Viva Learning is part of the overall Viva employee experience, which also includes Viva Connections and Viva Insights. Viva Connections has been available to all SharePoint customers since March. The second, Viva Insights launched in public preview last month to give organizations actionable insights into productivity across teams. As promised, Viva Learning is now also available in preview. Microsoft explains how it used customer feedback to build the features of the service: “We’re continuing to build Viva Learning to seamlessly integrate learning into the tools you already use everyday – you can share learning via chat, pin learning content in existing Teams channels, recommend learning, see all your available learning sources in a personalized view, search across available sources, and so much more.”
Details
If you’re unfamiliar with Viva Learning, it acts as a single location for employees to learn. It provides access to tools for discovering and sharing content, while also allows admins to assign learning materials to employees. Admins place learning resources within the services, allowing employees to easily tap into them. Microsoft’s own learning tools are also included, such as Microsoft Learn and LinkedIn Learning. Major third-party tools are also available, including edX, Coursera, and Skillsoft. With the public preview, Microsoft is bringing Viva Learning to all customers with a Microsoft Teams subscription. That basically means organizations with a Microsoft 365 plan. The only exceptions are Government and Education customers. Tip of the day: By default computer names in Windows 10 tend to be quite plain. By default, they tend to be ‘WIN’ or ‘Desktop’, followed by a string of random letters and numbers. We show you how to change your PC name with Settings, Command Prompt or PowerShell to make it more easily identifiable.