Neovation Corporation

Neovation Corporation Our team of experts will deliver a complete online training solution, tailored to your needs. Our su Neovation is your full-service learning solutions company.

We're obsessed with unleashing human potential and increasing organizational intelligence, while avoiding eLearning myths and focusing on the science of learning. Is your online training ecosystem working for you? We will build or enhance your eLearning ecosystem to improve training performance. We help organizations deliver effective, impactful, measurable online training. Expand your eLearning e

cosystem beyond LMS-based courses and realize the full potential of online training. An eLearning course doesn’t exist in isolation. Your online training is part of an ecosystem that develops and manages your most valuable asset — your talent. Partner with us to develop a full-service solution to improve your training outcomes and boost your bottom line. We’ll guide you from designing and creating content, to choosing and implementing delivery platforms and supporting your training administration!

A lot of L&D programs default to one delivery model for all their work. One freelancer. One agency. One in-house team. E...
06/08/2026

A lot of L&D programs default to one delivery model for all their work. One freelancer. One agency. One in-house team. Everything goes through the same path regardless of what the project actually needs.

The programs that clear backlogs most efficiently tend to match the model to the project. In-house for strategy and high-stakes work. Done-for-you for standard training. Freelancers for specialist overflow.

The mix is the method. Full breakdown here

Three ways to hire eLearning designers: as a freelancer, an in-house team, or a done-for-you service. Compare cost, timeline, and the math behind each path.

Most eLearning buyers don't realize how much of their course backlog fits a standard productized scope until they actual...
06/07/2026

Most eLearning buyers don't realize how much of their course backlog fits a standard productized scope until they actually map it out.

For many L&D teams, the answer is the majority of it — which means they've been paying project-based custom rates for work that didn't need to be that complicated or that expensive.

The guide at the link walks through how to tell which package type fits which work.

Custom eLearning development services come in four package types. What each commits you to, and how to match the right model to your actual project shape.

Most eLaaS contracts have a subscription floor that only makes sense if you're producing 12 or more courses a year. Belo...
06/06/2026

Most eLaaS contracts have a subscription floor that only makes sense if you're producing 12 or more courses a year. Below that volume, per-course pricing almost always wins. The problem is that most buyers compare the eLaaS pitch against the frustration of per-project work, not against what per-course pricing would actually cost them. The math is worth running before you commit to twelve months.

What eLearning as a service actually is, when the subscription math works, and how to tell if your L&D program is a fit or if project-based is better.

Most eLearning buyers compare consultant hourly rates against agency project fees and make a call.What they often miss i...
06/05/2026

Most eLearning buyers compare consultant hourly rates against agency project fees and make a call.
What they often miss is the third column: productized services, where bounded standard training gets delivered at a fraction of either rate — fixed price, fixed timeline, no scope creep. For most compliance, onboarding, and product training builds, that column is worth checking first.

Custom eLearning solutions company, consultant, or productized service: how to match the engagement model to your project, plus when none of them fits.

Before your next authoring tool subscription renews, run one number: how much is your team's time costing per course, ve...
06/04/2026

Before your next authoring tool subscription renews, run one number: how much is your team's time costing per course, versus what that course would cost to outsource?
Most L&D teams find the gap is not what they'd expect.
Full breakdown — direct replacements, free options, done-for-you path, and a calculator to run your own math.

Articulate 360 alternatives compared: direct Storyline and Rise replacements, free and open-source options, plus when to skip the authoring tool entirely.

When a vendor quotes "$8,000 per hour of eLearning," the word "hour" means the learner's hour — not development time. On...
06/03/2026

When a vendor quotes "$8,000 per hour of eLearning," the word "hour" means the learner's hour — not development time. One finished hour of seat time typically takes 50 to 700 hours of staff time to build.

That's why the same one-hour course quotes anywhere from $1,999 to $50,000 and both numbers can be accurate. They're describing different products.

This breakdown of what one hour of eLearning really costs explains the spread and where standard organizational training actually lands.

What "cost per finished hour" actually means in eLearning quotes, why the range runs from $3,000 to $50,000+, and how to compare vendor quotes fairly.

"Affordable eLearning" is a meaningless phrase until you have a reference point. The same one-hour course quotes anywher...
06/03/2026

"Affordable eLearning" is a meaningless phrase until you have a reference point. The same one-hour course quotes anywhere from $1,999 to $75,000 depending on what's actually being built. A low number without a defined scope is a teaser, not a quote.

This guide to what affordable actually means — including the three checks before you sign — is worth reading before the next proposal comes in.

What "affordable" actually means when one-hour eLearning courses quote anywhere from $1,999 to $75,000. Three checks before you sign a quote.

Outsourced eLearning projects go sideways for the same reasons every time. Fuzzy scope. Stakeholders added late. No writ...
06/01/2026

Outsourced eLearning projects go sideways for the same reasons every time. Fuzzy scope. Stakeholders added late. No written change-order policy. The wrong vendor type for the project.

Every one of those is visible before you sign. This guide to outsourcing eLearning without the headaches covers the vendor types, the vetting questions, and the three engagement non-negotiables that keep projects on track.

How to outsource eLearning without scope creep, surprise invoices, or a third-month rebuild. Plus the vendor types, vetting questions, and engagement basics.

Ask three vendors to quote the same eLearning project and you'll get three dramatically different numbers — none of whic...
05/31/2026

Ask three vendors to quote the same eLearning project and you'll get three dramatically different numbers — none of which come with a clear explanation of why.

The spread is real, but it's not random. Four things drive almost all of it: how interactive the course needs to be, how much content you're starting with, how many stakeholders will review it, and what your technical requirements are.

This guide to eLearning development costs walks through what the ranges actually mean and how to match your budget to what the training needs to do.

eLearning development costs run from $1,999 to $50,000+ per finished hour. See what drives the spread, the hidden costs, and how to budget by training role.

Before posting the job for an eLearning designer, one question worth sitting with: is hiring actually what the work requ...
05/30/2026

Before posting the job for an eLearning designer, one question worth sitting with: is hiring actually what the work requires? A full-time instructional designer runs $140,000 to $160,000 fully loaded before a course ships. The hire cycle takes six to twelve weeks. Programs producing fewer than ten courses a year often find the per-course math doesn't hold up once those numbers are counted.

This guide to freelance, in-house, and done-for-you eLearning walks through what each path actually commits you to — and when each one makes the numbers work.

Three ways to hire eLearning designers: as a freelancer, an in-house team, or a done-for-you service. Compare cost, timeline, and the math behind each path.

Address

109-383 Provencher Boulevard
Winnipeg, MB
R2H0G9

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

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