Building a portfolio – episode 2

I become my client

It’s been about three weeks since I wrote the first episode of this saga, and about a week since I posted it. In the intervening time, I’ve approached the as I would if I were a client. This may complicate the telling of the story.

If I were a client, this is how I would work with me:

  • find out what my goals are, and what I want to accomplish in the project
  • establish the key messages I want to get across and identify my priorities
  • locate and structure the content to create those messages
  • build up storyboards with content (episode 3)
  • design the project for optimal visual impact (episode 4)
  • build and test the project (episodes 5 and 6)
  • launch the final, approved product (episode 6)

So there’s a lot to cover today. Of course, if I were a new client, there would be more I would want to know: sponsorship, communication, company culture, meeting the SMEs, doing a needs analysis, and so forth. But I think I know this client reasonably well.

bulls-eye-transparent My goals are two-fold: improve my skills with Storyline 2™, and create an online portfolio showcasing my skills and experience. The end product will be posted on my web site at www.memorable-learning.com.

Notice that nowhere did I use the term training? Once I recognized that I was creating a marketing piece rather than a training piece, the framework for the project began to appear.

 

framework

As I put details on my goals, it became clear that I wanted the reader to get four things out of the project:

  1. Understand the services I offer: I am an instructional designer and elearning developer, with deep experience in collecting and structuring content, and in looking at the overall needs of an organization in change.
  2. Walk the path that got me to where I am today: the experience I have had in a variety of industries.
  3. Appreciate a well-crafted Storyline project that tells my stories.
  4. Learn about my background and how to contact me.

That sounds like a pretty firm structure. I am ready to move on to the content.

BookshelfOver time, I have built a lot of resumes, each one either an update of a previous one, or a presentation of a specific set of skills. There was no master document with descriptions of each project I’ve done over the years. Well, there was one – I had started a CV (curriculum vitae, the resume of academe) when I was in grad school, and until a few years ago, I had dutifully added a bullet point about each new project as it was completed. It ran to 12 pages, and had not been updated since 2003.

Have you ever tried to remember everything of note you’ve done in the last 12 years?

Fortunately, I had kept copies of my timesheets for that period (no, I don’t know why I kept them, just never deleted them) so I could identify which projects were done when. I captured these in a small Word template and tried to fill in as much detail as possible. There were 27 projects.

Blue-bridge So back to the structure. I had identified four services: instructional designer, content developer / editor, elearning developer, and change mThe four are interrelated, but there are some specific aspects of each that I wanted to talk about. Once I laid out these topics, my structure began to look like this:

ID Content Elearning Change
Analyzing needs
Defining goals
Designing for best effect
Working with experts
Delivering and coaching
Evaluating outcomes
Multinational experts
Regulated environment
Technologists
Thought leaders
Public service experts
Blended curricula
Repurposing to elearning
Regulated environment
Dedicated elearns
Virtual classrooms
Change strategy
Needs analysis
Communication planning
Teaming for success
Workforce alignment
Change training

And the same analysis for the experience in industries yielded this table:

Life Sciences Technology Finance Retail Public Service
Scientist
Process alignment
Risk management
Change strategy
Technology
Training new processes
Distributing expert knowledge
Enabling public utilities
Training custom systems
Enabling across divisions
Merging accounts payable
Training IM auditors
Training bank auditors
Implementing financial ERP
Automating advertising
Restaurant financials
Transformed stores
Cosmetics supply chain
Retail consultant training
County government
Federal change managers
Federal consultants

It’s still a lot of topics, and I had to write a short description of each of them.  More on that next week.

Lesson learned: Never throw away anything. You might need it some day.

Author: memorable-learning.com-admin

Memorable Learning was founded after almost 30 years of telling the stories of people passionate about what they are doing. It began as writing laboratory reports to support a method of protecting a third-world farmer’s hard-won harvest from rats, but soon expanded. Whether it’s explaining a new software product to users, teaching engineers how to share data with international counterparts through an enterprise-wide system, or bringing accountants up to date on new developments in their fields, I’ve been privileged to work with some of the most passionate people in the world.

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