7 Benefits of Microlearning You Need to Know

Do you want your eLearning content to have greater impact? Start by thinking smaller! Over the past decade, learning and development leaders have increasingly relied on microlearning to deliver the knowledge and skills their teams need to get the job done.

What Is Microlearning?

As the name implies, microlearning is real learning delivered in bite-sized chunks, so it can be completed in just a few minutes. Microlearning modules offer a great way to deliver a focused answer to a single problem or question. Any type of online content, including video tutorials, audio podcasts, presentations, scenarios, and assessments can be created as microlearning.  

This is an example of a microlearning video. It lasts only 59 seconds, but gives a complete answer to the question: What should you include in a home first aid kit?

Microlearning is typically mobile-ready, making it accessible on any type of device. Learners love microlearning because it offers immediate access to essential skills and knowledge. Instructional designers adore it because it allows them to develop high-quality training quickly and inexpensively.

Organizations that don’t make use of microlearning are missing out on the chance to build the kind of fast-paced, engaging content that your learners want. Still not sure if this is for you? In this article, we’ll explore seven microlearning benefits that show you how smaller learning bursts can drive large results.

1. Improved Learning Retention

Learning is a process that requires us to absorb and reflect in order to build new knowledge and skills. The German psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus found that the average learner forgets 50% of what they learned in a class within one day and about 90% of what they learned within a month. He called this finding the Forgetting Curve.

Here’s what the Forgetting Curve looks like for a single learning event.

Ebbinghaus found that information is more likely to be retained when learning is conducted as a series of repeated activities, rather than a one-and-done event. Repetition creates stronger memories and stimulates recall.

Microlearning is an ideal antidote to the Forgetting Curve because it allows you to quickly create focused and memorable training activities and assessments that reinforce knowledge. Research has shown that microlearning reduces the potential for mental fatigue by focusing the brain to learn one thing quickly and then take a break. A repeated pattern of spaced learning activities helps transfer new information into short- and long-term memory, which is how we grow knowledge.

Many companies already use microlearning for workplace training and achieve great results. For example, after implementing a microlearning program, Walmart managed to improve employee knowledge and retention regarding safety practices dramatically and achieve a 54% decrease in recordable safety incidents. 

2. Better Learner Satisfaction

A recent survey found that Millennials (those born between 1980-2000), together with their younger Gen Z counterparts, now comprise close to one half of the total US workforce. Our youngest professional colleagues embrace technology in every way possible, both on the job and in the training arena.

Modern learners want training materials that are effective, accessible, and fast. Microlearning is typically mobile-first, making it the ideal solution for the 70% of employees who look for just-in-time answers to work-related problems.

For instance, after launching a unified microlearning-based training for sales professionals, BH Media, which owns and operates 119 newspapers in the US, received positive feedback from their employees that demonstrated near-unanimous satisfaction. 98% of participants agreed or strongly agreed that the content was useful and immediately applicable in their daily work.

3. Faster Learning

A recent study by LinkedIn found that the biggest barrier to workplace learning is time. Research conducted by Josh Bersin for Deloitte showed that employees typically spend just 1% of their workweek (or 24 minutes) on learning activities. With the average length of a corporate eLearning module running between 15 and 30 minutes long, most of us would be lucky to complete one course a week.

Microlearning modules are considerably shorter than traditional eLearning courses, making it possible for learners to complete multiple courses each week. 

4. Raised Engagement

Do your learners typically find your learning programs to be engaging? If not, one reason may be that you’re giving your learners too much information to absorb in one sitting. A majority (58%) of respondents to an LMS engagement survey said they would use learning tools more often if the content was broken up into multiple, shorter lessons.

A large part of microlearning’s appeal is that it aligns well with how our brains absorb information. Well-written microlearning includes only need-to-know information and skills, so learners don’t waste time on non-essential information or activities. A study by the Association for Talent Development (ATD) found that microlearning engaged learners more than traditional eLearning by creating experiences that were more memorable and more likely to “stick” in the learners’ minds.

The experience of Magellan Health, an American for-profit managed healthcare company, shows this to be the case. The company’s talent department was feeling more than frustrated that only 80 out of 6,900 employees accessed the corporate learning platform over the course of an entire year. After adopting a microlearning approach, training participation increased by 80%, with an average of 2,000 microlearning lessons viewed each month and 700 employees trained in less than half a year.

5. Reduced Development Time and Costs

Time is money. Microlearning has proven its ability to save time and money on many levels:

  • Learners save time by completing courses faster, as mentioned above.

  • Organizations save time because they can create and update microlearning courses faster than with traditional eLearning.

  • Organizations also save money because they don’t have to pay for classroom space, instructors, or travel.

Learning expert Ray Jimenez, PhD, estimates that microlearning allows organizations to develop eLearning up to 300% faster, while cutting development costs in half.

6. Learning Culture Support

A learning culture is a set of organizational values and practices that encourage the ongoing development of job-related knowledge and skills. Organizations with a strong learning culture encourage their personnel to continually grow their skills and share their expertise.

Regular engagement with learning content is a sign of a strong learning culture. Microlearning is designed to be accessible on demand and easy to share, so it’s an ideal way to promote a culture of learning. 

7. Boosted Learner Efficiency

If you want your organization to be as lean, mean, and productive as possible, you need microlearning. The short structure of microcourses means that learners can quickly learn and get back into the workflow, ready to apply their knowledge to the task at hand. Microlearning focuses on one topic at a time, so your learners gain specific knowledge in the most efficient way possible.

In a study conducted by APA PsycNet Articles, learners who received “successive small bites” of information about a process outperformed colleagues who were taught the same process in a longer format. Participants who received microlearning were more likely to be able to explain the process and generate solutions to problems than their peers.

The InterContinental Hotels Group’s experience is a great example of how microlearning improves employee efficiency. Faced with a constantly increasing number and complexity of customer requests among its 5,000+ hotels all over the world, IHG needed a new kind of training that could help streamline the process. After the company introduced microlearning and made microcourses accessible to their employees on any device at any time, it managed to cut onboarding time from 5 weeks to 2 weeks, getting employees back on the phones faster and resolving issues better. 


Helen Colman

Previous
Previous

Diversity leaders to Corporate America: Black employees' lives depend on your willingness to change

Next
Next

The value of LGBT equality in the workplace