Note: This article originally appeared in the Spring 2022 issue of LTEN Focus on Training Magazine.
Knowing that your product makes a meaningful difference in the lives of patients, healthcare providers, and administrators makes the hard work of planning and executing your product launch journey worth every working session, review, and revision. Done right, it will be an experience that your learners won’t forget and will ensure that your sales and marketing teams can confidently and competently sell your products in the marketplace.
Successful product launches motivate and prepare your sales and marketing teams and require purposeful and creative planning. Product training is the critical success factor for any launch—and experience shows that a holistic approach to training will foster significantly better results. To boost effectiveness, think of product training as a learning journey, rather than an event.
When it comes to preparing your organization for a product launch, identifying what you want your various learner audiences to do (or avoid doing) back on the job should not be difficult. Yet, to influence behavior (the “do”), you need to first influence what your sales reps and marketing teams think and feel about the new product and boost their own personal capabilities in selling it.
Consider the following eight critical elements when planning your next launch training program:
If you want to keep the learning journey grounded and aligned to business outcomes, start by defining what success looks like with your key stakeholders. Take a moment to consider: How will we know if the product launch is a success? What will be different? What impacts will this launch have on the business and our customers? What metrics will we use to measure success?
Thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are shaped through the experiences we have—which means we can influence behavior change by creating thoughtful, relevant experiences for our learners. To do this, we must get to know our learner segment(s) and consider their daily activities, motivations, and challenges. Empathy mapping and creating realistic learner personas help us narrow our focus to moments that matter to our learners and ensures the learning experiences we create are learner centric, not content centric.
You identified your vision for a successful product launch and created true business outcomes in step one. Now, it’s time to identify the goal(s) for the launch learning journey. Be specific about the instructional goals and mindful of how they connect back to your organization’s desired business outcomes. Take a moment to consider: How will we know the launch learning experience was a success? What will be different? What metrics will we use to measure the success of the learning?
To achieve your instructional goal(s), reflect on what your learners must know, do, and believe as a result of the training. Finish this sentence: “After completing the product launch learning journey, sales reps will be able to…” The know, do, and believe statements become the learning objectives that will help you assess whether your launch learning journey was successful. They will also help you stay focused on what truly matters when building out the content needed for the learning. If content doesn’t support the learning objectives, it should not be included.
Your learning objectives will naturally align to common topical areas or categories (for example, product knowledge, disease state, customer focus, competitor claims and information, and objections or barriers, to name a few). Organize your learning objectives from step four into logical topics or categories and decide if there is a natural order to the topics and the objectives within each. For example: Do your sales reps need to know the product information before practicing customer conversations, and/or do they need to recognize potential competitor claims before tackling objection handling?
Consider designing the experience using a three-phased approach. Engage the learners by building their foundational knowledge of the product you’re launching. This is typically online, independent learning. Deepen their knowledge and build skill by giving them opportunities to practice, make mistakes, win, and receive peer feedback. Live, in-person, or virtual collaborative workshops are best here. Finally, reinforce their newfound knowledge and skill on an ongoing basis, which increases their confidence and improves retention overall.
For each phase in the launch learning journey, consider what learning tactics you’ll need to maximize learner engagement and knowledge/skill retention. Leverage storytelling, create emotional connections, balance the cognitive load (minimize the “tell”), consider spacing and “chunking” the learning, and build in practice opportunities along with specific, timely feedback. Mixing it up ensures your learners will actively be engaged in their learning as well.
Optimizing a global product launch learning journey for localization must start at the very beginning of your planning. Consider these best practices:
Design a “plug and play” approach with a foundational framework plus examples, scenarios, and specific activities to be replaced or developed at the local level.
Create and engage regional and/or affiliate champions as you design and develop the journey.
Include localization standards as part of your launch’s style or formatting guide. Examples of standards include:
While each of these steps requires much deeper evaluation and consideration, these best practices will help you envision a product launch learning journey that taps into the potential of your people and enables them to drive the business outcomes tied to your launch.