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June 15, 2023

Adopting a Metrics-driven Mindset - Positioning L&D as a Business Value and Measuring the Economic Impacts

LocTalk

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Join David Kelly for an enlightening presentation on the future of on-the-job training. Explore the transformative potential of AI and augmented reality, uncovering how these technologies will reshape training practices.

Transcription

It's my pleasure to be here to join you and have a conversation today on AI and augmented reality and its impact on on-the-job training. My name is, as I mentioned in the intro, David Kelley. I am the CEO of the Learning Guild. If you wanted to know more information about me, you could scan that QR code that's there to connect us on LinkedIn. My job on a daily basis in the role that I have at the Guild is to keep my finger on the pulse of what's going on with learning and technology and to kind of synthesize that and make sense of it for people that are in our field so that they can harness the power and the potential of these technologies for themselves. And when I was invited to speak today and they asked me to speak on AI and augmented reality, I was very happy to have those be the topics A because I follow them very much in the work that I do, but also because they do feel that they are two of the most impactful technologies that we're dealing with at this time in our work. So I'm thrilled to be exploring each of those separately and the interconnections as we go through. I encourage you to be an active participant in this discussion. Feel free to use chat. I'll be looking on as people going in if you want. Feel free to ask any questions you want. Use a Q&A. We'll have a Q&A at the end, as was mentioned earlier, but we will also have the opportunity to just throw in chat if you want to add your thoughts to the discussion. So with that, we are here as mentioned to discuss how AI and augmented reality are going to transform on the job training. And we'll go through each one separately and look at it. I think language is an important part of this discussion because we think in language and I think that we have, if we're not using the right language, we're not necessarily having the right thoughts. So I want to start with each of these topics, just talking about the language that we're using when we talk about these things. And let's start with augmented reality. What do we mean when they say augmented reality? If you're here with this lie, feel free to put your own thoughts into chat. But I know there's a lot of different people who use augmented reality to describe different types of experiences. They use it to describe, a lot of times when you ask people to define augmented reality, the descriptions that come back are not necessarily talking about a specific technology. They're talking about a specific experience that people have with that sort of technology. And that's not necessarily right or wrong. I'm not looking to say that one definition is right or wrong, but we have to realize language talking and what we're speaking about here. Augmented reality is a very large spectrum of different types of experiences that could be powered by bringing digital assets into the real world.
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