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Online learning helps make compliance king

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How eLearning is keeping up effortlessly with a continually changing compliance landscape in the manufacturing sector.

– As the South African economy struggles to get back on its feet, battered by slow growth and high unemployment, and compounded by the fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic, one area in particular remains of concern to potential foreign investors: compliance in the regulatory environment. One recent study, funded by the European Union, found that while South Africa offers many attractive assets for foreign investors, they remain concerned about the lack of clarity concerning policy and structural reforms.

‘Compliance is key to statutory requirements, as the concerns associated with lack of governance in South Africa are being highlighted by most international investors,’ confirms Muhammad Ali, managing director of WWISE, an ISO (International Organization for Standardization) training, consulting and implementation specialist. The ISO’s standards are designed to ensure checks and balances in an increasingly globalised marketplace in which consistency, quality and integrity from one country or industry to another can slide.

For companies, what lies behind all these letters, numbers and titles is a continuous and ever-growing need for training – in order for a firm to be confident in its compliance with regulatory policies, staff at all levels, from the factory floor to top management, need to know exactly what’s needed, why and when. But how is this to be accomplished in a new world where not only does every cent count more than ever, but a second wave of Covid-19 infections is making it ever riskier to send staff out into group training scenarios? 

Enter eLearning, and the ability for anyone with an internet connection and an appropriate device to access revelant, up-to-date training materials from anywhere at any time. 

Mike Hanly, managing director of New Leaf Technologies, a Joburg-headquartered learning software and solutions company, says, ‘Compliance-related content must be enhanced to suit specific organisational needs. It’s pointless to expect standardised, government-authorised compliance training to elevate employee performance, as it’s mostly out of date. Impactful training happens when you empower learners, which is the exact outcome New Leaf sets out to achieve. Our learning management system, or LMS, supports greater knowledge acquisition and retention, and facilitates uniquely personalised learning paths.’

New Leaf Technologies strives to deliver an enriching and memorable learning experience with a focus on improved employee retention, converting old, outdated and often boring classroom-based presentations and standard-operating-procedure documents into employee-centric and memorable digital learning experiences. Hanly, who notes that ‘training content is not and should not be static’, says, ‘Developing bespoke or deploying ready-made content directly on our platform assists and saves time on any content maintenance and updates, while our solutions ensure that now and in the future, learning-and-development teams are able to deploy meaningful, highly contextual training interventions at the moment of need.’ 

Hanly also points out that when statutory- and compliance-related training interventions required, it can be an intense administrative burden for companies. ‘Our job is to diminish the admin, remove the “tick box” mindset, and deliver relevant and contextual training that empowers employees. New Leaf achieves immense training efficacy on the thresholds, competencies and objectives that need to be met within the organisations with which we work, and any solution our team designs aims to support the achievement of business goals by promoting human capital advantage.’

In the businesses with which WWISE works, Ali has seen rise in demand for courses on ‘Covid-19 regulations, implementing controls and managing risks’. In addition, ‘We at WWISE have seen a spike in training when it comes to health and safety and POPI, while training in and awareness of security has also seen a spike, with cyberattacks on Zoom, VPN and phishing being the top three ways of infecting computers.’

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