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Question

Best option for non-course video content? Channels?

  • March 13, 2026
  • 7 replies
  • 26 views

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We’re looking to make a series of videos available as non-course content for specific learner groups.

From what I’ve been able to research it seems that channels is likely the best/only option, but there appears to be quite a bit of confusion and some issues within the community conversations on this. Is channels the only/best option? What has worked well for others?

  • Our end goal is that learners can easily view video content without needing to enroll in and complete a course
  • We need to be able to accurately report on who has completed each piece of content (viewed in full, not just clicked on or scrolled over or exited after 10 seconds)

We really don’t want to use Discover Coach & Share – we intentionally had this disabled from our platform to prevent confusion and issues with all the question and feedback pages and options. From what I’ve read I believe some of the channels functionality is tied in to using DCS, particularly reporting. So that’s a concern.

There appear to be issues where a learner scrolling over a piece of content will count it as viewed (https://community.docebo.com/product-q-a-7/what-counts-as-a-view-5559). Has anybody found a way around this?

Thanks in advance.

7 replies

dklinger
Hero III
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  • Hero III
  • March 13, 2026

Intriguing challenge. I think the best you are going to get from DCS are the equivalent to impressions - and that type of tracking really does not help what you are trying to track.

Unsure if you are open to discussing what is the concern about using courses or if it is a hard requirement that is seen as a boulder? Can you leverage the autoenroll url if it was because of count of clicks? My understanding - there is even a url (quick enrollment) that just drops you in the course today - no landing page - and this is the equivalent of clicking on a video on a tile in a catalog.

I ask because your best experience for tracking begins with putting those videos into a course. 
 


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  • Author
  • Helper I
  • March 13, 2026

Thanks ​@dklinger. Courses create a whole additional layer of requirements around admin and visibility, especially for our PUs who don’t use the platform a lot. There are going to be a LOT of very short (2-3min) videos (far more than our number of actual courses), so I was really hoping to keep these separate from our course lists, but it doesn’t appear this is going ot be an option. I think I’m now resigned to the fact it’s going to have to be courses, and just manage the extra admin and training requirements to make this work. Thanks for the advice.


Moshe.Machlav
Novice III
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You're right that courses end up being the path here — without DCS, there's no way to surface standalone video assets with tracked completion. But courses don't have to feel heavy, for learners or for admins. I've set this up for several organizations with similar requirements (hundreds of short 2-3 min videos, lean admin teams), and the trick is treating these as "micro-courses" with the right configuration.

Make it feel like channel content for learners. The game-changer here is Focus Mode on the course player. When you enable it, the course opens directly into a full-screen immersive player — no course overview page, no extra widgets cluttering the screen. Combine this with setting the Starting View to go straight to the course player (skip the overview page entirely), and your learners click a video, it plays full-screen immediately. That's essentially the same experience as watching content in a channel, but with proper completion tracking baked in. The video LO tracks actual watch progress: 90% for videos under 2.5 minutes, or 15 seconds before the end for longer ones — so "completed" genuinely means "watched," not just "clicked."

Details on configuring the player here: Configuring the course player

Automate course creation from a shared drive. For the admin side, the biggest win I've implemented for teams in this situation is a one-time integration: connect a Google Drive or OneDrive folder so that when someone uploads a new video file, it automatically creates a micro-course, uploads the video as training material, and assigns it to the correct catalog. It's a one-time build using the Docebo APIs (course creation + LO upload + catalog assignment), but once it's in place, your content creators just drop a video into a folder and it appears in the platform — no manual course creation, no catalog assignment, no admin overhead. For organizations producing dozens of videos a month, this pays for itself immediately.

Happy to share more details on the automation setup if it helps.


dklinger
Hero III
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  • Hero III
  • March 14, 2026

@Moshe.Machlav - would love to see it!!!


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  • Author
  • Helper I
  • March 14, 2026

Yes ​@Moshe.Machlav, would love to see it.


Moshe.Machlav
Novice III
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I checked that out, but unfortunately the company got bought out and they’ve switched over to another platform.


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  • Author
  • Helper I
  • March 15, 2026

That’s a shame. But thanks ​@Moshe.Machlav for taking the time to check. Much appreciated.