The LMS features checklist for course creators

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Fourteen tabs open. Each one has a different feature grid with different labels for the same thing. Progress tracking, learner analytics, content sequencing. Your eyes glaze over before you even start checking boxes.

An LMS features checklist cuts through that noise. Instead of reacting to every shiny option, you work from a list you built around your course. Here is how to create and use an LMS evaluation checklist that actually leads to a decision.

What is an LMS features checklist?

An LMS features checklist is a structured list of requirements you use to evaluate learning management systems. It turns a vague "I need a good system" goal into specific yes-or-no questions you can answer for each option you consider.

Think of it as your LMS requirements checklist before you sign up or pay. You list the features your course needs, rank them by priority, and score each system against that list. The result is a clear picture of which option fits instead of a gut feeling based on a sales page.

What to put on your LMS evaluation checklist

Start with must-haves, the features without which your course cannot launch. These usually include a course builder, student accounts, lesson progress tracking, and a payment or enrollment flow. If a system fails any must-have, remove it from your list immediately.

Add nice-to-haves next. Certificates, drip scheduling, discussion forums, and affiliate tracking belong here. They improve the experience but are not blockers for version one of your course.

Finish with future needs. Features you do not need today but expect to need within a year. SCORM support, multiple instructors, or API access might sit in this group. Knowing they exist helps you pick a system that grows with you.

How to use an LMS features checklist

Give each item a weight. Must-haves count double. Nice-to-haves count once. Future needs count as a bonus point. This scoring keeps you honest when a system looks appealing but misses something critical.

Test, do not just read. During your evaluation, upload a real lesson, create a test student account, and walk through a purchase flow. A checkbox on a marketing page means nothing if the feature is buried or broken.

Write notes next to each item. "Works but slow" or "requires manual approval" tells future you why you picked or rejected a system. Those notes save hours if you revisit the decision six months later.

Your checklist connects directly to the comparison work from earlier in this module. If you have not compared options yet, read our chapter on LMS features comparison and what to look for first. Once your checklist is ready, the next chapter on what a course builder is explains one of the most important items on most lists.

Frequently asked questions

How long should an LMS requirements checklist be?

Should solo course creators use the same checklist as teams?

Where does branding fit on an LMS evaluation checklist?

Can I download or copy an existing LMS features checklist?

What if every system fails one item on my checklist?

How does a checklist relate to LMS features comparison?