Walk into most compliance programs and you'll find a training matrix, a tracker, and a sigh of relief when completion crosses 95%. None of that is compliance. It's documentation that compliance was attempted.
What compliance actually is
Compliance is the gap between what the regulation requires and what your team can demonstrate, on a Tuesday, with documentation that holds up under audit. Training is one input. Most of the work is everywhere else.
Where the real work lives
- Policy currency — Are your policies dated for the version of the regulation in force today?
- Acknowledgment — Can you produce, in 30 seconds, a list of every employee who has acknowledged the current policy?
- Operational adherence — Do the procedures people actually follow match the policy?
- Incident response — When something happens, can you trace it back to a documented control?
If training is your main control
It's not enough on its own. Auditors don't ask "did you train them?" They ask "show me the policy they trained on, the version date, and the acknowledgment." If those three pieces don't link cleanly, you have a compliance program on paper.