
It may be a right and wrong answer - it might just be the type of thing you set up where there's a certain type of feedback depending on what their response is. If they select the other option it will show Feedback B. In this template I just have Option 1 and Option 2.Īnd if they select Option 1 it will show feedback - the layer titled Feedback A. So that's how you put whatever decision your user needs to make. So right now it's just basically two buttons, fill-in-the-blank Option 1 and Option 2. Now once the user clicks on each of the three experts, then there's a trigger that will open up this question layer. And same goes for the "experts" themselves, obviously. You can change the color of this background, you can swap out this background image - just right click and hit "change picture," and then swap that out for a different office background. Keep in mind for any of these layers, you can customize these any way that you want. So here on the base layer, there's three images of the three "experts," and each of these images links to these three layers here: Expert 1, Expert 2, and Expert 3.

So let's take a look at this storyline template, and I'll show you how to modify it for your project. This type of interaction really lends itself to scenario-based content, where your user has to make a decision, but needs to seek advice from an expert or colleague before making the decision. So this interaction is basically a modified down version of a scenario we developed for a recent healthcare compliance project.

In this video we're going take a look at this "Ask An Expert" storyline template and give you a few ideas on how it might be useful in your next eLearning project.
