The solution aims to ‚revolutionise‘ training across industry verticals and create positive ROI
CGS has integrated its XR tools into employee training programmes, the company announced Wednesday ahead of the Augmented World Expo (AWE) 2023.
The firm is a major provider of industry-first extended reality (XR) Immersive Learning-as-a-Service (ILaaS) solutions. These include applications, outsourcing services, and enterprise learning tools — many of which the company will showcase at the event this week.
The measure aims to remove obstacles to drive adoption, digital transformation, and speed-to-performance pipelines across industry verticals.
Global workforces can now leverage CGS’s TeamworkAR and LauchpadXR platforms to launch, scale up, and deploy learning tools. Using virtual and augmented reality (VR/AR), clients for the New York City-based firm can tap the new features to instruct and upskill their workforces.
Clients of the company also include major organisations and firms like McDonald’s, the American Red Cross (ARC), Scoot Airlines, and many others. These clients rely on CGS’s full-scale XR technologies, avoiding the investment and setup costs companies traditionally use for their XR hardware, software, content, and other uses.
What’s in the Solution?
Firstly, CGS’s ILaaS solution offers bespoke AR content via training materials and modules across iOS, Android, browser-based platforms, and wearables.
The company also provides logistics and device management to deploy solutions and manage them remotely. This is also executed via device supply chain management, including shipping, warehousing, and updates.
CGS also provides device sanitation, repair, recovery, and replacement services for clients.
After receiving the devices, the solution is ready out of the box, with minimal adjustment requirements. This also provides onboarding, virtual on-demand training, workshops, and simulations.
Trainees can monitor and report progress via CGS’s hardware and software solutions. This creates learner outcomes and effective business reports to monitor progress and ROI.
At the event, it will demo its ILaaS training solution in partnership with Singaporean budget carrier Scoot, a subsidiary of Singapore Airlines. The demo will showcase the efficacy of generative AI and mixed reality (MR) solutions, which have led to immense results across metrics, including cost savings and learner retention.
The demo comes after a Deloitte study found that, by 2030, soft-skill jobs will reach 63 percent of all roles. Additional Harvard University research found that sufficient and soft and people skill would increase job success by 85 percent.
The study also found that the soft skills training market had topped $23 billion USD. Analysts predict the market will surpass $47 billion USD by 2027, with immersive soft skill training becoming the largest untapped opportunity for enterprises.
American Red Cross Use Case
According to a use case study with the ARC, total profit and loss benefits up to 2026 totalled $6.5 million USD. Additionally, the solution offered a net benefit of $3,337 USD for each student by reducing curriculum times by 50 percent on average.
Across 3,400 trainee phlebotomists across a year’s enrolment, the solution boosted numbers 70 percent.
Due to the solution’s rapid training deployments, it also eliminated training enrolment waiting times, reducing wait them from 20 to 40 days, down to zero days. Furthermore, instructor productivity skyrocketed from 25 percent to 92 percent, and training costs plummeted from $3,700 per student to below $1,300.
CGS’s training tools slashed learning times to proficiency from 30 to up to 45 percent, with learner retention after 30 days spiking from 10 percent to over 85 percent.
Ramp-up times also jumped to 75 percent, which allowed the Red Cross to tackle staffing shortages during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Finally, the solution drastically improved net promoter scores (NPSs) at blood donor drives, improving customer satisfaction scores. It also boosted Red Cross programme awareness across customers.
Comments on CGS training and ILaaS Solution
Doug Stephen, President of Enterprise Learning, CGS explained how ILaaS had become an “exciting solution” for firms seeking XR to onboard, train, and improve their teams’ performance.
He added,
“TeamworkAR by CGS provides everything needed to quickly design and launch enterprise immersive experiences – from designing and testing the proof of concept through full-service logistics and content creation with leading hardware and software partners such as Google, Hololens, Matterport, Meta, RealWear, ServiceNow, and Twilio”
Stephen explained further that the solutions were “especially beneficial” for large firms. Companies seeking the proper tools could leverage CGS solutions to execute collaboration “at scale,” he added. This aimed to reduce traditional methods’ costs, risks, complications, and time-to-performance.
He added: “It allows them to pilot MR and demonstrate [return on investment (ROI)] without the headache of procuring devices they might not need in the future.”
Speaking further on the use cases with the American Red Cross, the ILaaS solution had trained “thousands of phlebotomists in the field,” he continued.
Eric Abbruzzese, Research Director, ABI Research, added that training and remote assistance tools “prevail” across the industry. This comes as AR/VR technologies revealed high positive value for companies, and “streamlining access to those use cases only strengthens that value.”
He concluded,
“Ensuring interoperability and integration with existing systems and devices can be challenging, but having a flexible portfolio with professional service support is a boon for any company at any stage of XR maturity”
CGS will demo its solutions at AWE 2023 to note the solution’s ROI to thousands of attendees.
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