How to Make Effective Training Materials for Employees

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 มิ.ย. 2024
  • Well-designed training materials can unlock the full potential of employees by providing them with the tools and resources they need to excel in their roles.
    Effective training materials provide on-demand support to employees, ensure departmental functions continue even in the absence of key employees, and enhance new hire onboarding.
    Whether you’re an L&D professional or an author looking for tips on developing training materials in-house, this video will set you up for success.
    You don’t have to be an expert to design effective training materials. With a template and an easy-to-use design tool like Visme, you can easily create effective training materials and export them in LMS-ready formats, regardless of your level of design skills.
    Get started with Visme now: www.visme.co/templates/
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    In this video, we’ll cover:
    00:46 Training Material Examples
    01:59 Step One: Identify Your Training Needs
    02:36 Step Two: Choose Your Delivery Method
    03:12 Step Three: Create a Timeline for Training Development
    03:50 Step Four: Create an Outline
    04:40 Step Five: Keep it Short and Easy to Understand
    05:08 Step Six: Use a Training Materials Template
    05:40 Step Seven: Add Visuals to Keep Learners Engaged
    07:12 Step Eight: Share!
    To read the blog post version of this video, head over to: visme.co/blog/training-materi...
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ความคิดเห็น • 3

  • @VismeApp
    @VismeApp  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Start creating training materials and other visual content for your business right inside Visme.Find a customizable template here: www.visme.co/templates.

  • @caspiansfriend
    @caspiansfriend หลายเดือนก่อน

    Nice video! Great content, and of course that matters most. But as they say, "the medium is the message." So, your excellent presence in camera and the graphics are great. Just a recommendation to up you audio to a better level. As a video director/editor/camera/audio freelancer, I can tell you that so-so audio subconsciously cheapens the video quality. Very much so. In this environment I would use an XLR (aka analog) recording system with a hypercardioid mic--supercardioid would work well in a quiet room... on a boom just out of frame. Frankly, I'd use two. One above you and one below you. No lav. And no USB (or any other connection) straight to camera. USB, while not automatically bad, usually indicates a system that will compress your audio. That's bad. Use the camera mic as a very important reference audio in post. But cameras, no matter how expensive, will compress your audio. And that makes you sound a bit echo-y and like you're in a metal box. Again, the medium is the message. And if your presentation style is great and your graphics are great, your chroma-key (aka green screen effect) is good... but you sound kind of tinny and a bit distant and overall off (your recording is probably missing some of the overall frequency of your voice)... well, again, audio has a major effect on the viewer's subconscious opinion of you and your content.

  • @leopard6554
    @leopard6554 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Awesome 👌 🆒️ 🙌
    We wish you give us some advice about digital menu with small and big screens in small retailers like ice creams shops, fast food stores...!!!