An impure solution
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 11/08/99
In a distant lifetime, I did a few years of part-time teaching
for the IBM internal education organization. The job paid well
and got me to a number of places I would not have considered
going otherwise. IBM is now trying to minimize its need for
people like me.
A company the size of IBM with a few hundred thousand employees
does a lot of internal education. This is quite a good
opportunity for people like me who rent themselves out as
teachers, but it is very expensive for IBM in terms of money and
employee time. When I was involved with IBM, the company would
reserve a classroom in an education center or other facility for
a day up to a few weeks. Then the challenge was to get employees
to sign up and arrange their schedules to be at the site at the
right time.
Considering IBM's reputation as a network company, it seems
obvious that IBM should try to use network-based technology to
streamline this process and reduce costs. The company has done
so, but has not gone overboard and sacrificed function for
philosophy.
IBM's solution, which the company calls "distributed
learning," uses network-based tools but also includes
CD-ROMs and targeted classroom work. This is interesting to me
not only because it is good to catch up on what a group that I
once worked with is doing, but also because it seems to be a good
lesson in how to approach the training game. It is also
interesting that IBM decided not to go to a pure network-based
model - an approach that too many organizations are taking
because "it's the future."
Students can access the materials online, download them into
their own machines or get them on a CD. Students can access the
classes when and where they have the time, run at their own pace
and even skip sections they already know or those in which are
not interested - something that is hard to do in a face-to-face
class.
Although its distributed learning program has been active for
just a couple of years, IBM currently has about 1,400 classes in
the program. About 100,000 IBM employees used the system for a
total of more than 160,000 "learning days" in the first
half of the year. The company's goal is to switch at least 30% of
its education days to the distributed learning system and save
$100 million per year in the process. The company is well on its
way. IBM is even selling custom distributed learning programs.
Education, whether in a corporate or university environment, is
changing rapidly and will go through many stages as technology
matures. IBM seems to be learning the business of learning, and
the lessons that the company is getting will help many others.
Disclaimer: Harvard innovates with all deliberate speed and does
not yet have an opinion on IBM's ideas - i.e., the above opinion
is mine.