Wednesday 4 September 2013

10 things I need from an online e-training course hosting service

I've had a look at a fair few online training course providers now.

And new providers seem to pop up frequently.

The list below is how I evaluate them.

  • How easy is it to create the course?
  • How easy is it to migrate my existing courses?
  • How fair are the payment terms?
  • Can I update my course?
  • Can I communicate with the students?
  • Does the site look professional?
  • Are the other courses selling?
  • How well does the GUI work as a student?
  • Do you allow free courses to be released?
  • Can I opt out of some of your promotions and new features?
There are other factors I use but the above are the most important at the moment, since they are the criteria that I have used to reject existing vendors.

How easy is it to create the course?

This relates to the user experience for creating the course.

If I have to type in a lot of information for each lecture I add, then it is going to take a lot of time.

Simple things help:
  • Automatically creating thumbnails, rather than having me upload them.
  • Just a title and description - no tags, or categories, etc. etc.
  • Multi-page GUI for a single entity will kill me

How easy is it to migrate my existing courses?

  • I already have courses.
  • I can code.
  • If you have an API then I can write a conversion routine and probably have my course up and running in about an hour.
  • If you have an API and a good GUI then your platform might become the 'master' platform from which I migrate to the other platforms. This would mean that you would get all the updates first and become the main platform I promote.
  • Do you support automated import from other platforms? (Currently I haven't seen a single platform that does this)

How fair are the payment terms?

I'm using your service because I don't want to have to deal with the hassle of hosting, support, payments.

And I expect you to take a percentage of the sales cost because of that.

But it has to be fair.

And it has to be commensurate with other providers. Remember you are in competition with them.

If your terms say you'll promote the course. Then you better promote it, otherwise you're not living up to your end of the deal, and don't deserve so much commission.

Can I update my course?

I update my course because the technology it teaches, changes. Your GUI needs to allow me to update it.

Hopefully you have an API I can use to automate updates.

By the way - an API isn't mandatory for me, since I'll happily reverse engineer the HTTP calls and create my own API on top of your GUI, but I know this is brittle and I'd rather have my life made easy for me.

If you don't support updates, then the answer is a no-no.

Can I communicate with the students?

Learning isn't a 'shout from the mountain' process. It requires interaction. I need to be able to interact with the people on the course, and communicate via bulk processes.

Yes, some of the communication might try and upsell to new courses (particularly if this is a free course), but it will also be to provide information.

I'm happy for you not to share the emails, but you need to provide a working communication platform.

Does the site look professional?

My sites are shoddy at times. But they tend to push the boundary of what I think the minimal level of shoddiness is.

An online training platform has to look good, and feel good.

If your layout is bad. If the images haven't scaled well. If the GUI has obvious bugs. I'll walk away quickly.

First impressions count. If I'm put off, prospective students will be too.

Are the other courses selling?

If you list how many students are on courses then I'll look and see how other instructors are doing.

If they're not selling well, then I'm not signing up.

How well does the GUI work as a student?

I try and sign up as a student to see how the experience works from the other side of the fence.

If it isn't cross platform. If it doesn't work on mobile and tablets. If it is clunky and slow.

I won't put people through that.

Do you allow free courses to be released?

This costs you money. Not me. So I expect the payment terms to reflect this.

But free courses are a great way to experiment with the platform and try out the features without committing.

If you have free courses, and a communication feature. Then I can use these as an up-sell mechanism and you'll probably find all my courses on your site.

Can I opt out of some of your promotions and new features?

I evaluate your features at a particular time.
I expect you to improve over time.
But if you fundamentally change the engagement model then I need the ability to opt out, or I and my course will walk to the competition.

e.g. Udemy recently offered Certificates of completion. A new feature that they thought would be a vote winner. Not for me. But they allowed me to opt out. 

These are just the things I look for at the start. 

Not I haven't covered, length of videos, or streaming quality etc. etc. There are absolute basics that I expect you to get right, and they are so obvious and fundamental that I lump them into the user experience bucket.

I look forward to new course vendors coming out. And when they do, I'll probably add to my list.

What do you look for?



Friday 9 August 2013

Google Hangouts for Online Training

I've been using MeetingBurner.com for conducting Webinars.

I'm going to do some Group training with a few other people so we've been investigating Google Hangouts as a possible alternative.

Google Hangouts allows you to create a "Google Hangout On Air"

It seems that you invite the people that you want in the Hangout. Then start the hangout and go live, and it will start streaming to a particular URL or live in YouTube.
 Some How Tos:
This simple video describes how to embed it on a blog.
  • April Marie Tucker - How to Start and Embed a Google Hangout to your blog
  • start the hangout from your Youtube account (you don't need to invite anyone yet, you can do that just before you start)
  • get the embed code by clicking on the embed link at the top
  • no-one can see it until you click broadcast
  • once you stop the broadcast, that's it, you can't start it again
  • then manage the video on your youtube video management page it will be public by default - so you might want to hurry off and delete it, if it was a test
You might need to create a chat system below the video if you embed it in a web page, some chat systems people mentioned are:
  • chatango.com
    • sign up
    • create a live chat
    • choose box
    • create a group name  
    • configure the size and colour of the box
    • switch off sound etc.
    • copy the embed code to your site
    •  if you to to the url of your cat then you can sign in with your chat name and password to manage the chat window, ban users, delete messages etc.
  • chatzy.com
Other Chat systems found via google:
Or use google + or youtube comments.

Additional Options:
References & Other Links



Thursday 18 July 2013

So you want to provide training online... what are your options?

When I look around at online training platform options now, I can roughly categorise them as follows:
  • Self-hosted
  • Hosted
    • Free video sites e.g. YouTube
    • Individual course sellers
    • Subscription Based sites
Self-hosted means doing it yourself. Either storing the video files on your own server or on a CDN (Content Delivery Network) like Amazon S3 (you could also use something like DropBox as your CDN). There are tools to help you with this.

By Hosted I mean that some other site holds your files, this will be dedicated either to videos, or courses.

Hosted on Free sites simply requires you to upload your videos to YouTube or some similar site and link to them from your blog or web site.

Individual Course Sellers requires you to upload your course to a site that will sell your course individually, and pay you a commission for each course sale. Hosted Individual Course solutions often allow you to make your courses free as well, even though the hosting service makes no money off them, they have another student and can market additional courses to anyone who subscribes to your free course.

Subscription Based sites, you upload your course, and are one of many courses that the student has access to through their monthly subscription fee. You are paid a percentage of the subscription fees, calculated typically from how many views your videos have as a percentage to every other course in the system.

I'll investigate the pros and cons of each in future posts, but for now... a summary of the the option I chose.

When I went live with my first courses. I chose a Hosted Individual Course Seller. It meant that I could easily manage the course through their front end. Had an easy upload solution. Had a consistent interface to communicate to the students with. Hosted solutions make it easy to get to market quickly.

I'll write a future post on how I got started and what I explored later.