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Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS Ann Rockley, The Rockley Group Inc. Produced by June 26 & 27, 2008 101 Managing e-Learning Content

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Page 1: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS

Ann Rockley, The Rockley Group Inc.

Produced by

June 26 & 27, 2008

101

Managing e-Learning Content

Page 2: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 1Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

Managing Learning Content:LCMS vs CMS

Ann RockleyPresident, The Rockley Group Inc.

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The Rockley Group Inc.

Page 3: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 2Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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The Rockley Group sample clients

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The situation

Companies have identified content management or web content management as a key priorityLearning groups have also identified content management as key to reuse and effective management of learning materialsBudgets are limited or have been eliminated in some areas

Page 4: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 3Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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The situation cont.

The company desires a “single” solution to minimize costs and increase standardization across the companyOr, one department is “first in” with their solution and other areas must adopt itOr, companies have identified that they require a unified content strategy to integrate the management of organizational content

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Multiple content creators

Marketing/CommunicationsHREngineering/Product developmentTechnical publications/product supportTrainingCustomer support

Page 5: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 4Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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CreatingBrochures, product information sheets, proposals, press releases, speeches, presentations, annual reportsEmployee training materials, policies and proceduresUser guides, online help, reference documents, application guidesProduct specifications, design documents, test plansFAQs, customer support materialsClassroom or web-based learning materials

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For multi-channel delivery

PaperWebWireless (e.g., PDA and cell phones)

Page 6: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 5Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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For multiple content users

CustomersSuppliersChannel partnersEmployees

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The Content Silo TrapTM

Too often content is created by authors working in isolationWalls are erected among content areasContent is created, recreated, and recreated

Page 7: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 6Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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The solution

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A unified content strategy is

A repeatable method of identifying all content requirements up frontCreating consistently structured content for reuseManaging that content in a definitive sourceAssembling content on demand to meet your customers’ need

Page 8: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 7Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Reuse is not a new concept

Reusable learning objects is now accepted as “best practice”SCORM supports the delivery of reusable learning objects

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What’s different?

Reuse is within modules not just of modulesReuse is not just within learning materialsReuse is across departments, divisions, or the enterprise and across information types (e.g., documentation, customer support)Enterprise content reuse requires a common management platform or common metadata for sharing content

Page 9: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 8Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Common areas for reuse

MarketingDocumentationCustomer support

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Common content types

Product descriptionsConceptsTasks

Page 10: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 9Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Can you really reuse learning content?

Text-based content is easy to reuse at a very granular levelOther media (e.g., graphics, video) are reused at the BLOB (object) level

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Poll 1: Are you planning on reusing content? If so what areas do you plan to share with?

Page 11: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 10Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Example: Documentation and Training

Organization had difficulty managing huge volumes of paper-based documentation, extensive web-based learning center

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Solution

Chose to go to XMLCreated information models that enable them to create common documentation and training objectsSelected an XML-based authoring toolSelected an XML-based CMS that supported SCORMRetained an eLearning authoring tool

Page 12: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 11Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Solution cont.

Authored common objects in XML and stored them in the CMSStored digital assets in the CMSAssembled “virtual” lessons by selecting objects and digital assetsExported to eLearning toolApplied templates and linked in evaluations etc.Saved final output in the CMS

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Solution cont.

Reduced the time to create, manage, and deliver content by 40%Enabled them to real-time update materials which previously had been only updated yearly

Page 13: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 12Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Example 2: Documentation and Training

Company producing large volumes of content for over 100 products and servicesReuse has been identified across the corporation:•Marketing•Sales•Training•Documentation•Customer support

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Opportunities for reuse

Product descriptionsService descriptionsImagesTech SpecsMarket positioningCustomer quotesTips and tricksAnd more

Page 14: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 13Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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The solution

Analyze contentIdentify common structuresModeled the content, looking carefully at how common content is reusedDeveloped a common metadata strategy (taxonomy)Retained their XML-based Documentation CMSAdopted a new XML-based LCMSBuilt transformations from XML to HTML pages for the WCMS

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The results

25%-60% reuseIncreased productivityReduced translation costsImproved branding and message

Page 15: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 14Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Learning Content Management Systems vs

Content Management Systems

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Learning content management systems

Support the web-based learning materials content life cycle and the components of learning content (e.g., text, graphics, simulations, multimedia). Combination of web-based learning authoring tools with a content management system that handles traditional CMS functionality, reuse and delivery. Include tools for the creation of simulations and animations.

Page 16: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 15Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Web content management (WCM)

The term content management has become synonymous with web content managementWeb content management systems (WCMS) assist an organization in automating various aspects of web content creation, management and deliveryWCM are very good at creating web pages, creating and managing web sites

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Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Enterprise Content Management (ECM) is the creation, capture, delivery, customization, and management of content across an enterprise/divisionECM integrates document management, content management, and records managementECM is typically more document management oriented and frequently manages email

Page 17: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 16Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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XML/Component Content Management (CCM)

Content Component Management (CCM) systems manage content at a granular level (component) of content rather than at the document/page level. Each component represents a single topic, concept or asset (e.g., image, table). Components are assembled into multiple content assemblies (content types) and can be viewed as components or as traditional “documents/pages”.Each component has its own lifecycle (owner, version, approval, use) and can be tracked individually or as part of an assembly. CCM is typically used for multichannel customer-facing content (marketing, usage, learning, support). CCM systems are often XML-based

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Poll 2: Does your company already have or are they considering the purchase of:

Page 18: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 17Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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LCMS: Author

Create learning objects or directly integrate with learning content creation toolsCreate simulationsDevelop exercises and evaluations

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LCMS: Manage

•Learning modules•Learning objects (maybe)•Digital assets•Metadata•Workflow (often weak)•Translation/Globalization workflow/integration with TMS (maybe)

Page 19: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 18Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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LCMS: Deliver

•HTML•PPT•Paper (rarely)•XML (rarely)

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CMS: AuthorWCM typically includes an HTML forms-based authoring interfaceECM does not include an authoring interface as it is assumed that authors will use many types of authoring toolsCCM does not include an authoring interface, but provides an integration with XML authoring tools and MS Office products

Page 20: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 19Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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CMS: Manage

•All•Check in/out•Version control•Metadata•Workflow•Translation workflow (maybe)•DAM (varies)

WCM•Sites

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CMS: Manage cont.

•ECM•Records management•Email management

•CCM•Granular objects (topic, paragraph, sentence, fragment, variables)

•Reuse

Page 21: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 20Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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CMS: Deliver

•WCM •HTML•XHTML•Print (maybe/InDesign)

•ECM•No

•CCM•Requires integration with a delivery engine•HTML, XHTML, CHM, PDF, PPT (maybe)•SCORM (maybe)

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The options

Multiple systemsOne system

Page 22: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 21Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Multiple systems

Bonus!Select your LCMS of choice but ensure that it:•Handles XML structures internally (preferred)•Exports to XML (secondary choice)•Has strong metadata support

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One system

If your organization is only willing to fund one system, LCMS never winsWCM is usually the “one” systemECM may be the “one” systemMore chance of greater functionality with a CCMPetition for:•Strong DAM•SCORM support

Page 23: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 22Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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How you can use a CMS

Think of the CMS as “smart” storage onlyAugment with appropriate authoring and deliveryAuthoring•Note: CMS do not integrate directly with learning content creation tools•Pick your authoring tool of choice•Author reusable learning objects•If the CMS does not directly integrate ask about custom integration

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SCORM

SCORM is critical to many learning solutionsLook for a CMS that will take learning objects, wrap them in SCORM wrappers and deliver to your LMS of choiceOr, build an XML XSL transformation to take your learning objects, wrap them in SCORM wrappers and deliver to your LMS of choice

Page 24: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 23Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Track reuseBecause most CMS typically won’t assemble a course it is difficult to track reuseSuggestion:•Create all your objects in your authoring tool and store the objects in the CMS•Manually assemble your lessons and courses from your reusable objects in the CMS•Extract to your authoring tool for “publication”

If you assemble within the CMS, the CMS will track where content has been reused

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Manage

Store your RLO in the CMSExtract your RLO and assemble lessons and courses in your authoring tool

Page 25: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 24Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Deliver

Use your authoring tool to publish your RLO in the format of choiceOr use XML XSL transformations to convert your content to the format of choice

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Requirements for sharing content

XML (strongly recommended)Strong metadata taxonomyAuthoritative source

Page 26: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 25Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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The role of XML

XML is fast becoming the new Internet standard for information exchange. For complex information reuse, XML is the technology of choice.

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XML and structured content•In XML, structure can be defined in a Document Type Definition (DTD) or Schema. •A DTD/schema is quite specific defines all of the elements (XML tags) that can be used and defines the relationship of those elements to other elements. You can specify the hierarchy of elements (“a lesson contains...”), the order of elements, even the number of elements.•With a DTD/schema, you can mandate the structure that is required. This consistency is also very valuable for the users of the information. •A DTD/schema provides a powerful map for systematic reuse (automatic reuse) and personalization.

Page 27: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 26Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Separation of content and format

The separation of content and format offers immense flexibility.

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Built-in metadata

The tag names become metadata.

Page 28: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 27Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Strong metadata taxonomy

If you plan to share content it must be consistently named and taggedCommon tagging schemes are critical

Work with your counterparts in the enterprise to develop a taxonomy that works for everyone

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Authoritative source

When multiple repositories are used it is important to define an authoritative source

Only one source can exist all others are copies

Content must be changed in the source

Different repositories can store different authoritative source

Page 29: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 28Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

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Conclusion

LCMS are most appropriate for learning materialsLCMS can be a siloImportant to work towards sharing of content across the enterpriseWith good analysis and adherence to requirements like SCORM, a CMS can serve as an effective repository for learning materials

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Additional Resourceswww.rockleyreport.comwww.rockleyblog.com

“E-Learning Tools and Technologies” William and Katherine Horton, ISBN 0-471-44458-8, Wiley

Page 30: OLF51 101 Rockley presentation - eLearning Guild

Managing e-Learning Content June 26 & 27, 2008

Page 29Session 101 – Managing Learning Content: LCMS vs CMS – Ann Rockley,The Rockley Group Inc.

Questions

www.rockley.com905-939-9298 x302

[email protected]

Ann Rockley