According to the 2017/18 Learning Benchmark Report, published by the UK-based learning innovation benchmarking organisation, Towards Maturity, 89% of all organisations use some form of e-learning in their learning and development (L&D) activities.

Once you’ve decided to be among this 89%, you must decide how you’re going to source your e-learning. There are three basic options:

Many L&D professionals acknowledge they have neither the time nor the skills to design and develop their own, high-quality e-learning materials.

If people in your organisation have a highly specific learning need – perhaps something that’s closely related to your organisation’s USP, strongly impacts its competitive edge and/or involves highly sensitive, security-conscious operations, you’ll consider commissioning tailor-made (bespoke) e-learning materials.

Your other option – finding appropriate off-the-shelf (generic) e-learning content – means deciding which producer/ supplier is ‘right’ for you and your learners’ needs.

Finding your perfect match

In choosing a suitable supplier, you can:

Once you’ve found some potential e-learning partners you’re going to need some criteria against which to evaluate them. Here are ten criteria you could use.

Ten signs they are “The One”

Your e-learning partner should offer:

These aren’t the only criteria on which to base your choice of supplier. There may be other – for example, personal – factors involved.

One criterion that isn’t on this list is price. In the real world, price – along with quality and time – is a key factor in any proposed transaction. Price is a key factor where budgets are concerned.

However, learning should be about the most effective and efficient way to give people new knowledge and skills. In a corporate context, the results of any L&D activities carried out successfully should bring a return on investment of many hundred per cent – and that should last over the entire time that the learner remains working for your organisation.

So, it’s far more important to ensure that the eLearning materials you buy are of appropriate quality and are fit-for-purpose than to find the cheapest ones on the market because that’ll have a smaller impact on your budget.