One of my colleagues recently suggested that I post some of my Articulate Storyline work on my LinkedIn profile so that my Professional Network can see examples of what I've done.
You'll likely want to publish for web and then upload the content to a web server and include the link there. There are a few options in this article that you could use in terms of hosting Storyline published content. I know there are a few LinkedIn groups specific to Storyline - so you may also want to pose this query there and see if anyone has specific thoughts on how to upload it.
Thanks Joanne for sharing that link here and you may also want to look at sharing in the Building Better Courses side of the forums if you're looking to receive feedback from other users on the set up or your course as a whole.
Looking forward to seeing what you share Joanne! Another great spot to share your work and get some feedback is by participating in the E-Learning Challenges here. You can start with any challenge you like and David Anderson will update the appropriate links once you share.
Ashley, yes, I've shared three demos in E-learning Challenges#59, #102, #105, but didn't get much feedback. Thanks again, I'll still keep sharing my works in the future.
I know David who runs the E-Learning Challenges is doing a lot of travel currently, so it seems he hasn't had a chance to seek out your recent examples. I'll ping him just as a reminder for when he's able to pop in and take a look.
I'd agree with Joanne - it would likely be easiest to upload to web (e.g. dropbox or your personal website), and then create a post and link to the demo. This would also give you a good opportunity to describe your process, which folks always like hearing about.
I do the same things as mentioned above. I like creating a post that links to the example. That way I can share some details about it and it lets people comment and share it with others.
I would host it on my website and then link to it. I would suggest writing a blog post but I struggle to write more than 2 a year. The key thing is to drive traffic to your site.
I'm in agreement with the others. I post them to my website via blog posting or portfolio and then would link to them within Linkedin or elsewhere. This also gives me more flexibility to post it it one location "I control" and then link to it in many different spaces.
I'll second (third?) the suggestion for using a personal blog as your "home base" for your portfolio assets. Even just a quick sentence or two along with your published output is good. From there you can post an image/screenshot of it along with a link on LinkedIn.
If anyone is looking for ideas for sites to create a portfolio my first choice would be WordPress but there are tons of options. I've collected some of the better ones along with some articles related to hosting your courses etc here:
18 Replies
Hi John,
You'll likely want to publish for web and then upload the content to a web server and include the link there. There are a few options in this article that you could use in terms of hosting Storyline published content. I know there are a few LinkedIn groups specific to Storyline - so you may also want to pose this query there and see if anyone has specific thoughts on how to upload it.
Thank you for your quick response Ashley; I definitely appreciate the input and will give your suggestions a try.
No problem John. Please also share here in the forums if you're able - we love to see new examples of courses!
Hi, I also start to share my work on Linkedin, I can't find something like 'my work' function there. So I put my work in post. Here is one (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/my-workfun-game-practicing-multiplication-joanne-chen?trk=prof-post). And if you find a better way to share, please tell me. I would be very appreciate.
Thanks Joanne for sharing that link here and you may also want to look at sharing in the Building Better Courses side of the forums if you're looking to receive feedback from other users on the set up or your course as a whole.
Hi Ashley, thanks for your advice. I would like to share my works in the forum and get feedback from others.
Looking forward to seeing what you share Joanne! Another great spot to share your work and get some feedback is by participating in the E-Learning Challenges here. You can start with any challenge you like and David Anderson will update the appropriate links once you share.
Ashley, yes, I've shared three demos in E-learning Challenges#59, #102, #105, but didn't get much feedback. Thanks again, I'll still keep sharing my works in the future.
Hi Joanne,
I know David who runs the E-Learning Challenges is doing a lot of travel currently, so it seems he hasn't had a chance to seek out your recent examples. I'll ping him just as a reminder for when he's able to pop in and take a look.
I thought I'd pop in and share links to some of Joanne's recent challenge entries for anyone who would like to take a look and share their feedback!
https://community.articulate.com/articles/showing-conversation-and-messaging-in-elearning?page=1#comment-33228
https://community.articulate.com/articles/gamify-an-elearning-course?page=1#comment-32178
https://community.articulate.com/articles/elearning-games-for-kids?page=2#comment-31720
I'd agree with Joanne - it would likely be easiest to upload to web (e.g. dropbox or your personal website), and then create a post and link to the demo. This would also give you a good opportunity to describe your process, which folks always like hearing about.
Hi John,
I do the same things as mentioned above. I like creating a post that links to the example. That way I can share some details about it and it lets people comment and share it with others.
I would host it on my website and then link to it. I would suggest writing a blog post but I struggle to write more than 2 a year. The key thing is to drive traffic to your site.
Ashley, thank you, it is always nice to get feedbacks for my works.
Thank you, Kelly. Yes, these demos are all included on recap.
I'm in agreement with the others. I post them to my website via blog posting or portfolio and then would link to them within Linkedin or elsewhere. This also gives me more flexibility to post it it one location "I control" and then link to it in many different spaces.
Thank you,Kelly. I received more feedback after your sharing.
I'll second (third?) the suggestion for using a personal blog as your "home base" for your portfolio assets. Even just a quick sentence or two along with your published output is good. From there you can post an image/screenshot of it along with a link on LinkedIn.
If anyone is looking for ideas for sites to create a portfolio my first choice would be WordPress but there are tons of options. I've collected some of the better ones along with some articles related to hosting your courses etc here:
https://professional-portfolio.zeef.com/tmiket
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