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"Internet-based learning can help to capture and distribute valuable insights gained by your employees...


What did you do on your last training course? No, you don't need to try to remember, we all know the drill: Stay up far too late and drink far too much in the bar, sit in an uncomfortable chair listening to someone droning on about theoretical concepts far removed from real life, then take an extended break to catch-up with e-mails on the laptop.


Not for much longer, if Donald Clark has got anything to do with it. That's not because he's a spoilsport, trying to rob people of 'awaydays'. He just knows that conventional business training doesn't work.

His card describes him as chief executive of Epic, Britain's biggest e-learning company by some margin. But from the moment he sits down it is obvious that he is not simply talking his book.

Psychologist, business analyst, entrepreneur. Guru, even. Use any or all of these words if you like, but they do not tell the full story. Born in West Lothian, Mr Clark grew up in Livingston, and, while at Edinburgh University in the late 70s, he began 'playing around with computers' as a hobby, before moving into video-based training and later into computer-based training.

Interviewing him can only be described as a mind-altering conversation. Take this example: 'For more than 2000 years teaching and training have followed the same model - the sheep-dip approach based on chalk and talk: you go to the lesson, or the lecture or the training session and somebody transmits information.

'For all sorts of reasons that just doesn't work. For a start, most of the information is never transferred to long-term memory, and most students soon learn that they don't get their degree in lecture theatres but in the library and in discussion.

'Now that model has been totally shattered by the Internet. What's the Internet about? It's not just e-commerce. The Internet is the world's biggest library - and it's there on your desk.

'That alone has the ability to transform education - my eight-year-old has already discovered what that means - and it can also transform business.' At a superficial level, this sounds like the kind of soundbite that we got used to in the bad old days of the dotcom boom - but as Donald Clark fleshes out his thoughts the difference is soon apparent.

Issues such as the rise of the service economy, the growth of knowledge-based work, increasing regulation and the growth of performance standards in local and national government all give rise to new training needs.

And one of the drivers behind the growth of e-learning is that it can be cheaper than traditional face-to-face methods, particularly in large organisations. When times are hard, there's nothing wrong with selling a technology and a service where cost reduction is a key part of the business case.

But Mr Clark argues that cost reduction is simply a first-level benefit, and companies have to look beyond that. The danger, he says, is that in focusing on 'doing what we do already, but at a lower cost', the other benefits - which could be grouped as 'doing things we couldn't do before' - get overlooked.

When managers are forced to devote most of their energy to short-term issues, if not actually fighting for survival, it is difficult to think about issues such as growing intellectual capital: the skills, knowledge and experience of its people.

The danger is obsolescence: just like plant and machinery, intellectual capital loses value over time, as a result of technological, legislative and social change, increasing complexity, the growth of information and knowledge - to say nothing of staff turnover.

In Epic's vision, e-learning is much more than a mechanism for delivering content. It is a way to promote collaborative learning and knowledge sharing. In this context there are two different kinds of knowledge:

  • Codified knowledge, for example the information held in, or obtainable from, databases and documentation
  • Experiential knowledge, such as techniques and insight gained from personal experience

Distributing and managing the first kind of knowledge can, or should, be straightforward. It involves familiar mechanisms such as information standards, databases and data mining, networks and intranets. E-learning can obviously help people to know where and how to find it.

The second is rather different, not least because much of it is inside people's heads. You have to capture and distribute it so that it is not lost when those people are absent, leave the company or are moved to other roles.

People in the knowledge management business have been thinking and talking about this for years, but workable solutions are still thin on the ground.

Epic proposes e-learning tools and techniques to develop what it calls community-based knowledge management. These could include:

  • An organisational vocabulary, so that everyone talks the same language (at least on issues of product, process or technology)
  • Collaborative tools, such as e-mail lists, online discussions and video conferencing
  • Learning networks, which allow groups to share ideas that can be made available to the rest of the organisation

Not everyone will buy into this kind of knowledge management strategy, any more than everyone has committed to e-learning. Not everyone will need to, but issues of training and knowledge management have an important part to play in both public and private sectors.

And while Mr Clark's office may be in Brighton, Scotland still has an important place in his heart and head. He says that the increased adoption of e-learning could boost the Scottish economy.

There's an obvious problem here. In the private sector, the Royal Bank of Scotland is one of Epic's largest clients, and the list includes a good chunk of the FTSE too. But cost and complexity mean that it is beyond the reach of many of the smaller companies that could benefit from it, as Mr Clark readily admits. 'If you employ five to 30 people you are probably going home at night worrying about how much cash is in the bank rather than thinking about intellectual capital,' he says.

But there could be a way round that: the Napsterisation of learning. Napster is an example of peer-to-peer networking, in which individuals exchange information, rather than pulling it off a central server.

The concept is being developed across the UK with local authorities, which currently spend more than £600m on training every year. Much of this is duplicated because there is no effective way of sharing content and courses.

Epic is working with 100 local authorities to run a trial collaborative system. Each council will contribute part of the training jigsaw and make it available to all the others. The project is still at its early stages, but it is seen as a pilot that will provide answers to key questions: Will everyone contribute? Will it fall victim to the 'not-invented-here syndrome', with some authorities reluctant to use others' content? How much management and tracking of users is needed?

Mr Clark is already starting to think about how a similar model could be developed for Scotland's business community. At this stage, he says, it is only an idea - and, given Epic's track record over the past ten years, it is one we are likely to hear more about."

The Napsterisation of learning (P2P) is a white paper by Donald Clark. For a summary, click here.

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Corporate brochure: E-Learning at Epic
Data sheets: Epic Consulting, Accessibility Lab, Arena, Blended Learning ROI Calculator (‘The Blender’), Epic P2P, Hosting, Thought Leadership Programme, Testing (x4)
White papers: Blended Learning, Blended Learning in Practice
Survey report: The Future of E-Learning

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