Thanks to Bill Ellet, editor of the unbiased Training Media Review, writes about the awards in our industry and how hopelessly biased and corrupt they are.
Click to read Bill's excellent article.
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The weakness, of course, is how representative voters are of the population relevant to the product being voted on.
Posted by: Pepe Fanjul | Friday, 17 June 2011 at 02:52 AM
It wasn't a surprise that some of the individuals who made the list worked for companies that are paying sponsors of the organization running the contest.
Posted by: PetCareRx Coupon | Tuesday, 12 July 2011 at 08:58 AM
I would imagine that over the last two decades there is no one in our field who has improved the work of as many instructional designers, trainers, and e-learning developers companies..
Posted by: eBridge advertising | Wednesday, 03 August 2011 at 05:31 AM
Thanks to Bill Ellet, editor of the unbiased Training Media Review, writes about the awards in our industry and how hopelessly biased and corrupt they are.
Posted by: pandora bracelets | Thursday, 04 August 2011 at 10:41 PM
this will affect our field---indeed it is already affecting our field to some extent as computers already provide support for folks who are answering questions---but when this reaches a tipping point we'll just have to wait and see.
Posted by: christian louboutin sale | Thursday, 04 August 2011 at 10:42 PM
Does this mean that soon computers will be able to replace people in answering questions? For us as workplace learning-and-performance professionals, does this mean we'll be doing less training of people, and more training of machines?
Posted by: ray ban | Thursday, 04 August 2011 at 10:44 PM
indeed it is already affecting our field to some extent as computers already provide support for folks who are answering questions
Posted by: thomas sabo | Thursday, 01 September 2011 at 09:33 PM
for his many years in leading the workplace learning-
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