Alice Rowland Weisz, Information Services organization development manager for the fast-food giant, lists high-quality content and overall value as two reasons the company switched in late June to KnowledgeNet, which provides over 257 courses, ranging from Cisco technology to HTML.
A SmartForce spokeswoman confirmed the switch this week. "KnowledgeNet content is more recently designed and built with a Learning Objects mode," says Trace Urdan, a W.R. Hambrecht equity research analyst. SmartForce content is still legacy based, which is not as flexible, he says. SmartForce, however, has more course offerings, an asset that Urdan says is extremely critical to customers. "The order of preferences in terms of customers is size of library, price, and quality," he says. "KnowledgeNet still can't provide 100% of an IT department's training needs." Earlier this month, McDonald's said it's launching an online version of its worldwide training curriculum with DigitalThink Inc., another E-learning content provider. If the pilot succeeds, over 1.5 million McDonald's cooks, counter staff, and others will access DigitalThink E-learning in five languages to learn restaurant management and front-line processes.
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