How to Facilitate Fantastic Virtual Training

Keeping participants engaged and interested throughout a virtual training session can be a challenge. If you suddenly find yourself delivering virtual training because of the Covid-19 restrictions, you may be wondering how on earth you can manage it.

Wonder no more! In this blog, we will share several insider tips from our training team that will help you wow your audience and ensure your next virtual training session is a huge success.

Facilitate rather than teach

Effective trainers know that in training the delegates should be the focus of the session. Nobody is there to watch the trainer show off their knowledge and best (/worst!) jokes.

To put it simply, “speak less and ask more.”

Ask questions and challenge your delegates to help them create new connections, consolidate their learning and find those coveted “AHA” moments. And whatever you do, avoid boring them to death with PowerPoint.

Use the chat window

To keep delegates engaged during virtual training you must adapt your communication skills. To achieve this with a large group, the best way to maximise two-way communication is by actively using the chat window.

Person Typing on a Laptop

Try asking delegates to answer a simple “yes” or “no” to statements you make,  or get them to list their top 3 ideas about a topic.

An essential feature at the start of any successful training is to clarify with delegates what challenges they face related to the topic. The chatbox is a perfect way to record these challenges, because at the end of the training you can go back as a group and reflect on whether those challenges have been addressed.

Use participants’ names

By simply using delegates’ names when interacting with them or asking questions, it can not only help you to build an emotional connection but also keeps their interest and attention. It also means they can’t fall asleep!

Woman in Black Blazer Sitting by the Table While Using Macbook

Test and check understanding

Use quizzes/polls or ask the group questions to double-check understanding and to ensure the key learning points really stick. It’s ok if participants feel a bit of pressure at times, as that will push them outside their comfort zone and help them to learn. Don’t be afraid to put them on the spot!

Use the power of your voice

There is nothing worse than listening to a trainer with a monotonous or flat tone of voice. Be sure to vary the tone, speed and volume of your voice throughout the session. Try to emphasise keywords, and use the power of pauses before and after key points to help your audience to process the most important messages.

Angry woman yelling into loudspeaker on blue background

Conclusion

Virtual training might seem like a whole new world, but in reality, it requires many of the same skills as face-to-face training. A good rule of thumb is to ask the delegates to engage and interact approximately every 3-5 minutes. Follow this rule, and our techniques above, and your virtual training delegates will be blown away!

If you want to practise your virtual training skills and get real feedback and coaching on your delivery skills, take a look at our Virtual Train the Trainer course, or our Virtual Training Delivery Skills for more experienced facilitators.

Microsoft’s Power BI – what you can expect in 2019

Our FEBUARY Power BI blog had some great insights and tips into creating power bi tooltips – so what else is new for Power BI?
Python Visuals

In February 2019, Microsoft have announced an update of Power BI where you can now share, publish and view Python visuals in your reports and dashboards.

This update extends the support for Python in the Power BI Desktop to the Power BI service, which was written by Mohammed Ali, a Power BI Program Manager at Microsoft in August 2018.

This ability completes the support for Python in Power BI, enabling you to use Python scripts to prepare your dataset. It also allows you to apply slick analytics or machine learning in the Power BI Desktop and personal gateway.

You can then plot the results in your Power BI reports using any of the hundreds of open-source Python Visualisation Packages.

Incremental Refresh

Incremental refresh is a new feature of Power BI premium which enables more reliable and more efficient resource consumption.

It’s also completed refreshes faster on larger volume datasets.

Part of Microsoft’s strategy is to converge enterprise on Power BI on a single platform lead to the announcement of the public preview of incremental refresh in July 2018.

It’s a fine example of how Power BI is simplifying complicated implementations.

This allows the incremental loading of new or changed data without the need to reload the entire data list.

The benefits of this new process means faster refreshing times and less memory used during processing, older data can be dropped as it is no longer required and refreshes are ultimately more reliable.

Embedded Analytics

Here is a brief list of the updates made available for embedded analytics:

Use Power BI with service principle

Schedule Refresh API

Get Power BI Apps content

Embed Capabilities:

Control all visual menus programmatically

Personalise reports from Themes API

Clone Visual API

These are some of the most anticipated updates for Power BI this year and stay tuned for further posts on additional Power BI updates throughout 2019.