Last updated on July 6th, 2023

How Companies do Software Training and Onboarding

Pardeep Kullar
Pardeep Kullar
How Companies do Software Training and Onboarding

You'll go slightly crazy choosing how to onboard and train employees and customers on software because it requires swimming through abbreviations like DAP, LMS, Internal KB and terms like Corporate Wiki. Below we'll clarify some these terms and focus on DAPs (Digital Adopt Platforms) as an advanced practical method with the greatest potential. A DAP has the simple advantage of teaching directly on the page through doing and has a lot of evolution ahead of it.

Key questions we'll cover

How many SaaS cloud apps are companies now using?

What sort of problems does having so many SaaS apps create?

What training and onboarding problems does this software create?

How are companies onboarding and training people?

What major groupings of services are used to train and onboard customers and employees onto software?

What types of Digital Adoption Platforms are there? What do they do?

What's going to happen next? What's the likely evolution?

How many cloud apps are companies now using?

At Upscope we use anywhere between 20 to 30 cloud apps. I'm personally using Gmail, SEMRush, Intercom, Vitally, Notion, Slack, Ghost, RoamResearch, Hubspot, Upscope itself, Anymailfinder, Angellist, Heroku, Github, Oribi, Blazer and I'm probably forgetting another half a dozen.

Soon I'll also be using software for SOC2 certification management, product management, recruitment and any process which can be handled better by a system rather than a Google Sheet. In some ways most apps are just a replacement for inane things we do on Sheets and Docs.

Blissfully's report on app usage

Below are statistics from Blissfully as a good overview of what's happening within a range of different sized organisations.

"In 2019, 68% of organizations said they are mostly or all SaaS-driven at this point, with nearly 23% saying they operate solely using SaaS apps today"

"Overall spend per company on SaaS products is up 50%,"

"The number of billing owners per company has increased from 12 in 2019 to 21 in our 2020 report"

"The unique number of apps in usage per company is up about 30% year over year, with companies averaging 137 in 2019 vs. 2018"

"The average small business uses 102 different apps, while each mid-market business uses an average of 137 apps. Enterprises have, on average, 288 different SaaS apps in usage across their businesses"

The report by Blisfully was published in Oct 2019 so take into account that spending on SaaS has likely rocketed since then due to the pandemic forcing organisations to go cloud first.

See the blissfully report on SaaS trends here.

Okta have proven statistics on company cloud usage

Okta is a service companies use to securely access their own applications and is likely used on most of the apps within a given company. This means they'll have accurate minimum usage data on SaaS apps companies use.

Note, they define big companies as being over 2,000 and small firms as being under 2,000.

"The number of software apps deployed by large firms across all industries world-wide has increased 68% over the past four years, reaching an average of 129 apps per company by the end of 2018"

"Nearly 10% of businesses now have more than 200 apps in their enterprise information-technology systems, the San Francisco-based identity-management firm said in a report Thursday. The report defines large firms as having more than 2,000 employees and small firms as having fewer than 2,000."

"It found smaller firms tended to have fewer apps, though the average number is also rising—jumping from 53 in 2015, to 73 last year."

The next point is interesting because at Upscope we've been specifically told, during sales calls, that they're taking up our system so they don't become reliant on some all-in-one solution.

"The business world’s growing appetite for apps showcases the move over the last 10 years from single vendors with all-in-one platforms to “best-of-breed” applications."

This is partly due to control but also the realisation that a company focusing on developing one application is likely to build a better app than a company building multiple applications into a big all-in-one solution. They'll never refine and perfect the app like a more focused organisation where the investment in getting it right comes from the very top of the company.

Read more on Okta's numbers here.

Chief Martech put it at 1,295 cloud services per enterprise

Here's a nice table summary of where these apps are used. I'd expect development tools to rise up this list over time as it's a huge growing market and the competitors are flooding in. Not a bad thing at all :)

"As you can see in the chart at the top of this post, the latest data available from Netskope’s 2019 Cloud Report shows that the average enterprise is using 1,295 cloud services — a number that keeps rising, year over year."

Data from Chief Martech.

What sort of problems does having so many SaaS apps create?

Security

“Organizations are shifting the focus of modern security away from traditional network strategies to perimeter-less approaches, focusing on users, data, and locations."

"Privacy, security and lack of staff training are the top roadblocks to cloud adoption."

There's one interesting point from the WSJ / Okta article worth thinking about. The companies are both swamped by SaaS apps but also encouraging their use. They want to eliminate unnecessary clutter but also not discourage people from using new apps. Huge enterprises have the same dilemma as small ones. SaaS apps help productivity and ground up adoption is a common path to realising that productivity gain. You can't stop that with a top down policy restricting everything.

Read the WSJ Okta article here.

The SaaS Sprawl

There's even a term for this expansion of apps. It's called the "SaaS Sprawl".

Application sprawl and shadow IT can lead to:

  • Data loss or a data breach
  • Inefficient collaboration amongst teams
  • Compliance concerns
  • Bandwidth limitations
  • Wasted budget spend on SaaS applications
  • Overlapping software subscriptions in the public cloud
  • Different teams using different software that offers the same features
  • Paying for more features than what is needed
  • Buying SaaS applications before they’re needed

See more on SaaS Sprawl in this G2 article here.

Administering and deploying apps

It is often challenging to apply best practices for configuration management in SaaS environments because:

  • The application may be supported by business, not IT.
  • SaaS administrators may not be familiar with configuration and release management practices.
  • SaaS deployment tools are still maturing.
  • Deploying an application often requires both manual and automated steps.
  • SaaS integrations require synching releases with legacy systems.
  • Code, configuration, deployment scripts and manual checklists all need to be checked into the source code repository.

Read more from CIO.com

Okta's top SaaS sprawl challenges faced by companies

  • Password fatigue, provision and de-provision. they have to rely on app administrators to remember to remove access. So needs automated de-provisioning, clear audit trails, integration with active directory.
  • Compliance visibility for auditors. Who has access to what.
  • "These solutions are often managed by the corresponding functional area in a company, such as the Sales Operations group in the case of Salesforce.com. This can benefit IT but it can also create a new problem because there is no central place to manage users and applications, or provide reports and analytics."
  • Siloed data is a problem. You can have e.g. a Marketing department spread across multiple countries but each location uses it's own unique app and data storage structure so it's harder to get an overall picture. "Companies all have a myriad of systems that don’t necessarily integrate with one another. With this network of systems that do not cooperate it becomes difficult to share data across departments. Exacerbating this problem is an increasingly distributed workforce. If an audit team in North America uses one system, but a team in Europe uses a different system, the data from those systems will end up in silos."

Read more from Okta here.

Time wasted bouncing around between apps

"73% spend more than 1 hour per day on average navigating from app to app. With 100 billable resources on a team at $150/hour, that’s $15k lost in potential revenue per day. 72% say data quality as a top BI challenge - meaning companies are working with unreliable data."

"All companies need a number of systems to operate effectively. The issue is that some of these systems work together and some don’t. Because these systems don’t talk to one another, the company isn’t really operating optimally. Adding to the problem is the fact that many organizations even have duplicate systems in use by different departments."

Read more from app developer magazine here.

People abandon SaaS apps expecting them to be iPhone smooth

An almost comical underlying problem is that after using an iPhone and similar consumer software we expect business apps to be just as easy to use. It's a big CX problem where even companies that build elevators are finding customers want tracking apps to see how the build is progressing almost as if it's an Amazon delivery they want to track on their phone.

“Employees have shown a profound ability to use consumer tools to discover and assess information, collaborate, network and carry out tasks in their personal lives. The tools they have at work should be on par with, if not leagues ahead of the consumer apps they can use outside of work”

"The traditional utilitarian structure of enterprise apps often leaves users uninterested and easily distracted. When workers are used to seamless consumer apps, they have a hard time working with clunky and inefficient platforms."

"Custom-tailored software and processes will help employees get work done faster so they can service more customers better. And accomplishing this with no-code tools makes the task profoundly possible.”

From CIO article on SaaS abandonment

Training and onboarding problems

The key problem of course is training and onboarding. Not only do they need to understand and get to work with a range of apps but ideally it's again iPhone smooth and simple.

Onboarding new team members on apps at Upscope as we expand is a massive concern. We don't want to repeat the same introductory talk again and again and I don't think new team members want to sit through pained instruction. The initial talk is often forgotten anyway. Seeing and doing things in practise with documentation as backup is preferable.

ProfitWell describe some of the key problems in training.

"A complex SaaS product is rarely intuitive. It may require SaaS certification and training. Not too many SaaS providers offer such training, leaving many users in the dark."

"Some SaaS users don't learn how to use the entire functionality simply because they aren't aware of it. They pay for a product to use its key features without paying any attention to what else it has to offer."

The above is painfully true. I know that the service SEMRush has some brilliant features but learning about them would involve going through some dreaded videos and tutorials and I'd need to repeatedly refer back to the software to test them as I'm watching. Ideally the help should be on the page but there are solutions for that as we'll see further below when we discuss Digital Adoption Platforms.

"When users receive official SaaS certifications, they are more likely to become brand ambassadors. Official training adds credibility to the holder of the certificate, and then by extension, to the app itself."

"Online communities and in-person training build and strengthen your network of users. This brings credibility to your company, provides opportunities for product feature developments through customer feedback, turns customers into brand ambassadors, and much more."

See more on Profitwell's SaaS training and certification.

Workable describe employee onboarding steps

Here's a great reminder from Workable about how much is involved in onboarding a new employee:

  • Set up employees online accounts including email, instant message, password mgt, productivity,
  • Get them laptop, phone, monitor, mouse, keyboard, headset, phone number,
  • Introductory meetings with new colleagues over first few weeks
  • Plan first assignment
  • Day before first day: Technology setup instructions. copy of org charg. copy of first week schedule. copy of team culture book.
  • On first day: Allow your new hire some downtime to set up their new equipment, set new passwords and log in to their new accounts.
  • During first week. Have 1 to 1 meetings. Give 3 month road map.
  • After onboarding - ask for feedback

In between all that they'll be learning about apps and getting used to the culture and environment. Are they going to retain all that information? It's quite a head rush. Those internal wiki's, knowledge bases, LMS and DAP systems have quite a role to play here in helping with both general onboarding but specifically with apps they may be spending 95% of their time on. Read more on them further below.

Read more on Workable's employee onboarding.

Oracle describes how formal training is forgotten in a week

Oracle nail the problems with training in the modern SaaS environment. There's not enough time allocated for training and yet, because people want business apps to be consumer app smart and smooth and immediate, the trainees are impatient. Finally, with Slack going dut-dut-dut every 3.5 minutes with new information, tasks, reports and jokes, it's harder to focus.

Overwhelmed and short on time – during a typical work week, employees can only dedicate 1% of their time to training and development; just 24 minutes

Impatient for knowledge – learners do not have time to wait for scheduled courses; they are looking to solve an immediate business problem

Distracted with constant interruptions, and overloaded with information – 80% of formal training is forgotten within a week

See more on this by Oracle here.

What types of services are used to train employees and customers on using software?

You've got an array of options to onboard and train people on software. This includes Learning Management Systems (LMS) and Digital Adoption Platforms (DAP) which may or may not integrate with an LMS. There are internal knowledge bases sometimes shortened to Internal KB, Corporate Wiki's that can overlap functions with a CMS (Content Management System) which itself could partly be replicated in that Internal KB.

Here's a rapid overview of most of the above. I'll skip content management systems as the variety of CMS out there will complicate matters even further.

Digital Adoption Platforms (DAP)

DAPs like Whatfix allow you to create software tours with explanatory tooltips

Ever sign up for a new website and have it take you on a tour of the software by highlighting buttons and showing little explanatory tips next to it?

That's a DAP at work. Companies like Walkme, Whatfix, Toonimo, Apty, Appcues are some examples of DAPs.

The tours they provide can be used on internal app training and customer onboarding.

An enterprise might buy a software like Salesforce and follow an onboarding flow to learn about it but after implementing that software they may need to create their own internal tour in using that software.

Why?

Something like Salesforce has so many integrations that after purchase a company needs to create a new tour explaining to new employees how to use Salesforce for that company's own unique and extensive custom implementation.

Also, the code works between apps in some instances. You can have a process stretching across Salesforce and Workday where (assuming the DAP integration works with both) the tour starts at Salesforce and smoothly transitions to Workday and finishes there, showing you a complete cross-departmental process.

Learning Management Systems (LMS)

TalentLMS is one example of a Learning Management System allowing you to create courses

While the DAP sits on your application guiding you, it does not have courses, quizzes, points, badges, leaderboards or full on tracking and reporting for the specific purpose of evaluating progress and providing feedback. An LMS does this.

Using an LMS you can build a course, add quizzes, tests, videos and images to help explain not only software in but help people learn about real estate, supply chain procedures, compliance with regulation within aviation, and sales processes within dealerships.

What's interesting is that many DAP solutions mention being able to connect to an LMS which makes sense. Completing an initial onboarding flow that shows you how to use a software is not proof that you understand a software. We're likely to forget most of it a week later. The LMS would help reinforce and institute that learning.

Internal Knowledge Bases (Internal KB)

There's some overlap between an internal KB and a corporate wiki but the key difference is that the internal KB is primarily passive.

It's written once and occasionally updated. It's intended to be read and acted on the same way a help centre allows customers to search for instructions to understand a software or overcome a problem.

In fact, help centres and internal KBs look alike, as I imagine some companies built an external customer facing knowledge base to sell and then used the same tech to provide an internal KB for employees once they saw the demand.

An internal KB is where employees go when they have a question. It might include office addresses, benefits, tech help, org structure etc.

Corporate Wikis

While the knowledge base might contain the more formal docs that will provide onboarding material for new employees and provide answers to existing employees, a corporate wiki is the centralised search point for a lot of knowledge that might be regularly updated and added to.

The corporate wiki might have documents on processes, projects, products, quarterly meetings, internal product updates, changes to financial schemes and more.

A corporate wiki might contain some passive data but a lot of it will dynamic, regularly updated and conversational.

GetGuru.com is a popular corporate wiki

As an example, a marketing team might use it for holding and updating product messaging, personas, competitor battle cards, product launch checklist, branding guidelines, and a marketing strategy framework. This will of course change regularly and be referred to regularly rather than a once in 3 months visit to the internal KB.

What types of Digital Adoption Platforms are there? What do they do?

Not only the path of least resistance but the also practical time saving value of learning on the live website means Digital Adoption Platforms are worth focusing on.

They don't cover ALL the features of an LMS, Internal KB or Corporate Wiki but they have a chance to evolve into a solution covering many features of both the LMS and Internal KB by bringing those features directly onto the page and within the action.

We'll see why by covering a few of the popular systems out there.

Whatfix

While you already know roughly how a DAP works, it's the differences and similarities between them that give us insights.

For example, Whatfix.com, like a few other DAPs, has a Salesforce overlay and integration.

Several companies do this and having used Salesforce I can understand why.

It's useful for Salesforce to onboard customers but many of the solutions are for onboarding internal employees onto that company's Salesforce solution and then they connect over to other applications, like Workday for cross-application tours.

The above is the Whatfix navigation menu and similar entries are found in a number of DAP menus showing how they tend to cover both user onboarding and employee onboarding, as well as a focus on CRMs.

CRMs probably have the highest learning curve, especially for custom implementations, and are naturally numbers 1, 2 and 3 on the platforms list above.

Apty

As a comparison here is Apty's navigation menu.

There's quite an overlap with Whatfix.

The obvious thing to mention is the size of Salesforce, Dynamics and Oracle. If you build a solution for just 1% of Salesforce, that is still a $1bn market.

Collectively these CRMs make up an incredible total percentage of the market and their combined value is in the 100s of billions. So yes, I full appreciate why companies focus their solutions on them.

Apty, like a few others, also mentions SCORM objects. "With Apty, you can quickly export your workflows into articles, videos, slides, or SCORM objects."

This appears to be a way to connect a DAP to a Learning Management System that carries on into more in-depth training. That said, the companies building the DAP solutions are not far off from providing that functionality themselves and there's some overlap already.

Pendo

Pendo.io seems like an analytics and feedback tool that became a DAP afterwards but I can't say I know its history. However, Pendo is unique.

Pendo focuses on analytics, sentiment, feedback, roadmaps along with user walk throughs. It's almost like a UX analytics, Customer Success and Product Management app combined with a DAP.

This shows how many different directions DAPs can go and how they reach across departments.

Like the others they cover both user and internal onboarding and training.

They also provide a white-label solution called "Pendo Adopt".

"Pendo Adopt is a whitelabel in-application training product. Each customer uses your product differently, with unique roles, procedures, and conventions. With Pendo Adopt, your customers can document specific training and guidance for their users, and monitor compliance."

So, they're selling their adoption product to companies to sell to their customers who would then use it for their customers. It's a little mind stretching but you can see how big a market this is. One of their customers is AWS!

Toonimo

Now for something completely different.

Toonimo.com has quite an impact when you first try out their demo.

What happens?

A popup appears asking if you need help filling out the form. This is quite normal with DAPs but then...

... it starts talking to you, loud and clear to give you instructions on filling out the form. You're now watching buttons become highlighted as a voice talks to you about what each button will do.

This is another evolution of DAP systems. Voice and likely video that talks you through the form as you fill it in. I don't think you always need voice and video but it's almost comforting to hear a voice giving you a rapid intro to something if you're not sure about it. That can develop into all sorts of useful guidance.

Thought Industries

I've picked this one out because of Thought Industries' interesting side bar.

The one thing I worry about with DAPs is "Who is going to maintain it?" and "How often does it break" due to a user interface change?

DAPs have ways of managing breaks whereby it adapts or warns the creator of the broken flow but I'd be worrying if consumers or employees are following some old broken flow. On top of which it takes months to implement systems.

Do DAPs really need to identify the exact button to click? Or can they give a more general explanation on a side bar instead and let the person build some muscle memory in figuring it out themselves?

Personally, I go to sleep following instructions from DAPs. It does help me get from point A to point B and see what a software does but it's not sinking in. It could be due to the way it was implemented but sometimes I just want some general guidance on what to do next. A side bar could well do 80% of the work without the maintenance hassle.

GetGuru, the corporate wiki, mentions this maintenance problem and offers a solution by having a system of Verifiers:

"One of the most important parts of onboarding is ensuring that the knowledge new hires are consuming is up to date. If your onboarding program includes an old version of your slide or materials from before your last brand refresh, your new hires will be assimilating themselves with the wrong knowledge. Every piece of knowledge in Guru is assigned a Verifier, who is then responsible for keeping that information up to date and accurate. Verifiers are also required to specify a frequency at which they will re-verify a given piece of knowledge. If that Card reaches the end of its allotted trust window, it’s automatically labeled ‘Untrusted’ until the verifier goes in and affirms that the knowledge is still accurate."

They've clearly thought through the problem and I expect further evolution in the management side of DAPs to help companies institute maintenance and updates.

What's going to happen next?

While many of the DAPs are similar you only have to look at Pendo to think this could go anywhere and become a brand new category of product.

However, here are some simple enough guesses on the future:

On-page guidance where the customer is learning by doing is the path of least resistance and maximum impact. Digital Adoption Platforms will spread globally but they have a couple of issues to handle, notably with maintenance and the initial installation and setup.

Consequently, there is space for a DAP where staff can begin creating an onboarding or support flow without needing to go through a long setup process like installing code.

There is also space for systems where ownership of a flow is clear and manageable and maybe GetGuru's Verifier system is a good example of how to do that.

Voice and video will be added to many DAPs to help customers and staff in understanding software. I don't necessarily always like voice and video but it helps me connect with a product. I just prefer to read at my own speed in most instances.

That said, voice and video will likely help me in the intro phase of a new product or experience and especially for the most complicated parts of an application where an overview will help me understand where to begin and what to skip.

The DAP flow will likely be supplemented by either measurement of progress and further flows or a connection to an LMS.

If I go through a DAP flow on day one at a new company then I'm going to forget in a week and need to re-do it or at least get some sort of quick overview reminder.

I can't say I want to do a formal course on it but getting a badge of completion would be nice without having to sit an exam. The only way I should really earn it is by using the product successfully so training data might be a great component to add. I believe some DAPs do this with Salesforce.

This area of overlap between DAP and LMS has a long way to evolve, let alone the overlap with UX, feedback, roadmaps and CX and all that. It's early days.

Read next? Read more on knowledge bases, bots and questions customers ask.

Pardeep Kullar
Pardeep Kullar

Pardeep overlooks growth at Upscope and loves writing about SaaS companies, customer success and customer experience.