
Maintaining quality in compliance training is a constant challenge for healthcare organizations of all sizes. Any surge of regulatory changes necessitates prompt, effective training programs for staff, yet the process of developing and delivering quality learning can be daunting.
Crafting tailored educational content takes significant time and effort, especially for regulatory topics, while coordinating group sessions can feel like herding cats. Simply populating a Learning Management System (LMS) with generic material often yields lackluster results and managing it all with spreadsheets and emails adds to the chaos.
For example, one large California health system faced the daunting task of creating, delivering and completing training for pharmacy techs within a tight 10-day window following a new privacy waiver. And that’s just one of many examples happening weekly if not daily across all health systems. This scenario underscores the need for proactive compliance training that not only meets regulatory demands but also engages staff effectively.
This article by learning and compliance experts explains how compliance teams can get on top of training programs and deliver quality results.
Why Training Fails in Corporate Healthcare Settings and How to Fix It
Training fails in corporate settings (including healthcare organizations) because people don’t know how to train. HR or Quality departments typically handle training, not actual teachers, according to Erika Stevens, MA, FACRP, director of clinical research experience and faculty lecturer for MS Clinical Research Management Track at Rutgers Health. She addressed this issue at the Association of Clinical Research Professionals 2024 Annual Conference.
Stevens also made note of the need to incorporate engagement best practices into the training of clinical research professionals. “Clinical trials continue to be complex, even for those of us who have been involved in them for many years, and not just in terms of how do we involve the patients, but how do we prepare the professionals to engage them?”

Exactly. Here’s how to raise the quality of regulatory compliance training in your healthcare organization. Read this article for insights, tips and training best practices. And BTW, one of the experts IS a teacher.
Context Means Learning in Training Situations
On a recent episode of the Art of Manliness podcast, Scott Young, author of Get Better at Anything: 12 Maxims for Mastery, shared three key factors for learning:

- Seeing
- Doing
- Listening
A significant component of human learning lies in the ability to act on and interact with the surrounding environment. So, to a large extent, the ease of how we learn from others determines how quickly we can improve.
To see and learn in the world of business, we need to group professionals together during orientation. Then keep them together through the duration of work, no matter their job titles, to practice team-building skills and to be accountable to the group as well as to themselves.
Encourage Deliberate Practice in Compliance Training
Secondly, mastery requires “doing” through deliberate practice, which refers to a special type of training that is purposeful and systematic.
While regular practice might include mindless repetitions, deliberate practice requires focused attention and is conducted with the specific goal of improving performance.
Progress requires constant adjustment based on not just the red stroke of a teacher’s pen but on the results of hands-on experience.
Feedback Is Key Ingredient of Compliance Education
Whatever a person’s role, they need to repeat tasks and hone skills time after time. Training becomes about taking any action and then making course corrections based on feedback.
Why Feedback Is Needed
- Helps people flex and grow into new skills, capabilities and roles
- Creates more positive and productive relationships
- Helps to reach goals and drive business value
Speaking of feedback, let’s put this one on the managers. In our fast-paced clinical research world, being clear and brief is gold. No one has the time or the attention span (thanks, TikTok) for long-winded explanations. Keep it crisp. Use technology.
Technology Teaches
Tech solutions are being combined with basic education principles to transform compliance training workflow and tracking. To improve corporate training in any capacity, organizations should borrow from various education principles and utilize technology, such as:
- Active Learning & Engagement: Encourage participation through interactive discussions, problem-solving exercises, and hands-on activities rather than passive lectures.
- Storytelling for Retention: People remember stories better than raw data. Framing training within real-life scenarios and relatable experiences increases comprehension and recall.
- Personalized & Adaptive Learning: Use blended learning models, microlearning and adaptive tech platforms to cater to individual learning speeds and styles.
- Connection & Emotional Relevance: Foster an environment where employees see the “why” behind the training—how it benefits them personally and professionally. Make this clear.
- Scenario-Based Learning: Instead of memorizing regulations, research staff can engage in simulated case studies where they troubleshoot real-world ethical dilemmas or protocol challenges.
- Interactive Workshops: Hands-on practice with data collection tools, patient communication techniques, or other applications ensures skill mastery rather than theoretical understanding.
- Mentorship & Continuous Learning: Pairing new employees with experienced mentors fosters on-the-job learning and reinforcement beyond initial training sessions.
Up Your Compliance Training Game with Personalization
Although employees may attend workshops, complete modules, or watch presentations, they may still fail to retain knowledge or apply it effectively. A common reason is lack of engagement. Traditional training methods (e.g., slide-heavy lectures or dense manuals) are passive, generic and uninspiring.
Don’t use a “One-Size-Fits-All Approach” or ignore personalization. We need to apply core educational principles to compliance. Simple as that.
Making all types of training engaging, interactive and personalized helps:
- Boost retention
- Enhance job performance
- Foster a culture of continuous learning
Applying education-based strategies can transform compliance training from a mundane task into a powerful tool for professional growth and organizational excellence.
For ideas on how to up your compliance training game, reach out to the professionals at YouCompli.
John R. Nocero, Ph.D., and Andrea L. Bordonaro, MAT, blog on LinkedIn as “The Q-Kids,” discussing everything related to clinical research education, inspiration, and professional connection.
John is the Director of Quality at River Vista in Columbus, Ohio. He has worked in clinical research since 2003 and is inspired by the Irish professional wrestler Becky Lynch, whose personal and professional story centers on achievement, tenacity, grit, and overcoming adversity.


Andrea has taught first grade in Willoughby, Ohio for 25 years. She earned a Bachelor of Science in elementary education from John Carroll University and a Master’s Degree in the Art of Teaching and Education from Marygrove College.