Skip to content

EPSScentral .infoREADER

Sections
You are here: Home » Previous .infoReaders » 8 August 2006 .infoREADER

8 August 2006 .infoREADER

Document Actions
Subscribe to the .infoReader newsletter. Enter email address:

Not receiving the newsletter? After subscribing, you may need to check your SPAM box for the confirmation email. Thank you.

$Account.OrganizationName
08 August 2006

in this issue

Developing a mobile electronic performance support system for a major top 20 newspaper: An action research study in advertising sales

Gary Dickelman speaking at Documentation and Training 2006

Gary Dickelman speaking at Training Solutions Conference and Expo

Traffic Log Patterns

Guiding Principles for Providing "Remember Me" Personalization

Home Broadband Adoption 2006

The Write Stuff

Strategies for developing sustainable open access scholarly journals

Common Elements of Risk


 

Developing a mobile electronic performance support system for a major top 20 newspaper: An action research study in advertising sales

Theresa A. Hueftle

Amazon's book description:

The purpose of this study was to determine the most effective way to deliver just-in-time learning using mobile technology for newspaper salespeople working in the field. The goal was to produce a pedagogical platform that was time sensitive, had on the job accessibility, and did not overload the salesperson's mental abilities. The instructional design prototype used an action research approach. The study was based on the works of Gloria Gery (electronic performance support) and Ruth Clarks (building expertise). This study provided the information from an authentic newspaper environment to develop a mobile performance support prototype for newspaper salespeople. Results revealed the hardware, authoring software, content, architecture, and learning theory for developing a prototype. The Pocket PC could deliver the mobile EPSS because the device met the needs of the mobile EPSS and salespeople based on survey results and small group interviews. The researcher selected RoboHelp for developing the prototype because the software was easy to use and had the ability to output multiple formats. Emergent evidence suggested that the mobile EPSS should include: an array of information that covered (a) market research, (b) product, (c) sales, and (d) production. An effective architecture was deemed usable based on the hardware evaluation and Alison Head's usability criteria. Evidence suggested that the six identified cognitive learning theories were effective learning theories for a mobile performance support system design that used a just-in-time learning strategy. The researcher used cognitive learning theory as a general approach for recalling information when salespeople had prior knowledge. The Pocket PC was the device to deliver the mobile EPSS. The mobile EPSS contained: (a) advertising rates, (b) product specifications, (c) special sections, (d) special initiatives, (e) deadlines, (f) media information, (g) learning center for information where learners had no prior knowledge, (h) advertising guidelines which had many deadlines, product specification, and policies, and (i) marketing information. A weekly review and update of the information should occur for newspaper salespeople to maintain interest in the mobile EPSS. Adult learning, cognitive load, and learning by doing theory were the key predominate theories that described how newspaper salespeople learned while in the field.
 

Purchase from Amazon.com

2006 PCD Awards

The submission deadline has been extended to 20 August 2006, midnight GMT - 4hr.

It's that time again! EPSScentral LLC is now accepting submissions for the 2006 Performance Centered Design Awards! Here's your chance to gain recognition for yourself, your organization, your solution or tool, and your business sponsor. EPSScentral is accepting submissions from PCD solution creators, PCD tool vendors and, generally, from any organization - private sector, government/military, and academic - that can demonstrate innovation in performance-centered systems and tools.

The PCD Awards for 2006 will again showcase innovation that best represents performance-centered design (PCD) in two categories - PCD Solutions and Extraordinary PCD Development Tools. You may submit entries that are currently in-production (deployed to real users, or currently marketed and sold) or at the concept stage (FUNCTIONING proofs-of-concept, design prototypes and products that are not yet in production but have measurable or anticipated measurable PCD value).

Since 1997 the PCD Awards have been the global premier source of innovation and inspiration for demonstrating the principles of performance support systems, which means focusing first on completing tasks with little or no external support, and where learning occurs as a consequence of doing. PCD Award winners are those that put substance behind phrases like, "just enough, just in time," "support at the time of need" and the like. Workflow Learning, Process Performance and Learning Tools (PPLTs) and EPSS (Electronic Performance Support Systems) are among the many solutions and tools that comprise good submissions.

Examples of past submissions and guidelines for entry can be found in the PCD Awards section of www.epsscentral.info. Award recipients will be featured in a formal press release in October, 2006, and an awards presentation will be held at the VNU conference in Denver, CO. Past recipients span the range of small, independent companies to large government agencies and Fortune 100 companies. We look forward to your submissions and announcing the best-ever group of award recipients for 2006.

Regards, 
 

Gary J. Dickelman


  • Gary Dickelman speaking at Documentation and Training 2006
  • Documentation and Training 2006
    Boston, MA
    October 3 - 5, 2006

    Read more about this event ...
  • Gary Dickelman speaking at Training Solutions Conference and Expo
  • Training Solutions Conference and Expo
    Denver, CO
    October 23 - 25, 2006

    Read more about this event ...
  • Traffic Log Patterns
  • Summary: The relative popularity of a site's pages, the number of visitors referred by other sites, and the traffic from search queries continue to follow a Zipf distribution.

    Read more from useit.com ...
  • Guiding Principles for Providing "Remember Me" Personalization
  • Catering to the unique needs of each customer is the dream of any business. Technology can help us get there but we need to know how to please users without intruding their privacy. This article presents a set of guiding principles for personalization design.

    Read more from boxesandarrows.com ...
  • Home Broadband Adoption 2006
  • Adoption of high-speed internet at home grew twice as fast in the year prior to March 2006 than in the same time frame from 2004 to 2005. Middle-income Americans accounted for much of the increase.

    Read more from pewinternet.org ...
  • The Write Stuff
  • The primary service search engines provide is relevancy. You enter a query and the search engine provides what its algorithms consider to be relevant results from the index. It's that simple.

    Read more from clickz.com ...
  • Strategies for developing sustainable open access scholarly journals
  • Abstract: This paper discusses different forms of open access publishing and argues that small independent journals that are funded though subsidies provide an important niche in scholarly publishing. One such journal, Medical Education Online (MEO) is used as a case study characterizing the dilemma these journals can face in maintaining their operations as they become successful and their need for resources grows. The paper discusses several strategies for addressing this problem and how they have been implemented for MEO.

    Read more from firstmonday.org ...
  • Common Elements of Risk
  • Abstract: Traditionally, responsibility for completing a mission and the resources needed to pursue it aligned with organizational boundaries. However, key drivers in the business environment, such as the globalization of business and the fast pace of technological change, have resulted in increased outsourcing and partnering among organizations. It is now common for multiple organizations to work collaboratively in pursuit of a single mission, which creates a degree of programmatic and process complexity that can be difficult to manage effectively. In today's business environment, management and staff must be able to deal with intricate and unclear interrelationships and dependencies among technologies, data, tasks, activities, processes, and people. Mission success in these complex environments requires people to sort through the inherent complexity when making important decisions. Effective risk management that is based on a solid conceptual foundation is an essential part of this decision-making process. This technical note begins to define this foundation by identifying the basic elements of risk and exploring how these elements can affect the potential for mission success.

    Read more from sei.cmu.edu ...
    Receive the infoReader via Email:
    Created by rdickelman
    Last modified 2006-09-21 09:19 PM
     
     

    Powered by Plone

    This site conforms to the following standards: