Content curation in L&D refers to the deliberate process of finding, filtering, organising, and contextualising existing learning materials — articles, videos, podcasts, infographics, and micro-courses — and presenting them to learners in a purposeful, structured way. Unlike content creation, curation leverages what already exists rather than building from scratch.
With the explosion of freely available learning content (LinkedIn Learning, YouTube, MOOCs, vendor documentation), L&D teams face a different challenge: too much content rather than too little. Effective curation cuts through the noise, surfaces the most relevant resources for a given role or skill gap, and embeds them into a coherent learning journey — often hosted on an LMS as playlists, learning paths, or curated libraries.
Content curation approaches
- Aggregation — collecting the best resources on a topic into one place
- Distillation — summarising and extracting key insights from longer content
- Elevation — spotting emerging trends before they become mainstream
- Mash-up — combining multiple sources into a new curated narrative
- Chronological sequencing — organising content to build from foundational to advanced
Well-curated content reduces duplication, speeds up course build times, and keeps libraries current without constant authoring effort.
See also: Learning Management System (LMS) · Learning Experience Design (LXD) · Personalised Learning
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