About: Erica Ellis
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Erica has been part of the Bond, formerly with VCG, team since 2006. As the Client Services Manager, her team consists of people responsible for customer support, account management, implementation, training, report writing, and data migration.
Contact Info
Title: Client Services Manager
E-mail: Erica Ellis
Toll Free Number: 1-800-318-4983
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Posts by Erica:
- The “Just do it” learner - 06 Sep 2011 in Training
- Do You Hear the Words that are Coming Out of my Mouth - 03 Aug 2011 in Training
- See it to Believe it - 20 Jul 2011 in VCG LLC
- Different Strokes for Different Folks - 14 Jun 2011 in Training
- Repetition, Repetition, Repetition… - 03 May 2011 in Training
This week we will discuss the final learning style that we will cover in this series. This is the kinesthetic learner. The kinesthetic learner learns by doing. An employee may hear a concept and see a concept, but they will not fully understand it (and retain it) until the concept is put into practice. Fortunately, [...more]
Last time we learned some tips for creating a visual experience for our learners. Now let’s talk a little bit about auditory learners. This group of people needs to hear a concept in order to best understand it. If you send someone an email of instructions and they call you to talk it through, don’t [...more]
In my last blog, I discussed three types of learning styles. In order to provide effective training that meets the needs of all of your trainees, you need to design your training program to cater to all three learning styles. In this post, I would like to talk about the first of the learning styles – visual [...more]
During early childhood education, teachers and parents often give a lot of thought and effort into the practice of educating children based on varying learning styles. Each child has a way of understanding a concept that makes them most susceptible to learning and retention. These same children eventually grow into adults (most of them anyways), [...more]
I read somewhere once that an adult has to hear something six times before they retain the information. It seems hard to believe, but our brains require the repetition in order to learn. You have probably experienced a training class where the instructor repeats the same notion or concept many times through the session or [...more]


