In brief: Digital learning covers all learning modalities that use digital tools: e-learning, virtual classrooms, MOOCs, micro-learning and blended training. For training managers in training organisations or corporate L&D teams, it is a practical lever to train more people at lower logistical cost, while retaining attendance and engagement records that can be produced for quality audits.
Digital learning encompasses all forms of training that rely on digital tools or environments. The definition is broad: it covers everything from a standalone e-learning module to a synchronous virtual classroom, an open-access MOOC or a micro-learning programme delivered on a smartphone.
The term is often confused with "e-learning", which is a specific component of it (online learning, usually asynchronous). Digital learning is broader: it also includes uses of digital tools in face-to-face settings, such as tablets in the classroom, collaborative tools projected in a room, or real-time quizzes during a session.
For training managers, the distinction matters little in practice: the key is choosing the right combination of modalities to meet pedagogical objectives, respect budget constraints and satisfy funding body requirements.
Digital learning is not a single format. Training organisations and corporate L&D teams generally combine several approaches:
Adopting digital learning without anticipating certain pitfalls can slow the project or degrade the learner experience:
For training organisations subject to quality certification, a regulatory note: remote training does not exempt you from attendance traceability. Quality certification requires justification of training execution, including for remote learning. This is precisely where digital attendance tools come in.
Quality certification standards apply to all training modalities, including remote and digital. Auditors typically verify:
For training directors and quality leads, the challenge is not creating two parallel systems: one for in-person training (paper attendance sheets) and one for remote training (screenshots of connection). A single centralised tool capable of managing both modalities drastically simplifies the administrative burden and secures evidence for audits.
Edusign is not a content delivery platform, but an administrative management and tracking tool that connects to your existing digital learning systems. In practice:
The goal is simple: that the fluidity promise of your digital learning programme is not broken by still-manual administrative management. For training managers and organisation directors, this is the condition for turning a digital learning initiative into a real, measurable and auditable transformation.
E-learning refers specifically to training delivered online, most often asynchronously (self-paced modules, without a live trainer). Digital learning is a broader term: it covers all modalities that use digital tools, including synchronous virtual classrooms, collaborative tools used face-to-face, mobile micro-learning or blended programmes. In short, all e-learning is digital learning, but the reverse is not true.
The minimum setup includes an LMS platform (Moodle, 360Learning, Talentsoft, etc.) to host and deliver content, a module creation tool (Articulate, iSpring, etc.) if you produce in-house, and an attendance and signature tool that meets funding body requirements. For organisations subject to quality certification, the last point is non-negotiable: connection and engagement records must be traceable and archived. Edusign covers this administrative layer specifically.
Costs vary considerably depending on your starting point. An organisation starting from scratch should budget: LMS licence (from a few hundred to several thousand euros per year depending on volume), content creation tool (200 to 2,000 euros per year), team training (1 to 3 days), and module production time (estimate 30 to 100 hours of production for 1 hour of finished training). Return on investment becomes positive once the number of learners trained remotely exceeds a standard in-person group, thanks to savings on travel and room rental.
Four key indicators to track: completion rate (share of learners who finished the path), average assessment score, satisfaction rate (immediate and delayed questionnaires), and transfer to the workplace (evaluation at 3 months). LMS platforms generate the first two automatically. The last two require structured questionnaires and managerial follow-up. For quality certification, these indicators constitute the proof of effectiveness required by the relevant criteria.
Yes, and quality certification standards apply to all modalities, including remote learning. Key points to watch: tracing connections and time on path, documenting the technical means made available to learners, and collecting satisfaction and learning outcome evaluations. Best practice is to use a single tool capable of managing attendance for both remote and in-person training, to avoid two parallel systems that are difficult to consolidate during audits.