This is the first volume of six in Michael Allen's e-Learning Library, a comprehensive collection of proven techniques for creating e-learning applications that achieve targeted behavioral outcomes through meaningful, memorable, and motivational learning experiences. This book promises to walk readers through the revolutionary processes of rapid prototyping and iterative design as a means of sorting the conflicting and hidden agendas of organizations, winning essential support, and generating creative learning solutions. Does it deliver?

What does the book cover?

Allen's Creating Successful e-Learning is organized into three sections. The first section, Organizational Realities, sets the stage for e-learning projects. Each chapter presents a real-world scenario that surveys the challenges e-learning often faces. The point: managers must recognize the context of an e-learning project and manage the individuals involved.

In the second part of the book, Allen takes a moment to look at what hasn't worked and why. He reviews problems with typical design processes and looks at what it takes to get started down a new path. According to Allen, an iterative approach, rapid prototyping, and timely involvement of key stakeholders are critical to successful designs.

The final section, the bulk of the book, outlines the process of successive approximation, which uses iterative cycles of design and development to create e-learning programs. These chapters offer an agenda with annotated events to help readers conduct dynamic design solutions, beginning with a "Savvy Start" and moving through prototyping, development, and assessment cycles.

Is it worth reading?

Michael Allen is well-known for speaking out against ineffective, and Boring!, e-learning programs. Allen is equally known for sharing common sense techniques for producing quality programs. In Creating Successful e-Learning: A Rapid System For Getting It Right First Time, Every Time Allen shares his own tried-and-true process for developing programs.

Corporate instructional designers will find Allen's latest book a valuable resource. Allen offers practical solutions and techniques for developing e-learning programs, and he explains them in a logical, strait-forward manner. More important, readers can find comfort in knowing that the processes he describes derive from real world, award-winning applications designed by Allen's own studio.