Forum Discussion
Licensing Structure
I am in the process of proposing the Articulate suite to the VP of my company to create e-learning content for internal support staff and external customers. I am having to be extremely persuasive as the Articulate suite is much more expensive than our current tool, Captivate. However, I have used Articulate/Rise 360 and am confident in the value it will bring to our team.
Before I pitch the idea, I wanted to reach out to confirm the licensing structure. The item in question is, "Do peer reviewers need a license?" For example, if a single license to the suite is purchased for me - and only me -, can I share the e-learning content for my boss and others to peer review?
From what I remember when I last used the platform, I was able to create the e-learning course and submit the content to a reviewer without a license. She was able to review the content as it would be presented to the learner and leave comments.
Is this functionality possible? I am wanting extra confirmation before I pitch my proposal.
Thanks,
Sydney
You could publish your Rise (or Storyline) courses to Review 360. A person doesn't need an Articulate license to review content there.
Here's more info about Review 360: Review 360 User Guide | Articulate - Community
You could also publish for the web, and then put a course on your intranet. However, that just lets someone look at the course. It doesn't provide a way to collect feedback.
- JudyNolletSuper Hero
You could publish your Rise (or Storyline) courses to Review 360. A person doesn't need an Articulate license to review content there.
Here's more info about Review 360: Review 360 User Guide | Articulate - Community
You could also publish for the web, and then put a course on your intranet. However, that just lets someone look at the course. It doesn't provide a way to collect feedback.