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Some Tips for Training Your Employees on a New IT Tool

Auteur n°3 – Benjamin

By Benjamin Massa
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Summary – Faced with the risk of low adoption and resistance to change when rolling out a new tool, it’s crucial to build a training program aligned with user profiles, business processes, and strategic objectives. By combining progressive modules (basics, features, optimizations), on-demand e-learning, contextual hands-on workshops, internal champions, and shared resources, you maximize engagement, reduce support tickets, and drive continuous improvement.
Solution: needs assessment → tailored, multimodal learning path → KPI tracking and regular adjustments.

When a company rolls out a new IT tool, success is not measured solely by the technical quality of the solution but also by the teams’ ability to adopt it quickly and effectively. Training thus becomes a crucial lever to turn a mere deployment into a performance driver.

By anticipating user needs, designing tailored learning paths and establishing continuous support, organizations maximize engagement and reduce resistance to change. This article offers concrete tips for structuring an internal training approach, boosting the adoption of business software and generating sustainable return on investment.

Understanding Needs and Preparing the Ground

A thorough analysis of user profiles and usage patterns is essential to align training with your business objectives. Careful context preparation makes it easier for teams to buy in.

Mapping Users and Their Expectations

Before defining a training program, it is crucial to inventory current skills and specific needs for each profile.

Analyzing Business and Technical Challenges

Well-designed training must be based on a clear understanding of operational processes and strategic goals. Each tool feature should be linked to business priorities, whether productivity, compliance or service quality.

Engaging Stakeholders from the Start

To ensure sustainable adoption, business leaders, IT managers and future users must be involved in designing the training plan. This co-creation of the digital solution promotes collective ownership and allows content to be adjusted based on field feedback.

Designing a Multimodal Training Path

A mix of instructor-led sessions, e-learning modules and practical workshops maximizes engagement and effectiveness. Integrating collaborative tools and active learning methods enhances retention and autonomy.

Structuring Progressive Modules

For example, a manufacturing company segmented its modules into “Introduction,” “Business Functions” and “Advanced Optimization.” By ordering the progression in this way, its online course completion rate reached 95%.

This breakdown also enables micro-learning, short sequences focusing on a specific skill, supporting learning on the job and limiting cognitive overload.

Combining E-learning and Instructor-Led Sessions

E-learning offers on-demand access and replay capability, while in-person training fosters direct interaction and collaborative problem-solving. The two formats complement each other when orchestrated coherently.

Implementing Contextualized Practical Workshops

Workshops in real-world conditions, where participants work on cases drawn from their daily tasks, validate the immediate applicability of new skills. These sessions encourage peer support and collective skill building.

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Establishing Ongoing Support and Follow-up

A continuous support and knowledge-sharing framework sustains user engagement and cements adoption. Appointing internal champions and conducting post-training follow-up ensure lasting skill development.

Appointing Internal Champions

Identifying “super-users” within business teams creates a local training relay. These champions receive advanced certification and host regular meet-ups with their colleagues.

By appointing five ambassadors per department, informal self-training initiatives multiplied. These champions organized “digital cafés” and shared best practices, reinforcing a culture of mutual support.

Building a Shared Resource Repository

An internal centralized platform brings together tutorials, FAQs, demonstration videos and best-practice feedback. Quick access and smart search promote autonomy and reduce reliance on the help desk.

A Swiss SME in the healthcare sector implemented an internal wiki, kept up to date by user contributions. Within six months, its daily consultation rate exceeded 70%, significantly easing the support team’s workload.

Scheduling Follow-up and Feedback Sessions

Beyond the initial phase, it is essential to schedule experience-sharing workshops at regular intervals. These sessions measure tool usage, identify roadblocks and gather suggestions for improvement, such as tracking key performance indicators.

Measuring Effectiveness and Fostering Continuous Improvement

Tracking key metrics and analyzing usage data demonstrates training impact and informs adjustments to the learning strategy. An iterative approach ensures the tool’s ROI is optimized.

Defining Relevant KPIs

To evaluate effectiveness, monitor indicators such as adoption rate, reduction in support tickets and task completion speed in the new tool. These metrics provide a quantifiable view of progress.

Conducting Qualitative Assessments

Beyond numbers, satisfaction surveys and one-on-one interviews shed light on user perceptions, pain points and motivating factors.

Embracing a Continuous Improvement Loop

Training never truly ends: each new tool version or business process change should be accompanied by content updates and pedagogical refreshers.

Turn Training into an Adoption and Performance Accelerator

A structured approach—grounded in needs analysis, multimodal design, ongoing support and impact measurement—makes training a genuine adoption and performance lever. By engaging stakeholders, appointing internal champions and fostering a culture of continuous improvement, organizations maximize ROI and ensure the longevity of their digital tools.

Our experts guide companies through context-sensitive, evolving training solutions that empower users and strengthen their digital ecosystem. To turn your deployment into a lasting success, let’s talk.

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By Benjamin

Digital expert

PUBLISHED BY

Benjamin Massa

Benjamin is an senior strategy consultant with 360° skills and a strong mastery of the digital markets across various industries. He advises our clients on strategic and operational matters and elaborates powerful tailor made solutions allowing enterprises and organizations to achieve their goals. Building the digital leaders of tomorrow is his day-to-day job.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions on Training for the New IT Tool

How can you adapt a multimodal learning path to user profiles?

To adapt a multimodal learning path, start by analyzing the profiles: skills, habits, and preferences of each user group. Combine e-learning modules, hands-on workshops, and in-person sessions according to their level of autonomy. Integrate microlearning to target specific skills and plan formative assessments at each stage. Adjust the formats based on field feedback and completion rates to ensure effective, personalized learning.

Which open source tools should you prioritize for internal e-learning?

Among open source solutions, Moodle and Open edX provide a robust foundation to create and deploy your e-learning modules. With H5P, you can integrate dynamic interactions directly into your content. These platforms are modular, secure, and scalable, allowing for custom tailoring. Their large communities and plugin ecosystems make it easier to adapt to each organization's specific needs.

How can you involve stakeholders from the start?

To involve stakeholders, set up a steering committee that brings together business leadership, IT teams, and user representatives from the analysis phase. Organize collaborative workshops to define learning objectives and real-world usage scenarios. This co-creation ensures alignment with operational goals and fosters collective buy-in. Include regular review points to adjust content based on field feedback.

Which KPIs should you track to measure training effectiveness?

Key KPIs include the adoption rate (number of active users), module completion rates, and reduction in support tickets related to the tool. Also monitor the speed at which key tasks are performed and results from formative assessments. Complement these with satisfaction surveys and individual interviews to gauge perception and identify friction points. Regular monitoring allows you to adjust the training strategy.

What are the common mistakes when deploying training?

Common mistakes include neglecting needs analysis, offering a one-size-fits-all path for all profiles, and overlooking post-training support. Skipping stakeholder co-creation or failing to update content as the tool evolves can lead to frustration. Lack of field feedback and formative assessments limits the ability to adjust and undermines adoption rates.

How do you structure a post-training support system?

An effective post-training support structure combines internal champions, centralized documentation, and communication channels. Appoint certified super-users to answer questions and host regular touchpoints. Implement an internal platform (wiki, updated FAQ, videos) and schedule refresh sessions in person or online. Personalized and responsive follow-up reduces bottlenecks and boosts user autonomy.

Why appoint internal champions and how should you train them?

Appointing internal champions promotes best practice sharing and peer support. Identify motivated, versatile employees, train them thoroughly through a certification program, and encourage them to host workshops or digital coffee sessions. Their role as local ambassadors enables more agile support, experience sharing, and collective skill-building within each department.

How can you ensure continuous improvement after initial training?

Initial training should be part of a continuous improvement loop: regularly analyze metrics, collect feedback, and update modules to include new features. Plan debrief workshops and update documentation (tutorials, videos). This iterative approach ensures the longevity of the training program and constant adaptation to technical and business evolutions.

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