The learning management system you choose is as important as the choice of using SCORM or not. That’s because the best learning management systems are able to manage SCORM-compliant content and other types of content, freeing your training designers from thinking about technical nuts and bolts of delivering the learning content. Choose your learning management system with care, and you should have an easier time, particularly if your learning development team includes both SCORM-literate and newer training designers who may not be as familiar with it.
There is plenty of chatter about the decline of SCORM, with some talking as if it’s already a thing of the past. Indeed, the standard is limited in certain ways, and these limitations become clearer as consumer technology races ahead. For example, one reason the Tin Can API has captured so much attention recently is because of its ability to track mobile learning and offline learning. But SCORM is embedded enough that training designers aren’t jettisoning it altogether to start new with something else. Therefore, it’s important to monitor what’s going on with it and with other design standards.
You and your team are the only ones who can determine if sticking with SCORM is worthwhile. You have to answer key questions about the type of sales training you want to deliver, and what its purposes are.
Companies that need to deliver internal sales training that is, for example, focused on compliance, can often get excellent, cost-effective results with video content, perhaps some traditional PowerPoint content, and an exam at the end. Developing gamified content can be done via mash-up of existing interactive games and SCORM, but it’s not the most straightforward process. Perhaps the best determinant of the role SCORM will play in your organization going forward is how big a role it has played thus far.
In the “olden days” of 2000, standards for online content had yet to emerge and establish dominance, and many proprietary standards existed. Things have changed, however, and most platforms support multiple formats of video, text, audio, and other types of content. SCORM played an important role in bringing e-learning into “prime time,” and it still plays a role for many organizations.
However, you owe it to your organization to know all the possibilities, their advantages, and disadvantages. We invite and encourage you to get in touch with us and learn more about our areas of training expertise.