Here’s what makes compliance training so confusing: there’s no clear mandate for training at the federal level that applies to every business.

Some industries have required training—Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) training for hazardous jobs, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) training for public safety—but nothing that applies to every company. To make matters worse, some states require compliance training and others don’t.

To help you navigate this increasingly confusing and high-risk area of running your business, here’s a brief breakdown on what training is required and what’s recommended. Hint: we recommend any training that’s going to protect your business and your employees.

Why compliance training matters

Before we start, we need to understand why compliance training is vital to your business. To stay in business and keep growing, you need to have employees engaged with your company and customers. Compliance training helps to keep your employees working within the laws and regulations set out by federal and state governments and serves to keep employee morale high by reducing the likelihood of a toxic work environment.

Male employee sat on a couch and taking online compliance training by using his laptop

Compliance training seems boring and unnecessary but consider that every employee who quits your company is a potential lawsuit. This is a risky and extremely costly gamble that you can significantly reduce the likelihood of occurring by conducting even minimal compliance training with your team.

By ensuring a workplace free of harassment, bullying, and toxicity, you can not only minimize your risk but also create a safer work environment, increase productivity, reduce absenteeism and turnover, and show your employees you respect them as individuals and support their needs. Ultimately, compliance training is just good business.

Required training

Sexual harassment

Sexual harassment training is intended to prevent unwanted sexual behavior in the workplace. It builds awareness of what constitutes sexual harassment and seeks to reduce the likelihood of your business suffering negative consequences from unwanted sexual harassment, keeping your workplace happier, healthier, and more cohesive.

The closest the federal government comes to mandating compliance training for all companies across all industries is for sexual harassment. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the U.S. Supreme Court have strongly encouraged sexual harassment training and stressed its importance. But neither has taken the step to formally require such training.

Some states, however, have taken that additional step. As of the publication date, the following states mandate sexual harassment training for employers in their state:

  • California (for employers with 5 or more employees in the state)
  • Connecticut (for employers with 3 or more employees in the state)
  • Delaware (for employers with 50 or more employees in the state)
  • Illinois (for employers with 1 or more employees in the state)
  • Maine (for employers with 15 or more employees in the state)
  • New York (for employers with 1 or more employees in the state)

We didn’t skip any states, the list is that small. Very few states mandate sexual harassment training, although in recent years, there has been a push to make this training more widespread.

Additionally, some states have requirements that supervisors and managers receive separate training on how to handle sexual harassment complaints. Oddly, some of the states requiring supervisory sexual harassment training do not require employee-level sexual harassment training. Other states only require sexual harassment training in certain industries or professions, like New Mexico which mandates training for all primary and secondary education providers.

Why it matters: Even in states where you’re not required to provide sexual harassment training, your company can be held liable for any sexual harassment. If you provide training, you may have an affirmative defense that limits or entirely removes your liability.

Anti-harassment & anti-discrimination

In states where sexual harassment training isn’t required, this training can take its place while including additional topics. If you are required to provide sexual harassment training, it’s good to keep that separate and documented.

Anti-harassment and anti-discrimination training define workplace harassment, bullying, and discrimination. It will cover strategies for preventing such workplace behavior as well as how to deal with violations.

When you clearly define what is considered unacceptable behavior, you hold all employees to the same standard, which is a form of anti-discrimination in itself.

Diversity

Diversity and inclusion efforts by businesses have increased dramatically in recent years. This training will provide your employees with insight about their own biases—both known and unknown—and how to counter them to work effectively with colleagues from varying backgrounds.

Diversity training often goes hand in hand with anti-harassment training. It also includes details on how to operate in a more inclusive environment, welcoming people from different faiths, cultures, abilities, and beliefs.

Workplace safety

Safety training will vary depending on your industry. If you operate in a traditional office environment, your training will focus more on ergonomics, first aid, fire safety, and rendezvous points in case of emergency.

However, in more hazardous industries and professions, your workplace safety training may be more intense, and it may be required. For example, if you operate in the construction industry, you may be required to provide certain OSHA safety training.

Data protection & privacy

You might think this only applies to companies who collect and store customer or client data. Think again. In today’s work environment, you collect and store your employees’ data on a regular basis. If you offer retirement benefits, you’re collecting confidential information about each enrolled employee.

This training will show you the difference between personally identifiable information and publicly shared data. It will also show you how to properly collect and store the data, and how to restrict employee access so a breach is less likely. Your employees want to know that the data you have on them is safe and, by having this training, you’ll convey the steps you take to achieve that goal.

Healthcare

Related to data protection and privacy, healthcare training is vital to any business. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) limits health information that can be disclosed without a patient’s consent.

This training is crucial for employers who offer health insurance to their employees. Running afoul of HIPAA can lead to serious fines but it also reduces the trust your employees have in you, making it more likely that you’ll soon deal with higher employee turnover and reduced productivity.

Human resources

Human resources (HR) training is one training that’s specifically designed for one group of employees, instead of everyone. Even if your HR department is small, your business will benefit from HR training so you can scale more effectively.

HR training ensures your company handles complaints appropriately, keeps records correctly, handles payroll accurately, and manages employee performance effectively among the many other tasks HR is solely responsible for doing and overseeing. Regulations abound for HR and employment laws. Your HR team must understand and follow these regulations accurately to reduce your company’s risk.

State-specific

As noted, every state has slightly different requirements for compliance training. This makes it even more crucial that you train your employees on the nuances of your state’s laws. That’s also what makes state-specific training so much more in-depth. There are countless sub-trainings that may be necessary, depending on your industry and the types of workers you have.

For every state, from employees to executives, you’ll need to ensure everyone understands the rules they need to follow. This is your company’s path to an affirmative defense.

What’s an affirmative defense?

We’ve mentioned this term a couple of times so let’s discuss it for a brief moment. An affirmative defense is a defense an employer can support through evidence which, if credible, will reduce or eliminate the employer’s liability.

Let’s consider an example. You have a supervisor who’s created a hostile work environment for an employee because of sexual harassment. If the employee did not engage in sexual behavior with the supervisor and was fired, demoted, or received any other adverse action, your company has no defense.

However, if no adverse action was taken against the employee and you can prove the following, you may prevail and reduce or eliminate your company’s liability:

  • Your company provided both supervisor and employee sexual harassment training
  • Your company reasonably tried to prevent and promptly correct the sexual harassment behavior
  • The employee failed to reasonably take advantage of corrective opportunities provided by your company

Your next steps

Train your team.

Sounds simple, right? It’s not.

Training is proactive. If you train your employees incorrectly, you’re to blame and will bear the burden of the consequences. If you fail to train your employees on training required by your state, you’ll bear the burden of the consequences. To make matters worse, training requirements and employment laws are constantly changing.

It’s important that you take proactive steps to ensure your employees are properly trained on required and recommended training necessary for them to do their jobs. To help you, partner with a training platform that does the hard work for you, so you can focus on your core business needs. With eloomi, we make sure your compliance training is up to date and contains accurate information to help guide and support your employees in their work.

Don’t waste time trying to reinvent the wheel. Get in touch today.

About Bryan

A people leader veteran, Bryan is a writer and lawyer. He’s written for Yahoo!, Forbes, LegalZoom, and the ABA, among others. He’s appeared on podcasts to help companies and employees better understand each other. And he’s worked to assess company employment law compliance while ensuring an employee-centric focus.

Bryan knows HR legal compliance and people operations like the back of his hand and conducts training on the crucial topics because he wants everyone to have a basic understanding of how these complex (but essential) systems work—and so that employees feel heard and understood by their employers.