eLearning tools created for strategic impact on human-centric designs.
You’ve invested in the platform. You’ve got the tools. But the learning still isn’t landing.
That’s because there’s something much more important than your choice of eLearning tool; strategic design. The kind that starts with people, focuses on outcomes, and makes every screen, scenario, and scroll actually count.
Here’s how to use it to make sure your eLearning tools are doing the most.
Start with behaviour
Every piece of digital learning should be designed to shift something. A decision. A habit. A skill that matters when the pressure’s on.
Consider this:
What does success look like on the job?
What will people say, do, or decide differently?
What does “better” actually mean for this audience?
Then design around those moments.
Want faster onboarding? Build a module that walks through real first week tasks (instead of company history).
Want safer job sites? Design branching scenarios that surface everyday risks then coach through the decisions.
Want stronger customer conversations? Include practice dialogues, cheat sheets, and a space to reflect.
Co-design with the humans who’ll use it
The fastest way to blow a budget on tools that don’t land? Design in a vacuum.
The solution is to get your people around the table early.
Ask them:
What’s working now? What’s not?
Where does learning show up in your day?
What format makes sense for the outcome we’re chasing?
Flex the format
One-size learning doesn’t fit anyone. The best digital learning mixes formats, layers experiences. Not only that, it meets learners where they are.
Smart use of eLearning tools might look like:
A short digital module that tees up a coaching conversation
A scenario-based quiz built around real decisions
A download learners keep on hand—because it’s actually useful
A short video paired with a Slack thread to keep the convo going
Build for performance, not perfection
Remember: the right tool is the one that helps you build fast, iterate often, and measure what matters.
So before you add another animation or interactive slider, ask:
Is this feature helping someone learn or just adding weight?
How will we know it worked?
What will we change next time?