The retail industry saw a dramatic shift in the last two years. Whether embracing a digital-first approach or pivoting to omnichannel, retailers have changed their approach and walked the extra mile to respond to the challenges posed by the pandemic. However, due to this paradigm shift, many skills have become obsolete, forcing enterprises to rethink their learning and development strategies.
Employee empowerment for providing a great customer experience has become a top priority in several retail organizations. Pre-covid, retailers used to focus on functional training to increase sales now they are additionally giving importance to safety training to increase customer walk-ins. Moreover, with the rise of the phygital trend, the need to develop an agile learning culture has increased.
60% of companies experience growth in profits after adopting an Agile approach.
The phygital retail model blends the physical and digital worlds to offer an enhanced buying experience. However, this has led to an increase in customer demand and expectations.
Concepts like microlearning and macro learning have suddenly gained momentum to upskill and reskill the employees to meet these demands and offer convenient buying and after-sales experiences to B2B and B2C customers.
But the question that arises here is which is more effective for the modern retail learning culture. Microlearning or macro learning?
Well, we will delve deeper into both these concepts to find out if we need to choose one of them or blend both to unlock the full potential of retail employees and vendors.
Macrolearning is a learning system of gradually increasing complexity that is designed to be accessible to a broad range of learners with varying levels of skills.
Learners are exposed to a variety of teaching and content that progressively gets more complicated during macrolearning. Through pertinent and meaningful exercises, this approach aids in the development of learners' skills and knowledge.
The individual who runs the class and imparts the knowledge is known as the instructor. The coach is the facilitator who assists students with their issues. A mentor is a person who offers guidance and support to learners as they advance in their careers.
Learners can be found in all three of these positions in a macrolearning setting. To assist them with their unique issues, they can work with one or more coaches, and they often have mentors who support them in their professional lives.
Microlearning touches the corners that macrolearning often fails to reach. It moves beyond the classroom and instructor-led training and gives employees the flexibility to learn from anywhere at their own pace. This level of learning freedom is pivotal in a challenging industry like retail, where trends and policies change rapidly.
The transfer of learning is 17% more efficient with microlearning.
Moreover, retail has a peak and valley pattern due to market fluctuations. Employees need to stay on their toes to offer optimum performance during various festivals and end or mid-season sales. Bite-sized learning helps retail employees upskill and adapt to the constantly changing retail landscape.
Employees are more engaged when learning is provided in short bursts that last up to a maximum duration of 7 to 11 minutes.
Whether it’s a physical store, a digital store, or a retail business that focuses on offering a phygital experience, the employees are often pulled in multiple directions due to high workload. In addition, with too much on their plate, retaining knowledge becomes challenging, especially when they are overloaded with information.
Within 30 days, 80% of learning is forgotten .
Microlearning has the power to negate the effect of the forgetting curve by refreshing the learner’s knowledge periodically. Retail employees can instantly apply what they’ve learned to their day-to-day tasks.
Moreover, it becomes easier to keep retail employees updated about the new products or changes in procedures and policies with knowledge nuggets. While traveling or during downtime, retail employees can easily make time to absorb new information and enhance their skills through microlearning.
Microlearning can boost engagement to more than 50%.
Macrolearning is apt for teaching larger concepts to retail employees. For instance, how to upsell and cross-sell in retail or training on a new product, its usage, benefits, and USPs when compared to the competitors.
It focuses on creating impactful learning pathways for achieving long-term results. macrolearning often consumes several hours or days as it comprises dissemination of knowledge, assessment, and feedback. Experiential learning, instructor-led seminars, coaching, and online courses are a few ways of delivering microlearning.
As per a survey, 35% of retail employees said training is “very effective” in helping them do their job well, and only 31% said that training makes them feel “extremely engaged,”
macrolearning is ideal for onboarding, compliance training, and change management training. It helps to provide an in-depth understanding of a complicated and diverse subject.
So, have we figured out which is better, micro or macrolearning?
Well, that’s like asking if is chicken better than turkey. But better for what?
It depends on what you want to make, a chicken burger or a turkey sandwich. Or you can blend both and even make a Turkey and Chicken Submarine Sandwich.
Microlearning and macrolearning are two powerful learning approaches that can create a great impact if used the right way at the right time. They don’t need each other’s substitute.
One misconception bubble that we need to burst is that Microlearning DOESN’T replace macrolearning or vice versa. Both can coexist and be used to train your retail employees through blended learning. For instance, microlearning can be used to prepare employees for online/classroom learning. They can get a glimpse of what they will learn in the detailed learning sessions through snippets or short videos. Retail employees can even get acquainted with a new product through microlearning and later delve deeper into the functionalities with detailed training using macrolearning.
Taking the right learning and skilling approach can improve employee productivity and have a strong impact on the business bottom line. In retail, employees are the face of the company; by providing satisfactory buying experiences to the customers, they can encourage positive word of mouth. This can help boost the growth and revenue of the retail business.
It is crucial to blur the line between micro and macrolearning. But how? Well, Disprz can help. This complete skilling suite offers both microlearning and macrolearning on a single platform. It even offers a mobile learning solution that busy retail employees can access at any hour of the day to enhance their skills and offer a better experience to the customers.
You can begin with microlearning through flashcards, infographics, and videos to create awareness about a specific subject. Later you can switch to macrolearning by creating a personalized learning journey with assessment at various intervals.
One of India’s leading pharmacy retail chains used Disprz to amplify efficiency and drive optimum employee performance.
They could conduct onboarding at scale within 30 days using macrolearning and reduce time to productivity. Moreover, they could keep the retail employees up to date with microlearning content on how to stock up on medicine, prescribe the right drugs, etc.
Click Here to check out the full case study on how the retail firm reduced in-class training time and upskilled employees at all their stores across India.
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