In brief: Blended training combines in-person sequences and remote activities within a single coherent pedagogical pathway. For training organisation directors and L&D managers, it is a format that offers flexibility to learners and venue cost optimisation, without sacrificing pedagogical quality, provided the dosage is properly designed and traceability for both modalities is properly tooled.
Blended training, or blended learning, is a pedagogical model that structurally combines in-person learning time and remote activities within a single programme. Unlike simply adding digital resources alongside a classic course, blended training requires intentional articulation of both modalities: each sequence, whether synchronous or asynchronous, remote or in a room, is designed to complement the other.
Digital modalities can take various forms: asynchronous e-learning, synchronous virtual classroom, mobile micro-learning, MOOC, SPOC, interactive quizzes, podcasts. They can occur upstream (preparation), during (alternation) or downstream (consolidation, assessment) of in-person sessions.
Blended training is distinguished from fully remote training by the retention of face-to-face sequences, and from classic in-person training by the formal integration of digital time. This structured complementarity is what gives it its pedagogical richness.
There is no single blended model, but several configurations depending on constraints and objectives:
The success of blended training depends less on tools than on pedagogical design. Three principles to follow rigorously:
The main administrative friction in a blended pathway is traceability: how do you prove the presence of a learner who is sometimes in a room and sometimes at home in front of a screen? Edusign resolves this with a unified suite:
For a training organisation director, the challenge is having a single monitoring interface for both modalities, with ready-to-use exports for quality audits and funding body reports. This is precisely what Edusign enables: a unified dashboard, regardless of the session modality.
Distance training takes place entirely outside the classroom: e-learning, virtual classrooms, MOOCs. The learner has no face-to-face time with the trainer or peers (or very little, in a virtual classroom). Blended training, by contrast, necessarily combines in-person and remote sequences in the same structured programme. If a training course consists of 100% online sessions with no classroom time, it is distance training, not blended learning.
There is no universal ratio: everything depends on the audience, objectives and content. Common practice in professional training oscillates between 30% and 50% in-person for certifying programmes. For short or highly technical training, a 20% in-person / 80% remote ratio may be sufficient if in-room sessions are devoted to intensive practical work. For learners less comfortable with digital tools, a higher in-person ratio is recommended.
Yes, provided the quality framework's requirements on traceability and execution monitoring are met. Quality certification criteria require training hours to be justified and learner progression to be evidenced, regardless of modality. In practice, this means attendance records for both remote and in-person sessions, positioning questionnaires and documented formative assessments. A tool like Edusign covers these requirements for both modalities.
At minimum: an LMS or training management platform (for content and tracking), a video conferencing tool (Zoom, Teams, Google Meet for synchronous virtual classrooms), a digital attendance system (in-person and remote), and a questionnaire tool (assessments, positioning, satisfaction). Beyond that, collaboration tools (Padlet, Klaxoon, Miro) enrich interaction. The golden rule: do not multiply tools; choose integrated solutions and train learners on their use before the programme starts.
The budget depends heavily on the organisation's digital maturity. The main variable cost is pedagogical design (adapting content to digital formats, often underestimated), plus tool subscriptions (LMS, attendance, video conferencing). An often-overlooked item: trainer training in remote facilitation, which represents a time investment but largely determines learner experience quality. Funding bodies may cover this upskilling investment.