https://.com/features/interactive-video

Dec 21, 2022

To help get the new employees on the right track It is essential to include various methods to engage and learn from learning materials. By leveraging shorter training videos as well as adding interactive questions to the training trainers and facilitators can set up new employees up for the success they deserve.
In this piece this article, we'll look at the impact that video quizzes have, how they could have and how to get started with interactive videos.

What is a video quiz?

Video quizzes provide the opportunity for an engaging and interactive training experiences for workers. While employees complete modules of training and learning, an accompanying overlay that includes a quiz question related to the content, can help them make sense of their knowledge. Interactive video quizzes allow employees to take a break, reflect on the content they've viewed as well as interact with the video in real time. This is also a great option to cut lengthy segments of material that helps to in enhancing the knowledge and increase the participation.

Video quizzes can fold into various training tools. Imagine company-wide orientation sessions all the way to role-specific instruction for sales, retail, engineering, product, marketing and many other departments.

4 elements of interactive video to help with training and onboarding

Hotspots in HTML0: Clickable hotspots are able to be placed anywhere on the video to lead viewers to other relevant material, quiz questions or other training videos. Think of hotspots as the core feature that initiates the action whenever a person clicks them.

Overlays Overlays let the user to include additional interactive content. They can be fully customized and can be created as an iframe or video, a PDF, an image. They are an excellent option to present quiz questions, call-to-actions and polls or other videos to add more depth to your standard training or onboarding experience.

Branching The branching feature allows the viewers to move between different points in a video or even pause the film to allow the viewer to take their own route. If you are designing an onboarding film, branching can be a great way to introduce diverse teams or to highlight the products or employees of the company or even make multiple trips in a single video. When it comes to a video-based quiz branches are great to run through various scenarios and playing out both correct and incorrect answers to certain questions.

Time Triggers:Drive more engagement with your content by trigger events in a video anytime, without a viewer taking any act. While hotspots trigger actions when clicked, time triggers initiate an action within a specific time

Four reasons why you should add an Interactive video into your training and onboarding

Layers with more context

One of the most effective ways to add interactivity to videos is by adding the ability to click on elements in the existing learning material. If there is already training or content for onboarding, you could create clickable hotspots, overlays, and clickable hotspots to provide your employees with additional context. This could include additional information on specific products, teams or processes, as well as topics and individuals or any other relevant facts.

Participation and interactivity on the drive

Interactive videos enable companies to design engaging onboarding experiences that offer an in-depth understanding of the context as well as insights along different learning tracks in a single clip.

These overlays, as well as quizzes, help viewers retain information and break up video content. Time triggers and branching provides scenario-based question and answer formats which increase engagement during learning. Research data shows that videos that are interactive can be 32 percent higher in remembrance than passive videos and has 5X higher interaction with the viewers.

Help reinforce learning materials

To help employees retain information, look for exciting and engaging ways to make training more enjoyable for them. As an example, you could break training down into multiple sections and ask questions through the course.

In reiterating content during, or after an instructional video session, participants are able to remember important information. Additionally, it helps to gamify the learning experience and interjects some fun.

Collect important training insights

Making interactive videos does more than aid in generating engagement. It's a way to collect data that can help you determine your onboarding, the development and learning strategy. Interactive videos are flexible, which allows trainers to assign scores, correct or incorrect specific questions, and then present a report card that allows viewers to track their progression.

By managing your polls and questions in your interactive video segments You can monitor important data including:

  • Total score
  • Total correct score
  • Completely correct answers
  • Individual score in terms of a percentage of the maximum
  • Number of questions that were answered
  • All questions correctly answered
  • Time to answer

Note:You can aggregate quiz data for a whole video, by question or per session. However, because doesn't track personally identifiable data, specific employee or user information can't be identified or segmented.

Get real-time feedback using polls. Record more comprehensive reports on engagement and retention and also collect the preferences of your users for content.

How do you create an interactive video quiz with

allows creators to give a value to a question by using an overlay or hotspot element. It also lets you handle a variety of answers and questions which vary between the multiple choice, false/true, or this-or-that scenarios. The display of the results of the test towards the end of the video will help viewers understand their performance as well as encourage them to work harder to improve their marks, and assist them remember important training knowledge.

There are a few ways to create quiz questions. We'll break down every step needed for creating an immersive learning and onboarding experience with video.

Prep your video content and quiz questions

Before you start to work, you'll need the following items:

  • An existing video or newly uploaded footage that's ready to be made interactive
  • A list of questions, as well as possible answers, that you wish to quiz your viewer on.

A hotspot, or any clickable part that is in an overlay (shapes pictures, shapes, or buttons) could be classified as a quiz answer.

Create a hotspot, and then take action

For the first time, you can add your video , select the appropriate spot on your video and create a hotspot. This is where your questions will pop up when you watch your video.

  1. To add your hotspot, look for the location or person within your video that you'd like to put your hotspot.
     Click the (+) icon in the top right-hand part of the screen in the Hotspot section. Make your own hotspot by selecting or creating a design
  2. Define where the clickable area of your hotspot will be by adjusting the position and the size of your grade net. Be sure to position your hotspot design relative to the object you'd like to be able to interact with for your exam.

Next, you'll want to assign your hotspot an move. The action will signal to the viewer that they have answered the question. Below are some ways that a hotspot could take:

  • Create an overlaythat informs the user whether they answered the correct answer or not.
  • Then they jump to a point on the screen where they are able to watch their answer play out.
  • The payload is a custom onethat activates an action the page or record the response to tell the user.

Toggle on your quiz question hotspot once you've determined which action makes sense.

Create multiple-choice questions by linking hotspots

Let's say your question will have a number of different responses or possible outcomes. The ability to connect multiple hotspots makes quiz questions more dynamic as they offer a range of responses and the corresponding reaction.

Connecting to multiple hotspots is excellent to track click rate as well as engagement.

  1. To connect hotspots to , head to the Question manager to create, edit questions or erase them in order for linking back to your hotspot. The data you pull from the quiz statistics.
  2. After linking your question to the hotspot, you can fill in details for answers, score and whether the answer is correct.
  3. Make sure you save your choices by clicking "Add".

Pro tip: Choose from a wide range of quiz hotspot templates for a start or make your own.

Create a hotspot with an interactive overlay

It is possible to use overlays within your interactive video to pose a question with the answers being clickable elements within the overlay, including buttons, shapes, or images.

  1. To start, create the hotspot, or timer.
  2. From the Action dropdown menu, choose Open overlay.
  3. Click Make overlayto appear in the overlay editor.
  4. Then, go to the left-hand side menu, and then select " Is an answer to a test question" to extend the menu.
  5. Click Question Manager, add your question or select a previously created question.
  6. When you've selected an answer, you'll then be prompted to fill out the name of the answer and the amount for that answer (ex. 10 points) and whether the answer is correct or wrong.
  7. Repeat this for all answer options in your overlay. Make certain you pick an appropriate answer in order to monitor your quiz's success.

Jump in time in the video to watch the outcomes play out

Sometimes, displaying the result of an answer to a question can really help the viewer understand the question.

In order to do this, choose the action of Jumping to a particular moment in the video in the hotspot settings panel or drag the tail of the flowline on the timeline towards the frame you want to.

You can monitor the quiz's results by using the panel for results of your quiz

It wouldn't be a quiz without a score! If you are training employees using interactive videos, you can provide a score for the final test in the final portion of the video, so that the viewers can review their performance.

For a panel of results in the middle of the video, you'll need to build an overlay with a timer.

  • Start by heading to the interactive editor , and scrub the timeline near the final part of the video.
  • Create a time trigger and then select the trigger to open an overlay, then select on the Create overlay button..
  • In the overlay editor, create your own results panel that will match your preferences.

Include quiz results in the overlay by clicking Results from the menu on the left.