What is a Learning Management System (LMS)?
Definition
A learning management system (LMS) is software used to create, deliver, track and manage training and courses in one place. It hosts learning content, enrolls and organizes learners, and records completions, scores and certifications — so teams can run and prove training at scale. Modern, AI-native systems go a step further and build the courses for you, not just host them.
LMS at a glance.
What does an LMS do?
An LMS handles the operational side of training: hosting courses, enrolling learners into paths, delivering content on web and mobile, running quizzes and assessments, and reporting completion and certification. For compliance-heavy teams it also keeps an audit trail of who completed what, and when.
LMS vs LXP vs AI learning platform
A traditional LMS hosts and tracks content you build somewhere else. An LXP (learning experience platform) layers on discovery and recommendations. An AI learning platform also creates the courses from your own material — combining the authoring tool and the LMS into one system.
AI learning platform
See how a modern, AI-native LMS builds, delivers and tracks training — all in one place.
Read the guideLMS — frequently asked
From definition to done.
See AI learning platform in action — turn your knowledge into training, built and tracked with AI.