Blog post: 3 minute read.
O365 adoption is an interesting challenge. It starts with knowing what your organization has identified as its business value drivers for O365 and translating those into key business scenarios which you train for at the individual level. The goal of training within O365 is to ensure users are comfortable using the suite of O365 tools in these business scenarios for their day-to-day work.
Over the recent past, I’ve made some observations about some right steps and missteps organizations make in their O365 adoption training program. This post focuses on some training strategies I’ve seen yield successful results as well as some noteworthy user groups that you should ensure you’re paying attention to.
For training content, there are excellent [free] resources you can draw from (FastTrack, Office Training Center, etc.) and every organization should be leveraging these wherever possible.
You should offer several different styles of training to users in your organization. Why? A couple of reasons…
First… people learn differently. Some may prefer a lecture-style training session with live demos whereas others may learn better by watching a video at their own pace and pausing it to try things. Some may want both.
Second… it’s been proven that people learn by having the same lesson repeated, but with different training styles. This is a common technique used to increase comprehension.
Here are just some ideas for delivering training in an organization (you could use any/all of these techniques):
- Links to “how-to” documents, PowerPoint, etc.
- leverage Microsoft material as much as possible
- Self-paced learning videos
- Targeted instructor-led “Back to basics” training
- Which apps are the “basics” in your organization?
- “Ask Us Anything” sessions
- Open forum. Great for those one-off questions.
- Lecture style 100 and 200-level training
- More advanced than “Back to basics”
- Could showcase Delve, OneNote Tips and Tricks, etc.
- Weekly “Tech tip of the week” blog
- Yammer group for Q&A
- Allows people to see previous questions and answers
Once you have your organization’s training program in full swing for users across your organization, there are some noteworthy groups I want to draw your attention to:
- Business-critical users
- VIPs
- New employees
- Less tech-savvy
- Service Desk
- IT
Curious why I would highlight these groups in particular? Let me explain…
Business-critical users
VIPs
New employees
- Show how to access O365 in your org
- Explain the difference between the Office Online tools and the full client tools
- Cover the O365 app basics for your organization: how to sync their OneDrive for Business, how to start a Skype meeting, etc.
- Explain the concept of sharing documents and how they should be doing this rather than attaching files in an email.
- Set up their mobile app so they can access mail/files from anywhere/anytime
- Inform them about the O365 training program at your organization
Less tech-savvy
Service Desk
IT
THE END
At the end of the day, it’s important that all staff across an organization have the skills and resources available to know how to effectively use the myriad of tools in O365. This will ensure we can tie the identified business scenarios back to the key business drivers for bringing O365 into your organization.
Perhaps your organization won’t have people in all of the above groups, however my advice to you is to consider each one and if you do have them, decide whether or not you’ve addressed their specific needs.
Thanks for reading,
-JCK
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