Generic GCP training means a significant portion of what your team sits through simply does not apply to them.
Your data manager does not need an hour on site visit conduct. Your CRA does not need a detailed module on statistical reporting standards. When people sit through training that does not match their role, they disengage. And disengaged learners forget.
Adults forget 70% of new information within 24 hours, rising to 90% within a week. Generic training accelerates that loss by delivering content people cannot connect to their role.
More than half of EMAS GCP inspection deficiencies in 2024 were critical or major. Most came from teams failing to apply processes in practice.
A1 in 3 workers cite limited relevance to their role as a direct reason for dissatisfaction with their training. Time spent on irrelevant content becomes the direct factor for disengagement.
In November 2024, the EMA’s GCP Inspectors’ Working Group found that more than half of all identified deficiencies were critical or major. Many of those came from teams failing to apply processes consistently in practice.
Your team can complete GCP training and still be unable to apply it correctly under inspection conditions.
ICH E6(R3), adopted in January 2025, puts qualified people and fit-for-purpose processes at the center of quality. When an inspector arrives, they are not asking whether training happened but whether your team can demonstrate it.
If no, consider why your team is spending time on content that doesn’t directly support their responsibilities, role, or day-to-day responsibilities.
Inspectors expect clear, accessible evidence. If pulling together training records is time-consuming or inconsistent, it can expose gaps in oversight.
Protocols change. People change roles. New systems come in. If your team cannot revisit relevant content outside the annual cycle, they may be applying knowledge that isn’t relevant to them.
ICH E6(R3) puts qualified people and fit-for-purpose processes at the center of quality. Role-relevant training delivers both by ensuring each person receives training matched to the responsibilities they carry, and it produces records that demonstrate that to an inspector.
Role-relevant GCP training means creating shared foundations for the whole team, combined with pathways that reflect what each person does.
But what does that look like in practice?
Role-relevant GCP training gives each team member modules that reflect their actual responsibilities, rather than a single generic course covering all GCP principles regardless of applicability. It combines a shared foundational baseline with role-specific pathways for functions including monitoring, data management, and quality assurance.
The Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve shows that adults forget up to 70% of new information within 24 hours and that rate increases when content does not connect to a person’s day-to-day work. When your team sits through training that does not match their role, engagement drops and knowledge disappears faster, before it can be applied in practice.
Go beyond the annual cycle. Revisit training when protocols change, when new systems come in, and when people change roles. Giving your team just-in-time access to relevant modules closes the gaps that build up between formal training cycles.
ICH E6(R3) puts qualified people and fit-for-purpose processes at the center of quality. Role-relevant training delivers both by ensuring each person receives training matched to the responsibilities they carry, and it produces records that demonstrate that to an inspector.
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