- 18% of L&D pros struggle with centralizing training—don’t let a messy tech stack derail your strategy. Start simple, but scalable.
- Content compatibility is non-negotiable. Know your SCORM from your AICC or risk buying a system your courses can’t even run on.
- Reporting is your compliance safety net. If your LMS can’t prove completion for audits, you’ll feel the pain later.
- Per-user pricing means size matters. Small org? Go for providers built for you—don’t pay for enterprise bells you’ll never ring.
- Implementation makes or breaks success. A shiny platform without hands-on support = wasted budget. Choose a partner, not just a product.
If you're brand new to learning management systems and looking to make your first purchase, it can be easy to get overwhelmed. There is a lot of information out there, and it can be difficult to understand industry jargon and translate it into real-world impact. Friend to friend, we've put together a glossary of some of the most commonly used vocabulary in L&D and LMS conversations to help you out. After the glossary, we'll chat some more about these terms in detail and other important aspects of buying an LMS for the first time.
If you'd like to skip ahead, you might also find these resources helpful: The Ultimate Buyer's Guide to Online Learning Solutions, Top LMS Examples Explained, and our breakdown of L&D SaaS pricing models.
Not sure what to ask vendors?
Download our free LMS checklist to compare your options apples-to-apples — features, pricing, support, and more.LMS Glossary: Key Terms for First-Time Buyers
Before we walk through how to select a learning management system, here's a plain-English reference for the terms you'll encounter most.
General LMS terms
Content & course management
User roles & experience
Tracking, reporting & compliance
Integration & deployment
Pricing & buying considerations
Have questions? We'd love to walk you through it.
Connect with a BizLibrary rep for a no-pressure platform tour and a chance to get your questions answered — no sales pitch, just a real conversation.What to Look for in a Learning Management System
Now that we've established a basic vocabulary, let's talk about some of these terms in more detail. Two of the major challenges in selecting an LMS can seem like two sides of the same coin. It's important to define your goals and needs before beginning an LMS search. On the other hand — you don't know what you don't know, and without understanding LMS capabilities, it can be difficult to know what to ask for. So let's set up a basic framework for determining what to look for in an LMS.
1. Define your goals and needs
- What do you need the LMS for? (Corporate training, education, compliance, onboarding, etc.)
- What types of content will you deliver? (Videos, quizzes, SCORM, xAPI, PDFs, live sessions, etc.)
- Where will you acquire your content — made in-house, purchased from a learning provider, or a mix of both?
- How many users will be on the platform?
2. Key features to look for
- User-friendly interface — for both admins and learners
- Course creation and management — does it support different formats (SCORM, xAPI, video, PDF)?
- Automation and integrations — does it connect with HR software, CRMs, or tools like Slack and Zoom?
- Personalized reporting — ability to edit and customize reports to suit your needs
- Assessments and tracking — ability to measure learner progress and performance
- Customization and branding — can you modify the platform to reflect your brand?
- Mobile-friendliness — learners should be able to access content on mobile devices
- Security and compliance — ensure it meets industry standards (GDPR, HIPAA, etc.)
3. Deployment options
Cloud-based (SaaS)
No need for IT infrastructure; updates are automatic and managed by the LMS provider.
Self-hosted
More control over data, but requires internal IT resources to set up and maintain.
Open-source
Free to use but may require technical expertise for setup and maintenance.
4. Pricing models
| Model | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Pay-per-user | Monthly fee per active user | Growing orgs with predictable headcount |
| Pay-per-course | Cost based on courses accessed | Orgs with variable or seasonal training needs |
| One-time license fee | Higher upfront cost, no recurring fees | Stable orgs with large user bases |
| Freemium / open-source | Free with optional paid upgrades | Small teams or tight budgets |
5. Scalability and flexibility
- Will the LMS grow with your business?
- Can you add new users, courses, or features easily?
6. Support and training
- Does the LMS provider offer onboarding and training?
- What kind of customer support is available (chat, email, phone)?
- Is there a knowledge base or community forum?
- Is there programmatic or strategic support offered, or is it purely technical?
7. Try before you buy
- Take advantage of free trials or demos.
- Test usability, features, and compatibility with your existing systems.
- Get feedback from potential users (employees, administrators, etc.).
How to Choose a Learning Management System: A Step-by-Step Approach
If you're new to online employee development and choosing an LMS, it can be difficult to know what to look for. While every organization is different and has unique needs, many teams don't want to purchase something with too many bells and whistles that they don't know how to use. Scalability is essential for first-time LMS buyers — and also one of the most difficult things to plan for. If I were chatting with an HR or L&D friend who had never purchased an LMS before, this is what I would recommend.
Step 1: Identify why you need an LMS
Start by understanding what's driving the need. Is your current onboarding process inconsistent across locations? Are you dealing with turnover, productivity loss, or skill gaps? Are compliance deadlines creating risk? Your answer here will shape every other decision. An organization focused purely on onboarding doesn't need the same personalization features as one investing in upskilling and leadership development.
Step 2: Evaluate your content needs
Do you have existing digital learning content you'd like to migrate? If so, what format is it in — SCORM, xAPI, AICC? AICC is a legacy format still found in many older training libraries. Most organizations should consider updating to SCORM or xAPI, but any LMS you evaluate must support whatever format your content is currently in. You can learn more about SCORM standards in eLearning or use tools like SoftwareAdvice and Capterra to compare LMS features side by side.
If you don't have existing content, think about whether you want a vendor that also provides a training content library. All-in-one learning providers are often more cost-effective, but not every content library is the same — some specialize by industry, others focus on general business skills or software training. Check out our guide to 9 questions to ask a content provider before you commit.
Step 3: Look for essential LMS features
Compliance-heavy organizations need detailed completion and reporting features that hold up to audits. Beyond the basics — user import, content delivery, progress and completion tracking — look for features that reduce admin burden: content personalization, automated learning paths, and AI-assisted administration. These matter more as your program scales. See how BizLibrary's AI features address these needs.
Step 4: Understand pricing relative to your organization's size
Because per-user pricing is the most common model for learning management software, choosing the right LMS can feel high-stakes. It's worth going with a vendor that is sized for your organization. BizLibrary, for example, specializes in small to mid-size growing organizations (roughly 100–2,500 employees), while providers like Docebo target enterprise companies with global workforces. For a detailed breakdown, see our guide on what employee training really costs. Comparing learning management systems for 500 employees looks very different than comparing options for 50,000.
Step 5: Prioritize implementation and ongoing support
The steps taken immediately after purchasing an LMS are vital to the project's success. A great platform with a poor implementation is a wasted investment. Ask every vendor you evaluate what their implementation process looks like, who owns it, and whether strategic support comes with the product or costs extra. Read more about what a successful LMS implementation looks like — and how BizLibrary approaches it differently.
Why BizLibrary Is a Great Fit for First-Time LMS Buyers
If your organization is between 100 and 2,500 employees, BizLibrary is worth a close look. We are often a first-time buyer's choice due to the balance we strike between simplicity and sophistication. You can read more about whether BizLibrary is the right fit for your organization, or explore client success stories from organizations similar to yours.
We offer what many organizations need — simple and scalable user import and management, consistent and stable content delivery, and easy-to-understand analytics to help prove the value of your programs. We also offer more complex features that improve the lives of administrators and learners through AI: automated user import, content personalization, blended learning support, and more. We're not too intimidating to begin with, and your feature access can grow as your organization does.
Simple user management
Easy import, automated enrollment, and clean admin dashboards.
Stable content delivery
Consistent delivery of your content — ours, yours, or a mix of both.
Accessible analytics
Reporting that helps you prove program value to leadership.
AI-powered features
Personalization, automated import, and blended learning support.
Scalable by design
Start with what you need and expand as your organization grows.
Dedicated implementation support
Guided setup and launch — included, not an add-on.
See the platform for yourself — no pressure.
A BizLibrary representative would be happy to give you a no-frills platform tour at your convenience.