Collaborative learning platform where employees co-create courses and learn from each other
360Learning's collaborative LMS flips the traditional L&D model — employees and subject matter experts build courses in hours, not months. For companies with deep internal expertise to share, the ROI on content creation speed is exceptional.
Custom pricing based on learner count. Contact 360Learning for quote.
360Learning is a collaborative Learning Management System (LMS) that combines AI-powered course authoring, peer-driven learning, and traditional LMS functionality in one platform. Where most LMS platforms are built around L&D teams pushing content to learners, 360Learning is built around a collaborative model: subject matter experts (SMEs) across the organisation can create, update, and improve training content without L&D involvement. The result is faster content creation, more relevant training, and higher learner engagement.
Pricing: From $8/user/month (Team plan, up to 100 users) | Business plan custom for 100+ users | 30-day free trial available
360Learning describes its approach as “Collaborative Learning” — a model where L&D teams don’t own all training content, but instead act as facilitators who enable SMEs throughout the organisation to share knowledge. In practice: a sales manager can create a product knowledge course in under an hour using 360Learning’s authoring tools. A customer success lead can update a troubleshooting guide when a new product version ships. An operations manager can build a process walkthrough for a new workflow. L&D teams curate and manage the library, but content creation is democratised across the organisation.
This approach addresses one of the most common complaints about LMS platforms: content gets outdated because L&D is a bottleneck for course updates. When any SME can update content directly, training libraries stay current without depending on L&D bandwidth.
The platform also includes standard LMS capabilities: course assignments, completion tracking, compliance management, assessments, and reporting. Customers include Cognizant, Duolingo, Safran, and over 1,700 other organisations globally. 360Learning has raised over $240M in funding and serves both mid-market and enterprise companies.
Ratings are consistently high across practitioner review platforms. The Gartner rating (4.0) is somewhat lower than G2 and Capterra, reflecting that enterprise-level buyers have more demanding expectations. The overall picture is of a well-liked, reliable platform with a distinct collaborative learning approach that resonates strongly with its target users.
360Learning’s authoring tool is designed for non-L&D users: managers, SMEs, and team leads who know their subject matter but have no instructional design background. The drag-and-drop interface allows creating courses from text, video, images, quizzes, and embedded content. AI tools suggest course structure, generate quiz questions from existing content, and recommend related materials. Courses can be published quickly — 360Learning markets the capability to create a complete course in 11 minutes, which is achievable for straightforward content. More complex multi-module learning programmes naturally take longer but remain faster than traditional authoring workflows.
What differentiates 360Learning from traditional LMS platforms is the interaction layer within courses. Learners can ask questions, leave reactions, and flag outdated content directly within the course. These learner contributions go back to the course creator, creating a feedback loop that keeps content relevant. Discussion forums enable learners to share experiences, ask peers for help, and build a community around learning topics. Peer-to-peer learning — where learners teach each other through shared insights and questions — is built into the platform design rather than bolted on as an afterthought.
L&D teams can build structured learning programmes from individual courses, assigning them to specific audiences by role, department, or cohort. Learning paths can include prerequisites, deadlines, and completion requirements. Automated assignment rules enrol new employees in onboarding paths when they join the system, triggered by HRIS data. The programme management capabilities cover both mandatory completion (onboarding, compliance) and optional professional development paths.
360Learning’s AI features include: AI course structure recommendations based on the topic entered, automated quiz and knowledge check generation from uploaded content, learning path suggestions based on role and skills gaps, and content recommendations for learners based on their learning history. These features reduce the time investment required for course creation and improve the relevance of content recommendations without requiring manual curation at scale.
360Learning’s analytics cover course completion rates, learner engagement (reactions, questions, time-on-content), assessment performance, and programme-level progress. L&D teams get dashboards showing which courses are high-performing (high completion, positive reactions) and which need attention (low completion, learner questions about confusing content). The analytics are practitioner-focused and accessible, though some users note that extracting specific custom data requires navigating the interface carefully.
Completion tracking, certification records, and deadline enforcement are available for compliance use cases. The compliance management capabilities are functional and cover the core requirements — mandatory completion, reminder notifications, completion records — but are less feature-rich than dedicated compliance LMS platforms like Absorb or Cornerstone for organisations with heavy regulatory training requirements.
The fundamental insight 360Learning was built on is that L&D teams are always a bottleneck for content creation, and the people who know the content best — subject matter experts across the organisation — should be empowered to create it. This model works particularly well in organisations where product knowledge, customer processes, or technical skills evolve rapidly and L&D can’t keep pace with course updates. When a sales engineer updates a competitive positioning course or an operations lead builds a workflow guide for a new process, the training library stays current without L&D involvement in the creation step.
The inline feedback loop — where learners can flag outdated content, ask questions, and leave reactions that go back to the creator — creates a continuous improvement cycle for training content. Over time, courses improve based on real learner input rather than periodic L&D review cycles. This is a genuinely different approach to content quality management that most LMS platforms don’t offer.
360Learning is consistently rated as highly intuitive by both learners and L&D administrators. The learner experience — browsing courses, completing content, participating in discussions — is described as similar to a social media or Netflix experience: familiar navigation patterns that require no training. The authoring interface for SMEs is accessible without instructional design knowledge; the drag-and-drop tools and AI assistance reduce the barrier to content creation significantly. L&D administrator tools for programme management and reporting are more complex but still accessible compared to enterprise LMS alternatives like SAP SuccessFactors or Workday Learning.
360Learning implementations for teams under 100 users can be operational within 1–2 weeks, which is among the fastest in the LMS market. The Team plan’s accessible pricing and 30-day free trial mean organisations can evaluate the platform with real content before committing. Larger Business plan implementations with HRIS integrations and complex content migration take 4–8 weeks. 360Learning provides implementation support and customer success management throughout. The change management element — training SMEs to create content and getting learners to engage with the collaborative model — is more demanding than the technical implementation for organisations new to the collaborative learning approach.
Customer support is consistently rated highly. Dedicated customer success managers for Business plan customers provide ongoing strategic guidance. The implementation team is engaged and responsive. Post-launch support quality is strong based on user reviews across G2, Capterra, and eLearning Industry. 360Learning’s responsive support is frequently cited as a reason customers renew and a differentiator from larger LMS platforms where post-sale support is more transactional.
360Learning integrates with major HRIS systems for user provisioning and automatic enrolment: Workday, BambooHR, Salesforce, and others. SSO via Okta, Azure AD, and SAML 2.0. Video conferencing integration with Zoom and Teams supports blended instructor-led training. The integration ecosystem is solid for core use cases but less extensive than Absorb or Cornerstone’s enterprise integration libraries. API access is available for Business plan customers needing custom integrations.
360Learning offers one of the more transparent pricing structures in the LMS market:
At $8/user/month, the Team plan is competitive for organisations under 100 users compared to enterprise LMS alternatives. Business plan pricing for larger deployments requires a quote; enterprise contracts with full integrations typically run from $30,000–$100,000+/year depending on headcount and feature requirements.
Absorb has a better learner interface, stronger compliance management, multi-tenant branded portals, and deeper enterprise integrations. 360Learning has faster course authoring, stronger collaborative learning and social features, and more accessible pricing at smaller user counts. The choice depends on the primary use case: structured compliance and extended enterprise training (Absorb) versus collaborative knowledge sharing and rapid content creation (360Learning).
Cornerstone is the largest enterprise talent management and LMS platform with the deepest compliance content library, broadest integration ecosystem, and most comprehensive talent management capabilities. 360Learning is smaller, faster, and easier to use with a distinctive collaborative model. For large enterprises needing full talent management depth, Cornerstone wins. For mid-market companies prioritising speed of content creation and learner engagement, 360Learning is a more appropriate scale.
Degreed is an LXP focused on skills infrastructure and content aggregation from external sources. 360Learning is an LMS focused on internal content creation and collaborative learning. They address different problems: Degreed for skills-based development strategy and external content aggregation; 360Learning for rapid internal knowledge sharing and structured training delivery. Some organisations use both.
TalentLMS is a simpler, more affordable LMS that is accessible to small businesses. 360Learning is more powerful and feature-rich, particularly for collaborative features and AI authoring. TalentLMS is better for simple training delivery at very small scale or tight budget. 360Learning is better when collaborative learning, social features, and rapid content creation are priorities. At 100 users, 360Learning ($8/user/month) is competitive with TalentLMS pricing.
360Learning is used for employee onboarding, product and sales training, compliance training, and professional development in mid-market to enterprise organisations. It is particularly well-suited for organisations that want to enable subject matter experts throughout the business to create and update training content, rather than centralising all content creation in L&D.
360Learning costs $8/user/month for the Team plan (up to 100 users). For larger organisations (100+ users), the Business plan requires a custom quote. A 30-day free trial is available. Enterprise deployments typically run from $30,000–$100,000+/year depending on user count, features, and support requirements.
360Learning enables subject matter experts throughout the organisation to create training courses using an AI-assisted authoring tool that requires no instructional design background. Learners can ask questions, leave reactions, and flag outdated content directly within courses, creating a feedback loop that keeps content current. Discussion forums enable peer-to-peer learning. L&D teams oversee the system, approve content, and manage programme structure, but content creation is distributed across the organisation.
360Learning covers the basic compliance training use cases — mandatory completion, deadline tracking, completion records, and automated enrolment. For organisations with light compliance requirements, it is sufficient. For organisations with heavy regulatory training requirements — healthcare, financial services, manufacturing with frequent audits — dedicated compliance LMS platforms like Absorb LMS provide more mature compliance management features.
360Learning is used by over 1,700 organisations globally, including Cognizant, Duolingo, Safran, and a range of mid-market technology, professional services, and retail companies. The platform is particularly popular in technology-driven industries where training content needs to be created and updated rapidly.
360Learning is the best LMS for organisations that want to build a collaborative learning culture and enable subject matter experts to share knowledge at scale. The combination of fast AI-assisted authoring, social learning features, and strong peer-to-peer engagement makes it distinctly more effective at driving genuine learning culture than traditional content-push LMS platforms.
The limitations are real — compliance management is less mature than Absorb, branding customisation is restricted, and extended enterprise training for external audiences is not a strength. But for a mid-market technology company or professional services firm where the L&D team wants to scale training without becoming a content bottleneck, 360Learning is one of the strongest choices in the market.