Oracle Finds E-Learning a Breeze
Oracle The software giant will augment its
iLearning platform using Macromedia's The deal is part of Oracle's new Content Resource Center, which lets
companies develop, share and publish content. Customers of both companies
will now get access to the Macromedia products and Oracle iLearning tools,
which manage training participation in online or in classrooms.
The Content Resource Center will also provide access to a joint content
community site to help enterprises find developers experienced in delivering
learning solutions. In addition, Oracle and Macromedia are expanding the
Content Resource Center community by providing users with access to their
partner networks, the Oracle PartnerNetwork and the Macromedia Alliance
partner program, respectively.
"By working with the strong developer community and broad line of rich,
interactive content creation tools from Macromedia and Oracle's enterprise
learning management system, we are starting from an amazing vantage point to
move the industry forward," Kevin Lynch, vice president, Macromedia said.
After a brief dot-com bust hiatus, e-learning is back en vogue. The
sector is expected to grow to $83.1 billion in 2006, and eventually swell to more than $212
billion by 2011, according to research firm Brandon-Hall. The National
Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM) estimates,
corporate e-learning in India alone is expected to grow about 25 percent in
the next four years.
A recent University of Phoenix Online study found that enterprise
customers are perfect for online training. Technical and licensed
professionals made up 44 percent of their e-learning users last year making
them the largest demographic. Middle managers made up 30 percent and
executives or business owners rounded up the list at 20 percent.
Knowing this, Oracle and Macromedia said their joint customers can get
to resources describing industry standards and best practices for learning
content development and publishing.
"We are now in the pragmatic phase of e-learning - when most
organizations want their investments to pay off rapidly," said Josh Bersin,
president and founder of Bersin & Associates. "Despite the existence of
standards, however, content integration remains a major issue."
Oracle and Macromedia boast that their partnership
supports all of the standards for online learning technology including
Aviation Industry CBT Committee (AICC), IMS Global Learning Consortium
(IMS), and Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM).
Because there is interoperability between Oracle iLearning and Macromedia
products like Breeze, Flash, Authorware, and RoboDemo, the companies claim
they are making it easier to benefit from online learning.
Already, airline carrier America West announced it will take
advantage of the Oracle/Macromedia partnership. Brookwood Media Arts, which
already uses Macromedia products, said the additional support from Oracle
will help its enterprise clients including FedEx, Boeing and Air Products.
is taking advantage of resurgence in online
training to ink a deal with a flashy partner.
Breeze, a Web conferencing tool that uses Flash Player to deliver voice over IP, video, application and screen sharing, and other rich content.