Navigating the Marketing Maze: Trends in the Learning System Space

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Navigating the Marketing Maze: Trends in the Learning System Space
  • HR—Many vendors will attend shows such as HRTech (popular) but fail to attend SHRM, which is the biggie. Regardless, they see their buyer as HR, yet the marketing on their sites doesn’t target them here—except for the statements of integrations. In contrast, it will definitely show HRIS and other HR-related items.

If I were in HR, my guess is they would first look at the HRIS platform they are already on and that vendor’s system.

Thus, a learning system vendor who sees their core buyer as HR must figure out how to move them over and away from the other.

That’s why you see L&D as the core audience, even though the vendor may focus more on HR.

When you try to hit both L&D and HR, you need a USP for one audience that differs from another and ditto on UVP.

Let us not forget those training folks seeking their own UVP and USP.

See the dilemma?

Unless the system’s core focus is only on customer training, for example, or only on employees, you will have a good chance of seeing a USP and UVP.

Will you have a good chance of seeing a USP and UVP?

Whether good or not is a different bag of worms, err story.

Often done poorly.

  • Adobe Learning Manager – Brutal.
  • They mention they are headless, but what they are saying and what is headless are two different things -as they do not have it.
  • Learn Amp has a cool vibe. It tells you who they are and whom they are targeting and shows a Tour right away. I like the site. Plus, I like that it says, “Take a tour.” That said, I wish it were on the main page.
  • Eurekos – The guy on the right – in the video? That is the CEO – you can’t get better than that. A real person, not some images you purchased. Clean – right to the point. Fresh.
  • Biz LibraryFresh look. The video combines a marketing pitch and the system itself. I’d prefer just a tour of the system. Save the marketing angle for elsewhere on the site. It has a nice vibe. It gets right to the point and hits the key areas.
  • Thrive Learning—Overall, it has a good vibe. It has a product tour with areas folks might find helpful and interesting. It gets my attention, although I would tweak a few places. The see it in action button—I thought it would go further into a product tour, perhaps more interactive—which would rock.
  • NovoEd—Overall, it has a nice vibe. While it has product tours for various roles, such as manager, they sit on the second page rather than the first. This system has a lot of power and has something coming soon that will be a game-changer.
  • D2L—The corporate selection—I’m not a fan of it, but what about that person’s face being front and center? They are on this list because if you get to D2L Brightspace, you can see a tour immediately, and the features are there.
  • Schoox—Wonderful system, so why is the site a marketing mess? Features should be higher—I can’t figure out the USP, let alone UVP, here. And why so many static screens? The vibe is solid, but why? Better yet, who cares about the FAQ? That should be on the header, not on the site. I should note that many vendors put the FAQ on the home page as though that is a key selling point.
  • LearnUpon has a nice vibe. Yet one of their newest offerings, Anywhere, requires you to click on the top of the header under Features.