Forum Discussion
- PattiBryantCommunity Member
Hi Michael! We were actually discussing this in the Online Network of Independent Learning Professionals community hour yesterday. A couple of things from our discussion (that I can share here) were:
- There was a huge push in 2020 to get a lot of courses online. Now, we're seeing a bit of a trend toward ILT and vILT, which means there's a bit less development at the moment.
- We're seeing some folks looking into having AI build (crappy) courses to save some money.
It's always nice to get a temperature check from other freelancers/consultants - if you'd like to join us, feel free to click the link above. It's a free community that may be of interest to you. Have a great day!
- MichaelGallagheCommunity Member
HI Patti,
Thank you for your response. Your comment confirms what I have been seeing in the industry. The link you provided doesn't seem to work.
- PhilMayorSuper Hero
I agree with Patti. There is a lull because of the vast amount of work done out of necessity for COVID-19.
I suspect there are also a lot of additional (cheaper) developers on the market following layoffs from big tech companies.
Not sure if AI is having an impact, but would agree most courses built that way will be bad.
- JohnCooper-be3cCommunity Member
Hi Michael
I agree with both Patti and Phil about the slowdow being partly due to less eLearning development being done post-pandemic...
But I would also point to a shift in the general on-line learning market. (a) there is a LOT more content being developed as just straight (non-interactive) video. I find it kind of ironic that there are a lot of Storyline development experts who post their 'how-to' short training courses on YouTube!
(b) microlearning is a very distinct trend meaning shorter bite-sized learning modules
...and (c) there is a move away from what I can best describe as 'frame-based' learning formats - people want to access the content on mobile devices with touch screens and 'scrolling' rather than clicking 'next screen'. The increasing number of clients we get who prefer the 'look and feel' of RISE bears testament to this.
But people are just using a variety of different tools now - interactive video, pdf's etc. and there are a lot more LMS's with their own content editors on the market...
- PhilMayorSuper Hero
I would completely agree that video is making a comeback. Which is no surprise as when I want to learn something I run to YouTube.
I probably now produce 50% storyline 30% rise 10% other video and the other 10% is various LMS tools. Also it must be noted that there is a global slowdown