Jhana is an online learning and employee performance platform, from FranklinCovey. It aims to help first-level managers hire, develop and retain qualified people through eTraining. Jhana believes that the best way for first-level managers to learn is through real-world based situations and information that’s actionable, realistic and relevant in today’s messy, fast-changing workplace. With over 1,000 practical articles, videos and toolkits, Jhana content aims to be comprehensive, simple,…
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LinkedIn Learning (Lynda.com)
Score 9.0 out of 10
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Lynda.com (now offered as part of LinkedIn Learning) is an elearning course library acquired and now supported by LinkedIn in May 2015.
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Pricing
Jhana
LinkedIn Learning (Lynda.com)
Editions & Modules
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No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Jhana
LinkedIn Learning (Lynda.com)
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Jhana
LinkedIn Learning (Lynda.com)
Features
Jhana
LinkedIn Learning (Lynda.com)
Learning Management
Comparison of Learning Management features of Product A and Product B
Jhana
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Ratings
LinkedIn Learning (Lynda.com)
7.5
Ratings
13% below category average
Course authoring
00 Ratings
7.50 Ratings
Course catalog or library
00 Ratings
8.80 Ratings
Player/Portal
00 Ratings
8.30 Ratings
Learning content
00 Ratings
8.60 Ratings
Progress tracking & certifications
00 Ratings
8.80 Ratings
Learning reporting & analytics
00 Ratings
6.50 Ratings
Social learning
00 Ratings
6.90 Ratings
Gamification
00 Ratings
3.70 Ratings
eLearning Content
Comparison of eLearning Content features of Product A and Product B
If you are growing quickly and need to give first time people managers a resource to learn the basics this is a good tool. If you have established leaders this is not a good tool for them. It covers the basics and ABCs of people management and does not go much further than that.
lynda.com is well-suited for an individual OR an enterprise. You can take learning on-the-go via mobile phone or tablet. Instructors are well-known industry experts. There is a tremendous amount of courses. Ideal self-directed learning library to supplement anyone's ILT-heavy learning strategy.
When they were acquired by LinkedIn, the next invoice barely noted the invoice was for Lynda.com. I at first thought it was a phishing attempt using LinkedIn as a front.
The invoice should be from the lynda.com domain and NOT from LinkedIn.
Account administrators should be able to change passwords, and see passwords, for the license entities they manage. Also, all email notices to users should be duplicated to account administrators.
It can help all employees learn to strengthen current skills or to learn new skills and then can learn to excel in their current department or they learn a new skills in a new department creating interconnection and cross-departmental value in a company.
The platform is very easy to use and navigate, the content is clearly itemised via the Contents section and the video playback speed can be adjusted. It's also useful to have optional captions (I always use them) and a transcript for accessibility purposes.
The technical team behind LinkedIn Learning (or Lynda.com) knows their job, and they usually solve problems very quickly. While I haven't had many run-ins with them (thus the low rating), I do find that when we call them, the problem gets resolved in a reasonable amount of time. The flip-side of this comment is that we never have needed to call them with a high-priority issue.
By implementation we are able to achieve 1.Skill improvement 2.Reduced burden on training staff 3.Learning new market leading technologies like Generative AI.
I have not used any other products like Jhana and I am not sure of what else would be out there. So it is hard to explain how Jhana has stacked up. I would image it stacks up well against anything else. My guess is that other tools feel a lot more corporate.
Udemy for Business is a crapshoot. The consistency is non-existent. Some courses go incredibly deep, while other courses don't go deep enough. Even when we got a few free months of access to Udemy - I still couldn't find why I would use Udemy over LinkedIn Learning. Pluralsight is superior to LinkedIn Learning in programming/coding. They have a better library of content and more tests. What Pluralsight lacks is for non-developer skillsets. Buy Pluralsight for your devs. Coursera is not at all an option for the business environment. It follows the college model of delivering content slowly and without reason. Its focus is more on high-level possibilities, not real-world things you want to solve.
I can't think of a negative impact that Lynda.com has when it relates to the extensive library of training software that is available to subscribers. I'm lucky that my job provides a free subscription for instructors. I use Lynda.com to hone in on my technical skills.