corporate training. It sounds so simple –


mixing e-learning with other types of training delivery. But now that internet-training is
so widespread, where does it fit? What are the best ways to “blend” delivery types? Will
the term “blended learning” replace e-learning?

In 2002 and 2003 we set out to understand these issues – and conducted a very large
study of more than 30 corporate blended learning programs to understand “what works.”
Some interesting findings we uncovered:

1. Blended Learning IS the next big thing.

In the late 90’s everyone jumped on the e-learning craze. In reality the promise was a
little immature. Internet-based training grew up in the IT world – where people are used
to spending hours in front of their computers.

Now we know that different problems require different solutions (different mixes of
media and delivery) – and we believe that the key is to apply the RIGHT MIX to a given
business problem. Hence blended learning is effectively replacing e-learning.

Unlike traditional education, corporate training exists primarily to improve business


performance. We are not in the business of making employees smarter, but rather in the
business of increasing revenue or reducing costs.

We deal primarily with adults – people who want and need to learn just enough to
become more effective at their jobs. The science of “how to teach adults through the
internet” is still being developed. We know that people learn in different ways, and
different media applies to different people.

© Bersin & Associates 1 May 2003


Blended Learning: What Works™

“Blended Learning” is really the natural evolution of e-learning into an integrated


program of multiple media types, applied toward a business problem in an optimum way,
to solve a business problem.

I believe that every successful e-learning program is or will become a blended learning
program.

2. Blended Learning optimizes your resources.

As we talked to companies embarking on blended learning, we found them asking the


same questions. What combination of tools and media will give me the biggest impact
for the lowest investment?

In some cases, like Cisco’s reseller certification program – which must reach nearly
900,000 people, the audience is so large and the problem so complex that a major web-
based curriculum is needed. In others, like Siemens’ global change in accounting
practices, the audience was nearly 10,000 financial professionals and a simulation-based
solution was needed.

These projects cost $Millions to develop – and are cost-justified based on the large
audience and huge business drivers required.

In other cases, however, when a company like Kinko’s rolls out a new product to their
field sales offices, a conference call and series of job aids will do the trick.

>>> The key to blended learning is selecting the right combination of media that will
drive the highest business impact for the lowest possible cost.

So how do you decide the mix?

We found a variety of methodologies. One of the simplest approaches is to create


electronic content and “surround” it with human, interactive content. This approach of
“surrounding” e-learning with human enables you to create high interest, accountability,
and real assessment of the results of the e-learning program.

© Bersin & Associates 2 May 2003


Blended Learning: What Works™

The Simplest Appr

This approach was used by many companies when rolling out ERP application training.
An initial conference call and series of meetings was used to explain the project and why
the new system is so important – then the users took an online course – then there was a
follow-up meeting and evaluation by the manager before the system was actually rolled
out.

3. Each media type has its own strengths and weaknesses.

To make blended learning more powerful, you can start looking at all the media as
options: classroom training, web-based training, webinars, CD-ROM courses, video,
EPSS systems, and simulations. Other media which is less exciting but just as important
Instructor
includes books, job aids, conference calls, documents, and PowerPoint slides.
E-Learnin
Led
One lesson we learned is that the highest impact programs (such as the training program Coursewa
provided for new sales reps at British Telecom) Introduction
blend a more complex media with one or
more of the simpler media. A web-based course for introduction followed by a real Or Online Pro
“hands-on” interactive class is an obvious(or
mix. conference call)

Some of the questions you should ask when selecting media are shown below:

12 © Bersin & Associates Blended Learning: W

© Bersin & Associates 3 May 2003


Blended Learning: What Works™

Classroom-based instruction

Web-based courseware (with or


without simulations)

CD-ROM-based courseware (with


or without simulations)

Findings: How to
Live virtual classes/Webinars

Hardware/software simulation

On-site labs

Conference calls

J ob aids (e.g., manuals, checklists)

Electronic performance support


systems(EPSS)

Audience Online portals with supplemental


materials

•Skills Communities of practice - Chat


rooms and online message boards

•Time available Mentors (in-person, over the


phone, or over the Web)

•Motivation
In fact, from this research we developed a “media selection guide” which can help
companies identify which media to use for a given problem.
Time
Media Type •Time to Scalability
Instructional develop? Time to Cost to Cost to Assessment Trackable
Value Develop Develop Deploy Capable
How to Classroom
•Time High
to roll
Low
out?
3-6 weeks Medium High Medium Low
Design •Time
based training
to complete?
WBT Course- High High 4-20 weeks High Low High High
and ware

Architect CD ROM High High 6-20 weeks High Medium High Low
your Courseware

Blended Conference
Scale
Low Medium 0-2 weeks Low Low No No

•Audience size
Calls
Learning
Program Webinars
•Need
Software /
Medium

Very High
to update
Medium

Medium
frequently?
3-6 weeks

8-20 weeks
Low

High
Medium

Medium
Low

High
Low

High
Online Simu-
lations
Lab-based Very High Low 3-6 weeks High High Medium Medium
Simulations
Media
Selection
Job Aids

Web Pages
Business
Low

Low
Application
High

High
0-3 weeks

1-8 weeks
Low

Low
Low

Low
None

None
None

None

Web Sites•Need
Low to assess learners?
Guide
High 1-8 weeks Low Low None None

Mentors
•Need to certify?
Medium Low 2-3 weeks High High Low Low

Chat- Medium Low Medium 4-6 weeks Medium Medium None Low
•Need
Discussion-
Community
to track completion?
Services
•Impact ofMedium
“not6-20learning”?
Content
Video (VCR High weeks High High None Low
or Online)

•Are SMEs available?


EPSS Medium Medium 8-20 weeks Medium Medium None Medium

Blended Learning: What Works™ Checklist page 3


•Shelf life of content?
© Bersin & Associates, 2003 www.bersin.com

•Simulation/labs availab

11 © Bersin & Associates Blended


© Bersin & Associates 4 May 2003
Blended Learning: What Works™

4. Blended Learning forces you to think about the business problem.

One of the big things we found was that once you have to make “media” or “blend”
decisions, you are essentially doing “portfolio management.” Just like the problem of
balancing your 401K account, people need a methodology to help decide when to use a
webinar, when to use a conference call, and when to build a complex simulation or online
course. When you create a financial portfolio, you start with your goals – factor in risk,
time, and budget. In blended learning, the factors are similar:

 Specifically what is the business problem or goal? (Need to increase sales


revenue for a new product)
 What is the learning problem which you believe is creating this business problem?
Can you be sure it is a “learning” problem or a problem of distributing new
information? (Need to train sales reps on value proposition and pricing of this
new product)
 What are the characteristics of the audience? (How much time will they have to
use the content? What connectivity will they have? What kind of learning style
and education level do they need? What do they respond to? How motivated are
they?)
 What are the characteristics of the content? (How long before it goes out of date?
Are we “informing, developing skills, or creating competencies? – We developed
a paradigm describing the 4 types of corporate training which helps with this –
located at http://www.bersin.com/tips_techniques/Breeze2.htm , Where is this
content? What SME’s do we need to use? How much time will be able to get
with them?)
 What kind of measurement do we need? And how much? What amount of
measurement does the business problem justify? (Measurement is expensive –
what do we really need to measure in order to solve this business problem?
Completion? Scores? Certifications? Nothing at all?)

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Blended Learning: What Works™

The Blended

Each of these questions can be thorny. But you cannot hope to answer these questions
Characte
rationally without understanding what business cost, benefit, and processes you need to
be successful.
Identify
5. Technology is not as “easy” or “ubiquitous” as people think.
Audien
Here is an amazing fact. Nearly everyBusiness
company we talked to told us about many

Challenge Deve
technology hurdles they had to overcome. In the process diagram above, in step 3 we
identify how companies implement infrastructure. Infrastructure is very problematic in
most corporations.

Some of the places which can trip you up include:


Lear
Define
 Some learners do not have high bandwidth connectivity because they are in
foreign countries or remote locations – therefore some content will not run.
Learning
 PC’s each have different browser versions and plugins, so content standards must
be set which specify browser version, plugins, bandwidth, memory, and cpu speed
Develo
needed.
Challenge
 LMS systems are expensive and complex to implement, and if you rely on LMS- Measure
driven features for your program you may find that some are missing (i.e.
Assessments for example) Strateg
 When you deploy a large program you have to be ready for massive throughput in
a short period of time.

© Bersin & Associates 6 May 2003

1 2
Blended Learning: What Works™

 Measurement is difficult if you haven’t thought about what metrics you want to
measure up front, because LMS’s have fairly unsophisticated reporting systems.

Blended Lea
1 Target Aud
Au

6. Think Deployment Processes!


Portal: Catalog, Login, L
The single biggest issue we found which companies spent time and money on is the
marketing, launch, and deployment process. In order to be successful you must develop
an integrated “go to market” plan for your program. This must include:

 Executive support so that line managers give workers time to take courses
 A launch program (webinars, phone calls,SAP Cisco
email blasts) so that people understand ISO 900
the importance and urgency of your program
 Education to local coordinators – soTraining
that line managers and lineTraining
training people Training
can support your program. You cannot launch a company-wide e-learning
program alone, nor can you get it done from your corporate office.
 Rapid feedback. You will find problems immediately. They must be addressed
in hours, not days. If someone cannot get content to work, they are likely to leave
and never come back.
 Business process integration. You have to think about how this training integrates
with your company’s existing business processes. For example, in one company
the sales people were not given time by their managers to take training – because
2
they were too busy. How are you going to incent people to take time for training?
Do you need to integrate training into peoples’ performance plans? Are you
going to give out certificates? Bonuses? 5
© Bersin & Associates 7 May 2003
Blended Learning: What Works™

 Marketing. Too much is made of “marketing” e-learning. The real “marketing”


is all of these steps. Sending out emails alone will not do it. You have to make
sure that you have answered the question: “why would a busy worker stop what
they’re doing to take this course or program?” What’s in it for them? Once you
know that, how do you communicate that to them and their managers?

Deployment
• Every possible de
• CD-Rom
7. Blended learning does not have to cost Millions. You can build your own
content.

• Conference Calls
Another interesting finding. Many companies outsource major e-learning projects – and
sometimes spend millions of dollars. One of our research companies spent millions of
dollars creating a business simulation which trained financial professionals how to use

• Performance Aids
new accounting principles. In this particular case, the problem was global – and the cost
of failure was very high – so it was worth the cost. If you have a very large audience and
a very big problem, you can cost-justify a lot of money on content.

• Webinars
(The simple cost equation for blended learning is the tradeoff between development cost
and delivery cost. For web-based training, for example, high development costs can be
amortized by low delivery costs if the audience is large. For classroom training, lower
• Web-based courses
development costs and higher delivery costs are justified when the audience is small.)

However in most cases what we found was the opposite. Companies are now developing
web-based content for $100’s per instructor hour (we used to charge $30-70,000 per

• Do NOT assume t
instructor hour in my prior life!). How do they do this? They often hire a vendor to
“teach them” how to build courseware – then they get a small team together (3-4 people)
and build the content internally. This appears to be a major trend.

internet
© Bersin & Associates 8 May 2003
Blended Learning: What Works™

One company developed a major SAP upgrade program which was business critical
across more than 10,000 employees for a total development cost of $75,000. This is less
than $7.50 per employee for development cost – the cost of lunch in most big cities.

Developmen
• There are no “standard”
• In-house development i
8. Huge Impact is Possible
cost of outsourced deve
• Develop In House:
The most fascinating of all findings from our work was that Blended Learning in fact has
huge and measurable business impact. Most of the companies we studied told us that the
blended learning programs they built solved problems which were impossible to solve in
any other way.
• Content with short sh
The biggest business benefits of blended learning which we found are:

• • “Disposable” content
Scale: You can roll out a new initiative or program to global audiences and reach
more people than ever possible before. This is the promise of e-learning and it is


true.
• Informational content
Speed: If you need to train people within months, you can reach thousands of
people simultaneously. Although there is a fixed time to develop content, the

• Outsource:
time to deploy is fast. If the business problem is NOW and the content will
become stale, blended learning is the answer.
• Throughput: If your training problem is bottlenecked (one telecommunications

• Highly instructionally
company had such a backlog of training that technicians were driving around in
trucks drinking coffee for weeks waiting for new-hire training slots), you can
eliminate that bottleneck and improve training throughput by orders of magnitude.

© Bersin & Associates 9


• Very long-lasting con May 2003

• Simulation-based solu
Blended Learning: What Works™

• Complexity: many training challenges are just too complex for a single web-
based course or PowerPoint based webinars. If the material is complex and your
business need demands that people internalize and change their behavior, using
multiple media will get much higher completion and results.
• Cost: I believe that many companies have found that e-learning may not really
save as much money as they thought. By the time you buy and LMS, implement
the LMS, buy tools, buy a content catalog, and start building lots of web-based
courses – you may find that the total cost has just shifted – from instructors to
infrastructure and web development. By using the blended approach you can
avoid this explosion. One of our research companies starts with job aids first, and
then moves up the scale to more expensive media only if the problem demands it.
By thinking about every problem as a “blending” challenge, you can select the
lowest cost media which solves the problem.

Bottom line: Blended Learning is here to say. I believe it is the natural evolution of e-
learning – understanding the business problem and selecting the right “portfolio” of
technologies and processes to drive impact. As companies focus on understanding the
processes of blending media, they will find that e-learning is more powerful than they
ever though.

Appendix: companies included in the study include:

C o m p an y B u sin ess C h allen g e In d u stry A u d ien ce S ize LM S M ajo r V en d o rs M ix

S iem ens C om pany T ransform ation M anufacturing 10,000 N o LM S A ccenture S im ulations


T ellabs E R P A pplication R ollout M anufacturing 450 D ocent RW D W B T , C onf C alls
R oc he E R P A pplication R ollout P harm aceuticals 1,800 I-A cadem y RW D W B T , ILT
W W G rainger E R P A pplication R ollout D istribution 5,000 S aba RW D W B T , Lab, C onf C alls
E nt S oftw are C o. F ield S ales T raining S oftw are 1,100 S aba S aba W B T , V C , ILT
B ritish T elecom F ield S ales T raining T elec om m 260 D ocent A ccenture W B T , ILT , C onf C alls
R oy al S un F ield S ales T raining Insuranc e 1,500 S aba S aba W B T , ILT
K inkos F ield S ales T raining R etail 20,000 S aba S aba W BT
C isco F ield S ales T raining M anufacturing 860,000 Intellinex K now ledgeN etW B T , Labs, ILT , A ssessm ent
EMC F ield S ales T raining M anufacturing 1,000 S aba K now ledgeN etW B T , C onf C alls
V erizon F ield S erv ic e T raining T elec om m 100,000 H om e G row n NETg W B T , ILT , H ands O n
NCR F ield S erv ic e T raining - C ertification
S erv ice 370 E dcor NETg W B T , Labs, A ssessm ent
C hip M anufac turer M anufac turing T raining M anufacturing 25,000 H om e G row n K now ledgeN etW B T , Lab
B ell C anada E nterprises
R educ e C ost of T raining T elec om m 42,000 T echnom edia NETg W B T , ILT
P eoplesoft S ales and E m ployee T raining S oftw are 5,500 H om e G row n NETg W B T , D iscussion G roups
N ov ell C hannel S ales T raining M anufacturing 5,600 N o LM S M acrom edia P owerP oint B ased w ith A udio

About Bersin & Associates

Bersin & Associates is a leading provider of corporate and vendor consulting services in
e-learning technology and implementation. With more than 20 years of experience in e-
learning, training, and enterprise technology, Bersin & Associates provides a wide range
of services including product development, product marketing, industry research,

© Bersin & Associates 10 May 2003


Blended Learning: What Works™

corporate workshops, corporate implementation plans, and sales and marketing programs.
Some of Bersin & Associates’ innovations include a complete methodology for LMS
selection and application usage, an end-to-end architecture and solution for e-learning
analytics, and one of the industry’s largest research studies on blended learning
implementations. Bersin & Associates can be reached at www.bersin.com or at (510)
654-8500.

© Bersin & Associates 11 May 2003

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