Augmented Training (AR): The Future Starts Now

Augmented Training (AR): The Future Starts Now

As we highlighted in a previous post, AR has already demonstrated huge benefits to workforce training.  Inherently on demand, AR training can reduce costs significantly without the need to travel to seminars and classes, especially if implemented on existing hardware platforms like mobile phones and tablets. It can also help job training where safety might be a concern.  But most importantly, AR training provides more effective learning and retention by removing cognitive barriers, creating stronger emotional connection to content, and narrowing focus to core subject materials in ways that were not previously possible at scale.

Many organizations have begun to embrace and prove out the effectiveness of augmented reality as a critical method to train their workforce.  Boeing has reported a 90% increase in ‘first-time’ quality and 30% reduction in delivery time with the use of AR in the training of its manufacturing engineers.  Major investments in AR are accelerating in important industries and sectors.  For example, the US Department of Defense, more specifically the US Airforce, is turning to AR to train over 16,000 Civil Engineers on equipment too expensive to be made readily available at all the necessary outposts throughout the world.  This massive investment in augmented reality underscores the essential role it will play in all areas of the economy in the not-so-distant future.  

You may ask: “But how do I implement a training program leveraging the power of AR technology?”  This prospect can be very intimidating.  But, in many respects, you have the infrastructure in place already.  

Hardware

While we expect to witness big leaps in technology in the next couple of years, particularly as it relates to head-mounted devices (such as the Hololens), an AR device is probably in your pocket as we speak.  Unlike Virtual Reality which requires specialized wearable equipment, iPhone and Android devices have had AR componentry in them for quite some time, including advanced cameras, sensors and chipsets.  The good news is that your workforce is already equipped to take advantage of AR at scale.  Sure, the future holds some very promising immersive “Metaverse” experiences with fancy glasses, but there is no need to wait to start integrating AR into your existing digital learning and development strategies.

Now that you do not have to worry about expensive hardware roll-outs to your workforce, you can begin to evaluate how to extend your existing learning and development investments to integrate augmented reality content.  

Content Creation

At the heart of any learning and development strategy is the curriculum.  Organizations rely on a set of industry-standard tools to create content… Everything from PowerPoint, video-editing tools like Premier and Camtasia, as well as high-end tools like Articulate’s Storyline for interactive course material.  Tools like these give authors endless possibilities for delivering information and assessing comprehension.  An AR authoring tool like WorkLink Create from ScopeAR provides a similar content creation experience, but with giant leaps forward in interaction and engagement possibilities.  

Like most creator platforms, WorkLink Create allows authors to create step-by-step training experiences.  However, with WorkLink Create, training content can overlay on top of real world subject matter.  Animations and highlights can help guide and direct the learner as they step through a learning module.  Additional contextual information can appear with a simple voice command.  You can even repurpose your existing 2D training material alongside real-world subject matter or provide video inset windows for on-demand supplemental information as a learner steps through a particular AR training experience.

Content Delivery

AR instructional content needs to integrate into existing curriculum.  A learner should expect to see all content necessary to achieve competency in one spot.  Imagine a training curriculum, say for maintenance of a genetic analyzer for a medical device manufacturer, and the curriculum includes a series of courses.  Each course contains a collection of learning modules.  A routine maintenance course could include a series of interactive web training modules, a couple of videos, and potentially a quick assessment in the form of an augmented reality quiz.  The course is accessed through your Learning Management System.  Instruction designers can now integrate AR content into traditional course material as an interactive learning module.  As an example, after selecting an AR learning module from the course’s table of contents, the learner is presented with a QR code.  The learner can easily scan the QR code with their phone and launch into the specific AR learning module.

Assessment

Beyond content management and delivery, an AR content platform needs to support the common ways of assessing a learner.  The key promise of AR is to accelerate comprehension and retention by promoting critical thinking.  AR content needs to enable the key components of assessment through standard data tracking and reporting.  At the very least, the platform should make it very easy to report on the following items:

  • Did the learner complete the training module?
  • How long did it take to complete?
  • Did the learner pass/fail?
  • What was the overall assessment score?

While these may seem like basic items, the majority of online assessments captured within a Learning Management System are based on these 4 items.  AR content platforms need to make it easy for creators to build content that will provide assessment output.  Once a learner has completed an AR training module, the AR platform needs to make this data available to the LMS for a training administrator to track overall competency.

augmented reality in training
No device or travel needed to train. Only a flat surface required.

Taking our example of the DNA analyzer, a learner has launched an AR experience on their mobile device focused on troubleshooting technical issues with equipment.  They are guided through an interactive instruction projected onto the real-world subject matter.  Throughout the AR instruction, knowledge checks are presented to the learner.  Some of these knowledge checks can be interactive, perhaps asking the learner to select the correct inspection approach needed to troubleshoot a maintenance problem.  Answering correctly unlocks the next set of steps in the training module.  

Creators should have the option to create scored quizzes in their AR experiences as well.  At the end of the training module for troubleshooting technical issues with the DNA analyzer, the content creator can insert a quiz, picking from a variety of standard question types.  Beyond typical multiple choice and true/false type questions (which have value in AR with their spatial proximity to real-world subject matter), AR enables highly interactive training assessments, such as selectable hotspots in 3D space, taking the learning experience to a new level.  This type of interaction has been proven to increase overall learning and retention.

Once the learner has completed the work instruction, the AR platform should package and send the assessment data to the LMS.  A number of different methods should be available to make this integration, but at the very least, data should be made available through a secure API.  And native integrations with market leading Learning Management Systems should make a closed loop learning experience relatively seamless.

In summary

Organizations have invested millions of dollars in their content delivery infrastructure in the form of Learning Management System, Content Management Systems and Competency/Skills Management Systems.  An AR solution needs to integrate with these existing ‘systems of record’, thereby extending the value of these investments.  They have also invested in the talent needed to deliver compelling learning experiences.  Launching an AR Learning and Development program can sound daunting, but in reality, it is extending existing investments to augment (pun intended) a comprehensive and future proof strategy to train your workforce.

Scope AR announces SOC 2, Type 2 compliance

Scope AR announces SOC 2, Type 2 compliance

SAN FRANCISCO, CA. Scope AR today announced that the Company has successfully completed its Systems and Organizational Control (SOC) 2 Type 2 examination. An established industry standard for security and compliance, SOC 2 reports focus on a Service Organization’s internal controls designed to meet its service commitments and system requirements based on the criteria established by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). The examination was conducted by Dansa D’Arata Soucia LLP (www.darata.com). In doing so, Scope AR maintains its adherence to one of the most stringent, industry-accepted compliance frameworks for service organizations and provides additional assurance to its clients, through an independent auditor, that its business process, information technology and risk management controls are properly designed and operating as intended. 

The official auditors’ report provides a thorough review of Scope AR internal controls, policies, and processes for enterprise augmented reality software. It also reviews Scope AR processes relating to risk management and sub-service (vendor) due diligence, as well as Scope AR entire IT infrastructure, software development life cycle, change management, logical security, network security, physical & environmental security, and computer operations.

“We’re thrilled to announce and distribute our finalized SOC2 report” said Scott Montgomerie, CEO and Co-founder. “Not only does it prove our commitment to ensuring the highest level of security and data privacy, but it gives our customers assurance that their data is treated with the utmost security throughout our organization. WorkLink is the most trusted augmented reality solution for leading aerospace, defense and medical device technology companies, and this certification is just a further reflection of the trust our customers place in us.”

For more information regarding Scope AR and its security practices, visit its published Security Statement.

About Scope AR 

Scope AR is the pioneer of enterprise-class augmented reality solutions, delivering the industry’s only cross-platform AR tools for empowering frontline workers the knowledge they need, when they need it. The company revolutionized the way enterprises work and collaborate by offering a visual “knowledge base” solution that provides effective and efficient knowledge-sharing to conduct complex remote tasks, employee training, product and equipment assembly, maintenance and repair, field and customer support, and more.

The WorkLink platform offers a complete, end-to-end augmented reality application suite that supports smartphones, tablets and wearables and can ingest any CAD model format. WorkLink makes it easy for leading organizations like Johnson & Johnson, Mitsubishi, Lockheed Martin, Honeywell and others to quickly scale use of AR to any remote technician.

About Dansa D’Arata Soucia LLP

Dansa D’Arata Soucia LLP (“DDS”) is a full service CPA firm based out of Buffalo, New York. Over the past decade, DDS has built a team of auditors dedicated to understanding the AICPA’s Trust Services Criteria and how properly applying best practices to comply with this set of criteria results in mitigation of risk as it relates to protecting sensitive data. DDS understands that a SOC 2 examination can be initially intimidating. As such, DDS has worked tirelessly on finding ways to streamline the examination process to be as minimally invasive as possible on company resources. This allows the management teams of their clients to stay focused on growing their businesses! To learn more about DDS and their SOC services, please visit www.darata.com

Scope AR Has Become a Siemens Digital Industries Software Partner

(reprinted from BusinessWire)

SAN FRANCISCO, CA — Scope AR today announced that it has joined the Siemens Digital Industries Software Partner Program, enabling Siemens’ Teamcenter® customers to integrate directly with WorkLink, an enterprise-class augmented reality (AR) platform. Scope AR currently operates its WorkLink platform globally.

“We are ecstatic to offer this leading PLM technology integration to our current and future customers,” said Scott Montgomerie, Co-founder and CEO. “Streamlining the creation of AR experiences from PLM systems is an integral part of the digital thread. With the connection between Teamcenter and WorkLink, that vision is now a reality. We launched WorkLink Create to give the world the fastest AR authoring and publishing experience possible. That experience is now seamlessly connected to the world’s most widely used PLM system, and this integration unlocks limitless use cases for our shared customers.”  

From its founding, Scope AR has improved the way people work with technology that accelerates the sharing of specific knowledge. In 2010, Scope AR’s founders saw the power augmented reality had to make anyone an expert, regardless of how complex the task. To harness that power, they developed WorkLink, a platform that transforms the way enterprises manufacture, inspect, test and train their workforce through step-by-step 3D visual guidance. WorkLink enables higher workforce productivity with better training, less rework, and higher compliance. 

WorkLink has been proven transformational in hundreds of use cases and industries, and makes it easy for leading organizations like Johnson & Johnson, Mitsubishi, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Honeywell and others to create and distribute powerful AR content in minutes across a wide array of devices. In addition to Siemens Digital Industries, Scope AR partners with technology leaders such as Microsoft, Google, Amazon, ServiceMax, Unity, NTT Data and more.

The company is based in San Francisco with offices in Tel Aviv, Israel and Edmonton, Canada.

For more information on the partnership, including a video of the integration in practice, please visit https://www.scopear.com/partner-siemens/.

Contact: Robert COMBIER

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries launches AR program with Scope AR

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries launches AR program with Scope AR

Hunt Valley, MD (March 2, 2021) — The Corrugating Machinery Division of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries America has announced the expansion of EVOL AR, its industry-first Remote Assistance Augmented Reality Program. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries America (MHIA) is a leading supplier of Corrugating and Box Making machinery.

Current EVOL AR customers have been able to reduce equipment downtime by up to 50%. EVOL AR allows plant managers, technicians, and engineers to quickly and efficiently share issues in real-time from their facilities, enabling MHIA technical support staff to see and resolve machine issues and assist in troubleshooting. EVOL AR equips MHIA technical experts with the ability to draw and annotate on their device, text on the screen, and capture pictures or video for future reference.

The expansion of EVOL AR in response to ongoing customer feedback since the program’s 2019 launch and throughout 2020 in order to enhance the program’s value and efficacy through additional augmented reality capabilities. With this new release, existing EVOL AR customers will immediately gain access to the following five components:

  1. FE Front Stop Gap Calibration

2. FE Side Guide Limit Calibration

3. Feed Roll Gap Calibration

4. Back Stop Limit Calibration

5. Back Stop Parallel Adjustment

This first content drop will cover every gap and limit calibration on the Feeding Unit. The process begins by building procedures for every gap and limit calibration on the entire EVOL. The long-term plan is for this valuable library of comprehensive and easy-to-access AR content to replace traditional printed or PEF-based maintenance and operation manuals.

Novice mechanics, electricians, and more junior technicians will be able to more effectively perform complex maintenance tasks through using this new online procedural content library.

“Our expanded EVOL AR is the latest investment we’re making to directly benefit our customers, another technology and service value-add that keeps box plants up, running, and profitable,” said Darrold Phillips, Vice President Service, MHIA Corrugating Machinery Division.

EVOL AR was developed in conjunction with Scope AR, a global leader in developing augmented reality solutions and products for industrial clients focused around field maintenance, manufacturing, and training.

More information: evolservices@mhicorr.com or greg.scott@scopear.com

Press Editorial Contact:

Tim Colbert Adduco Communications

tim@adducomm.com

201.284.9987

Scope AR Announces Support for Microsoft HoloLens 2 to Deliver the Next Generation of Mixed Reality Use Cases to Enterprise Customers

Company also becomes an authorized HoloLens reseller through selection as a mixed reality distributor-managed partner (DMP)

San Francisco, CA – November 7, 2019 Scope AR, the pioneer of enterprise-class augmented reality (AR) solutions, today announced support for Microsoft HoloLens 2, which is now generally available. The company’s industrial AR knowledge platform, WorkLink, is available on the new headset immediately, allowing enterprise customers to quickly deploy AR instructions or conduct live, remote assistance video calls in even more sophisticated, hands-free use cases. 

“We have a long history of supporting the most cutting-edge devices so our customers can take full advantage of AR’s most effective tools as soon as they hit the market,” said Scott Montgomerie, co-founder and CEO of Scope AR. “The HoloLens 2 represents the next generation of mixed reality hardware and we look forward to helping enterprise organizations drive even more impact through their use of AR.”

With support for Microsoft HoloLens 2, WorkLink users can explore even more complex, hands-free use cases as a result of the device’s improved wearability, expanded field of view, and enhanced gesture control and eye tracking. Now, enterprise workers can perform longer maintenance, repair or manufacturing procedures and conduct industrial tasks that require more precise hand control and interactivity. 

As a long-standing Mixed Reality Partner, Scope AR today also announced its status as a Microsoft mixed reality distributor-managed partner (DMP), making it an authorized HoloLens reseller. Additionally, the company now integrates with the Azure Active Directory and its WorkLink platform is available in the Microsoft Azure Marketplace as a software solution optimized to run on Azure. Scope AR’s expanded partnership with Microsoft makes it even easier for enterprise organizations to not only find AR solutions that fit their use case needs, but also implement those solutions on supported hardware in a more seamless manner to start benefiting from the value AR can deliver immediately. 

About Scope AR

Scope AR is the pioneer of enterprise-class augmented reality solutions, delivering the industry’s only cross-platform AR tools for getting workers the knowledge they need, when they need it. The company is revolutionizing the way enterprises work and collaborate by offering an integrated AR platform that provides more effective and efficient knowledge-sharing to conduct complex remote tasks, employee training, product and equipment assembly, maintenance and repair, field and customer support, and more. The company’s device-agnostic technology supports smartphones, tablets and wearables, making it easy for leading organizations like Unilever, Toyota, Lockheed Martin, Becton Dickinson, Honeywell, GE and others to quickly scale their use of AR to any remote worker. The company was founded in 2011 and is based in San Francisco with offices in Edmonton, Canada.

Media Contact:
Brittany Edwards
Carve Communications for Scope AR
Email: scopear@carvecom.com  
Phone: 210-382-2165