7 QUESTIONS TO ASK TO CREATE EFFECTIVE E-LEARNING

7 QUESTIONS TO ASK TO CREATE EFFECTIVE E-LEARNING

We don’t always hear clients asking us to create effective e-learning to help improve performance. But here are a few questions we can ask...

Share This Post

Share on facebook
Share on linkedin
Share on twitter
Share on email

7 QUESTIONS TO ASK TO CREATE EFFECTIVE E-LEARNING

We’ve all heard this before. I have, at least a few hundred times. A new client reaching out, saying: “We are looking to create an engaging course. Please make it as interactive as possible.”

And every time I hear this, I go “Hey wait! What about effectiveness?” I ruminate over why no one is talking about the effectiveness of a course, when that is the first thing we should be focusing on.

And then, one fine Sunday morning, it struck me. A light bulb moment!

We were talking to an interior designer for doing up our apartment, and before we met him, I had made a PowerPoint presentation, and as is typical of me, detailed every little corner that we wanted shelving in, including the length, width and height of each shelf inside the cupboards. And I had convinced my husband to not think about the style or the colors until we got this, the basics, right.

After all, form should follow function. And to me, this was the right way to do things, the focus on the effectiveness (the ‘livability’ of the house) before the engagement (the colors and the aesthetics).

When we met the designer with the presentation, he was not only stumped and taken aback, he told me he’d never seen anyone do this before.

People don’t necessarily go by effectiveness. They don’t say “I want my home to be functionally well-designed”. Instead they say something to the effect of, “I like contemporary, but I also like art deco, and I want my home to have elements of both.”, or “I love orange, and I want it in my living room”. And beyond outlining a few requirements, they leave it to the designer to figure out the rest.

That got me thinking. Just because the client (or the business head or SME) throws around a few terms, it doesn’t mean they are aware of what makes an effective course. That’s for us e-learning designers to think about and come up with.

Of course, we know engagement is really important. Only if the learner is engaged does their mind open up, and they become attentive and receptive to what the course is saying. And no matter how well we design the course, if the learner is not going to pay attention, then all our efforts are wasted.

But engagement alone is not enough. Movies, books and games have taught us that. Audiences take up adventures, go on journeys, and laugh and cry with characters, and once done, go back to being the same person they were before they went through the experience. Nothing changes. While this is okay for a work of fiction, it is not okay for a learning experience, because what we ultimately want is behavior change. We want to build the skill or ability for a person to do something they were not able to do before.

So how do we bring effectiveness to a course without having to lecture the client or other stakeholders about it? For starters, we can ask a few questions:

– What can they do after the training that they can’t do now?

– Why aren’t they doing it (or doing it well) now?

– What barriers do they face?

– What mistakes do they make?

– Are there some people in the learner group who are able to do this well now? If so, what are they doing differently?

– How will we know that our course is successful?

– Once they have completed the course, what can we do to:

  • Support them to do the task well
  • Motivate them to do the task well, and continue to do so

Once we’ve asked all of the above questions (and don’t for a moment think that we’ll get all the answers!), here are a few things we can do to nudge the course towards making it effective:

– Drop learners in a realistic setting, and have them ‘do’ the job they would have to do in real life. This could, depending on what the course is about, mean that they:

  • Make split-second decisions on the floor of a bustling hospital
  • Write code in a new program they are just learning
  • Talk to a customer, overcoming objections and trying to sell them a product or service

… perform any other job that the course is teaching them to perform

– For each action, show them the consequences of their action, and provide detailed feedback on why that action is right or wrong. And, when they have invested cognitive effort in working out the answer to a tough question, they are truly open to learning from the consequence, as well as the feedback. This is where real learning takes place.

– Create opportunities to support them and motivate them well after the training is over. Because after all, training is just the beginning of learning.

What do you think? What else can we do to make sure that our e-learning program turns out be not just engaging, but also effective?

Written by Srividya Kumar

(Co-Founder at Learnnovators)

_________________________________

(Visited 1,582 times, 1 visits today)

More To Explore

The Power of a Good Start - Why Onboarding Matters - Learnnovators
E-Learning

The Power of a Good Start: Why Onboarding Matters

The first few days in a new role can set the tone for everything that follows. This article explores why onboarding is more than just paperwork and process—it’s about helping people feel grounded, supported, and ready to contribute. When onboarding is thoughtful and human, it gives new joiners the clarity and confidence they need to hit the ground running. Because a good start doesn’t just ease the transition – it lays the foundation for long-term engagement and growth.

Upskilling and Reskilling - Thumbnail
E-Learning

Navigating Change: Upskill or Reskill?

As technology continues to reshape industries, organisations face a critical question: should they upskill their teams – or reskill them entirely? This article breaks down the difference between the two, explores when and why each approach makes sense, and highlights how aligning employee growth with business goals can lead to long-term success. Whether it’s helping people sharpen existing skills or preparing them for entirely new roles, the key lies in building a culture of continuous learning that’s ready for whatever comes next.

Learning Culture vs. Training Culture - Thumbnail - Learnnovators
E-Learning

Learning Culture vs Training Culture

Many workplaces still treat learning as a one-off task—something to tick off after a course or compliance module. But real growth doesn’t happen in isolated sessions. This article unpacks the key difference between a training culture and a learning culture—and why it matters. While one ends with the session, the other is woven into everyday work, conversations, and challenges. The piece offers a clear perspective on how organisations can move beyond checklists and create an environment where learning is ongoing, meaningful, and part of the culture.

Corporate Culture - Learnnovators
E-Learning

Corporate Culture vs. Company Values

It’s easy to print your values on posters. It’s much harder to live by them every day. This article unpacks the growing disconnect between company values and actual workplace culture – and why that gap matters. It explores how culture isn’t built on buzzwords but on behaviours, decisions, and what leaders choose to reward. When values are lived, they create trust and meaning. When they aren’t backed by action, people notice. The piece offers practical ways to close the gap and build a culture that not only says the right things, but does them too.

Micromanaging - Blog - Learnnovators
E-Learning

Stop Micromanaging. Start Trusting.

Micromanaging rarely starts with bad intentions—but it can quietly erode trust, stifle creativity, and drain ownership from even the most capable teams. In remote settings, where reassurance can’t come from a smile or a quick hallway chat, the impact runs deeper. This piece unpacks how micromanagement shows up, why it’s often invisible to the manager, and what it really takes to build a culture of trust. Because real support isn’t about control—it’s about creating space for people to take the lead, make mistakes, and grow.

How to Develop and Retain a Highly Engaged Workforce - Learnnovators
E-Learning

How to Develop and Retain a Highly Engaged Workforce

Engagement isn’t about grand gestures—it’s about getting the everyday things right. This article breaks down what it really takes to build and keep a workforce that’s motivated, committed, and ready to grow with the company. From meaningful onboarding and recognition to encouraging autonomy and psychological safety, it’s a practical look at how small, thoughtful efforts can add up to a culture people want to be part of—not just today, but for the long haul.

REQUEST DEMO