Technology • June 15, 2026
Instructional design is a process that makes sense of training programs — breaking them down and creating them with a clear analysis of production needs and some well-tested knowledge transfer methods. Unlike ad hoc training development, instructional design uses structured models to turn training into measurable skill improvement and clearly defined learning goals.
An instructional design model is a tried and tested framework that tells you how to design a training program. It is part of the overall instructional design process — from identifying required job performance and knowledge, to evaluating training effectiveness and learner outcomes.
Some key characteristics of a good instructional design model are:
Instead of guessing, instructional design model enables deliberate planning of learning experiences aligned with real job tasks and measurable business outcomes. Well-chosen, they help you understand where learners are now, where they need to get to, and how training should support that journey. Instead of guessing, you intentionally plan learning experiences that align with real job requirements and business goals.
Modern instructional design models work like flexible templates. You can rely on traditional instructional design models or adapt them to your context — it depends on your constraints, timeline, and budget. The right approach to instructional design directly affects the speed of delivery, the cost of the development effort, and the final outcomes.
A structured design and development lifecycle helps teams select effective instructional methods and appropriate instructional strategies, leading to fewer defects, faster onboarding, and safer operators.
When training is built without instructional design models, the problems are predictable:
Using proven instructional design models and structured practices solves these issues. A repeatable development process helps ensure that nothing critical is missed. When training is developed through a consistent design and development process, ensuring that nothing critical is missed. When instructional designers develop training through a consistent process, teams save time and resources instead of constantly reworking content.
As a result, quality improves: instructional designers develop training using proven instructional methods and appropriate instructional strategies, while built-in assessment methods make learning outcomes measurable. Over time, organizations mature their instructional design, scale developing instructional materials, and standardize how instructional design models are applied — creating training that delivers consistent, measurable business value.
All instructional design models can be divided into four categories based on their logic.
The ADDIE model is probably the go-to choice for instructional designers, and there’s a reason for that — it just works. ADDIE stands for Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, and Evaluation — it’s a full-on cycle of instructional design that all makes sense when you think about it.
The ADDIE model seems to do particularly well in places where there’s an emphasis on predictability and accountability.
When to reach for the ADDIE model in your production workflow:
ADDIE limitations:
The SAM instructional design modelis an alternative to ADDIE, created by Michael Allen in 2012. The model operates through short prototyping cycles with the constant participation of craftsmen, engineers, and operators.
The original SAM model is called SAM1 and has three stages:
When to choose SAM in manufacturing:
Dick and Carey’s (1978) model breaks down the ADDIE process into a 10-step process with a strong emphasis on finding that balance between where you want to be and the content you actually have to work with, as well as how you’re going to figure out if it’s working.
10 Steps from Dick & Carey:
Peculiarities of the approach:
Application of Dick & Carey in manufacturing: The model is ideal for comprehensive training and certification programs where a transparent link between what is taught and what is tested is important. For example, training operators of new automated equipment or retraining programs for new production standards.
This model focuses on structuring individual training sessions and modules rather than managing the full instructional development lifecycle. For example, training operators of new automated equipment or retraining programs for new production standards.
Robert Gagné formulated 9 learning events — a universal checklist for the structure of any training module or industrial training.
This model serves as a template for:
Bloom’s Taxonomy is a cognitive skills framework that’s been around since 1956 when Benjamin Bloom put it all together. It is an extremely useful framework for instructional designers when writing measurable learning objectives that are just specific enough and measurable enough to match the level of cognitive skill they’re trying after. And let’s not forget it’s also a great guide for figuring out how to write objectives and assessments that actually matter.
Six different levels of cognitive skills in Bloom’s Taxonomy, ranked from the simple stuff all the way up to the brainy stuff:
How instructional designers can use Bloom’s Taxonomy:
And when it comes to assessing progress you should match the kind of task with the kind of goal you’re after.
Learning programs that get progressively more difficult: they start off with the simple stuff, like remembering, and gradually work their way up to the more brainy stuff like creating, giving the trainee a gentle push along the way.
In 2002, David Merrill formulated 5 principles of effective teaching based on a meta-analysis of instructional design best practices.
Unlike other models, Merrill’s First Principles don’t describe development stages (like ADDIE), but rather define criteria for the quality of learning content. These principles can be easily integrated into any instructional design framework as a checklist for each module.
The Kirkpatrick model (1959, updated in 2016 by his son Jim) is the standard for measuring learning impact. Four levels of assessment are arranged in order of increasing complexity and value to production.
Instructional design is evolving with technology and educational practice. Some of the emerging trends and considerations are:
There is no single “best” instructional design methodology for manufacturing. The right model depends on the plant context, production goals, and risk level.
The ADDIE model (Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, Evaluation) is still by far the most widely used instructional design model in manufacturing and for good reason. It’s a systematic approach to training that fits neatly with all the usual regulatory demands and audit requirements. The ADDIE model helps teams get really clear on what they’re aiming for, define roles properly, and keep on record the decisions they’ve made at each and every stage of the training lifecycle.You’ll come across the ADDIE model being used in all sorts of areas such as occupational safety courses, operator certification programs, and hazardous equipment training sessions. Its phase-structured approach makes sure that all the instruction is consistent, you’ve got reliable ways of testing people, and you can do a proper, formal evaluation at the end to check if the learning objectives have actually been met. For places with really tight regulations, it just makes sense to have a systematic way of doing things.But, of course, as manufacturers get busier and want to get new production lines up and running faster, then SAM (the Successive Approximation Model) is starting to get a look in. SAM is different because it’s based on an iterative process so you can build, test, refine and build again before the whole thing is locked in. That’s useful when you’re dealing with new, and possibly unpredictable equipment.
Choose the ADDIE model if your training requirements are pretty solid and you’re launching a big new program (like full operator certification) or you’ve got to have really detailed documentation for your ISO audits, and you’re comfortable sticking with the tried and tested. On the other hand, go for SAM if you’re dealing with new gear that you don’t know much about yet, you need to get the guys on the shop floor’s thoughts on things quickly, and you’re working to an ‘agile’ manufacturing schedule. Either way, your instructional designers just need to make sure that the materials and strategies they’re using are actually going to get the learners where they need to be.
Absolutely, using a mix of approaches is just common sense especially in manufacturing. A typical combination would be to use something like ADDIE or SAM as the overall framework, then use Gagne’s Nine Events to structure each module, Bloom’s Taxonomy to figure out what you’re trying to achieve, and Kirkpatrick to measure the impact. Most of the time, people just pick and choose the bits that work best for their project, integrating the materials and strategies within the design process in a way that makes sense.
Learning objectives are just what you think you’re going to teach (ie. a ‘teach perspective’). Learning outcomes are what you actually expect the learner to be able to do after the training (ie. an ’employee-centric’ view). These days, writing your objectives in a way that shows exactly what you want the learner to be able to do after the training (‘the operator will be able to…’) makes a lot of sense, and it should be measurable too so you can actually check if they’re doing it after the training.
Backward design is just an approach where you always start with the end goal in mind (eg. you want to reduce defects and increase productivity) then figure out what the operator needs to be able to do to achieve that, and then work backwards to make sure you’re actually teaching them that, rather than just slapping a nice training course together. This way you can be sure that your design and chosen model are actually producing some real results and measurable learning outcomes.
Instructional design is a process that makes sense of training programs — breaking them down...
Technology
In today’s manufacturing world businesses are under pressure to get more productive, reduce waste and...
When it comes to making it in the manufacturing world, the quality of what you...