Internal vs External Learning Systems, Easy to Explain?

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Internal vs External Learning Systems, Easy to Explain?

There is no simple answer regarding the differences between internal and external learning systems. The landscape is complex with various types of learning systems, including Learning Management Systems (LMS), Learning Platforms, Talent Development Platforms, Learning Experience Platforms (LXP), and Mentoring Platforms, each serving different audiences such as employees, customers, clients, partners, and distributors.

Internal Learning Systems

Internal systems focus on onboarding, skilling, and upskilling employees. Key features include:

  • Skill Development: Tools for reskilling employees, offering coaching, mentorship, and opportunities to practice new skills.
  • Content Specificity: Content delivery aligned with job roles and personal development goals.
  • Skill Ratings and Job Roles: Mechanisms to rate skills and align job roles with opportunities, requiring managerial oversight for approvals.

External Learning Systems

In contrast, external systems emphasize customer training and engagement, characterized by:

  • Multi-tenant Capabilities: Ability to serve various external audiences.
  • E-commerce Features: Systems that support customer transactions, particularly in training environments.
  • Data-Driven Metrics: Insights centered around customer training, helping organizations track performance and completion rates.

Key Differences

  1. Focus Areas: Internal systems prioritize employee development, while external systems cater to clients and customers.
  2. Metrics Usage: Internal metrics revolve around learning paths for employees, whereas external metrics focus on customer engagement and training effectiveness.
  3. Functionality: Internal systems might lack certain features for external audiences, like extensive e-commerce capabilities.
  • Goal Management
  • Workflows—Customer training vendors who have plunged into internal may have it, but it will not be as strong as an internal system —that said, plenty of internal systems lack it.
  • Workflows that are expanding far more than current – this is a growing trend with internal – Learn Amp has it. Impressive.
  • Job Roles are intertwined with skills and content and are becoming tied to external sources, too. However, this is not universal. The job roles are the key here. Combos really have it—again, it is not universal.
  • Job Role driven
  • Strong level with skill ratings – If a vendor plays internally at a greater level, they will usually have this. Skill ratings are becoming universal, except when the vendor is 98 to 100% only customer training – external. Combos are all over the map with this. For example, Docebo has it and plays stronger externally – audience-wise – but feature sets are a perfect example of trying to do both segments. They have skill ratings, but compared to a Cornerstone, it isn’t at that tier. Neither do several other vendors who are at a Cornerstone level.
  • Skills Management—From skill mapping to skills capabilities, internal will always be stronger here. Combos can be solid, but they haven’t, in my opinion, achieved a level of heavy internal. And a combo that is more external but plays internal, who has it, has yet to penetrate at a solid level.
  • Metrics are all around L&D – That said, being great at it versus yuck is common. It seems to be either you are good at doing it or poor. Jekyll and Hyde here. I always note that if you can’t look at your data and get a firm idea of your learning story, which you should, it is a colossal failure. Anyway, this is a key piece I always look at, and I can tell in less than two minutes whether they are heavy internal and good at it or solid or strong internal and horrible at it. External – their metrics are not even close to this, even in the Combo space. If they are only External, their metrics are all around external.
  • Roles tied to Opportunities—clear. The funny thing is that a vendor who is one of the few attending LXPs out there, as in that is the core, has the roles, skills, and opportunities available. Combos—yeah, it can be brutal out there.
  • Learn Amp—They are all about internal. You can do external with them, sure. But their focus and core are internal. That should be a huge hint when you call yourself an employee development platform.
  • Juno Journey – If a vendor says they are an L&D platform – huge hint – they are core internal.
  • Cornerstone LMS, even Cornerstone Learn – Internal heavy. Again, you can do external; you get the point if a vendor offers multi-tenant and an extended enterprise option (the term should be customer training). You can do internal only with multi-tenants like you have dozens of LOBs or want to streamline all your systems under them. They now include a mentoring-heavy piece in their LMS – at no charge. Mentoring is internal – down the road, I see it externally, too – as a combo.
  • BizLMS plus BizSkills – Internal only. I would do it with both platforms. L&D is only here.
  • Docebo—As my rankings show, they are really good and skew internal, but they do have enough functionality for external. I would put them in play for internal. They are a legitimate threat.
  • Access Learning – Focus is on compliance – total internal
  • Acorn PLMS – Internal. Internal – hey, did I mention internal?
  • Kallidus – Heavy internal. It plays externally, too – but this screams internal.
  • SuccessFactors LMS—They are as internal as you can get, despite being underwhelming as a system.
  • Workday Learning—See above. They can meet with SuccessFactors and hang out together. Who brought the hot dogs?
  • Zensai Learn365 – Internal heavy. You may have heard of LMS365 – that is, well, sort of them, before acquisition.
  • Spark Learn—It’s all about front-line workers, including blue-collar workers. This is internal. Feature-wise, it’s not strong in many of those areas. Okay, they miss a few. But yeah, internal.
  • Schoox – They started to enter the customer training segment, which is odd because they are heavily tailored around internal. I wouldn’t buy them for customer training.
  • KREDO – Internal heavy. They dispute this, and you can go external, but I believe it is more internal.
  • Thirst—Internal focus. Is it a true LXP? I’m not seeing it. It has a lot of functionality, but from a serious LXP segment standpoint, nope.
  • Multi-tenant, with many options beyond what an internal can do. The challenge here is those combo systems—they can be a lot like an external, depending on the growth of one segment versus another.
  • E-Commerce—Customer Training will have it—whether you have to pay to use the service is a different question. In Combo land, the majority offer it—I mean Combo, which means both sides. The top ones on the Combo side do a far better job here.
  • Assigned Learning isn’t the focus here. If they offer it, well, it means they offer it. Nowadays, heavy CT offers it—not by choice; those darn Combos are causing it.
  • Metrics—The King Kong—All the metrics are around customer training. You can look at a customer training platform, take a look at those metrics, and it will tell you its learning story. If the vendor plays heavily in association land, then their metrics will have a solid set for external but a solid set for internal. Again, Combo here. This is one way to say, “Okay, this system is heavy for customer training.”
  • Eurekos is 100% focused external. Plus, they bill monthly, so you pay only for those in it—rare but plays well into the customer training side.
  • Thought Industries – 98% external. Super strong here.
  • Absorb LMS—Combo, but I like them more for external use. They can also go internal. The system goes about 50-50 here. I see them as a vendor who can do some serious damage in the external space, so I slide them here. If you want them for internal use, they have all the items noted above.
  • Intellum – Always played heavily in external.
  • Learning Cart – External full throttle.
  • NetExam – External.
  • Docebo – Combo land. They play more on the external side, but as noted earlier, they can do very well on the internal side. Can the top Combos do this? Can the rest? Well, a middle pack, the rest? Forget about
  • LearnUpon – Combo – They do a good job with external, hence the slide here.
  • Skill Jar—They do have some metrics for externals, but the idea that they are all about external is erroneous, in my opinion. See the case study above for more information on the other part.
  • Plenty of others – but yeah, I’m sure you found them.