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Covered in this course

Course contents

This training course is broken down into 3 sections

  1. 1 Whistleblowing
  2. 2 Whistleblowing Policy
  3. 3 Follow Up
An illustration of a whistle - Whistleblowing Training
Whistleblowing Training. Section 1: Whistleblowing
SECTION 1

Whistleblowing is all about calling attention to wrongdoing. Think about a referee in a football match blowing the whistle on foul play or a Victorian policeman blowing a whistle to bring attention to criminal activity. This section of the whistleblowing training course will cover what whistleblowing is and what the law is surrounding it.

Whistleblowing Training. Section 2: Whistleblowing Policy
SECTION 2

Many organisations have a Whistleblowing Policy. Having a policy means that everyone understands the rules and knows what’s expected of them. It establishes a fair process which is followed by everyone. If your organisation has one, make sure you read and understand it. This section will cover Whistleblowing Policies and how to raise concerns regarding Whistleblowing. 

Whistleblowing Training. Section 3: Follow Up
SECTION 3

Once you’ve made a disclosure and it’s not been made anonymously, you may receive acknowledgement of your disclosure. This depends on your organisation’s procedure or policy. In this final section, we look at following up after you have raised a concern and how employers should handle and store disclosure records. 

About this course

Providing employees with the right tools and information when it comes to Whistleblowing is essential for an employer to show that they are equipping their staff to deal with any cause for concerns. 

Protect state that 1 in 10 UK workers said that in the last two years they had witnessed some possible form of corruption, wrongdoing or malpractice. 

This Whistleblowing Training Course will provide information on what a whistleblower is, the laws surrounding whistleblowers and what constitutes as whistleblowing. Whistleblowing Training is essential for any organisation so that the correct procedures are in place should someone choose to come forward. 

There are a number of laws in place to protect Whistleblowers and they were created to support these people if they faced retaliation at work or the threat of dismissal after coming forward. Concerns of wrongdoing within a company can be brought forward both internally and externally. This course will advise employees on what procedures to follow and when you should raise your concerns. 

Through this online Whistleblowing Training, we'll equip employees with the information of what they should do if they put forward concerns to an internal or external party through 3 easy steps.  

Michelle Livings, a presenter of Whistleblowing Training

Presented by

Michelle Livings

The importance of Whistleblowing Training

It’s important that you comply with the law and understand the positive impact this training course can have on your organisation and employees.

Find out more

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  • Italian
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Whistleblowing Training certificate

Download and print

Each of our courses ends with a multiple choice test to measure your knowledge of the material.

This Whistleblowing Training course concludes with a 10 question multiple choice test with a printable certificate. In addition, brief in-course questions guide the user through the sections of the training and are designed to reinforce learning and ensure maximum user engagement throughout.

As well as printable user certificates, training progress and results are all stored centrally in your LMS (Learning Management System) and can be accessed any time to reprint certificates, check and set pass marks and act as proof of a commitment to ongoing legal compliance.

What does my certificate include?

Your Whistleblowing Training Certificate includes your name, company name (if applicable), name of course taken, pass percentage, date of completion, expiry date and stamps of approval or accreditations by recognised authorities.

Please note if you are using our course content via SCORM in a third party LMS then we are unable to provide certificates and you will need to generate these in your host LMS yourself.

Whistleblowing Certificate

759 real user reviews

4.8 out of 5
Clear and succinct
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This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

Really good, informative.
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This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

Well presented, concise, very informativ
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Easy to understand, worked well as a reminder to me as to what whistleblowing is for, also reminded me a a new employee t review the Company policy.

A good course which captures the basics
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The course was a good way to re-engage with the associated rights of an individual with concerns and course of actions that should be taken

Great knowledge and learning with useful
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Based on the headlines and specifics and easy to understand

informative, reassuring, easy to follow
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The course was short but informative and I felt reassured after it that if I ever have to whistleblow that I will be supported by my employer.

Good course
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Very informative, interesting and detailed.

Educative
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I love to be enlightened with measures and processes in the working place

Why is this training important?

Compliance

It's important that you comply with the law and know the ways in which it affects you and the way you work.

The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998

(PIDA) is derived from Part IV of the Employment Rights Act 1996. It aims to protect employees while making disclosures in the public interest. These disclosures include evidence of illegal activity or damage to the environment. Furthermore, it aims to protect these individuals should they be victimized for disclosing this information, this legislation could aid them in claiming compensation. 

For an employee to qualify from the protection of this legislation, they must make a "protected disclosure" to the employer, prescribed person, legal adviser or an otherwise appropriate person. 

A qualifying disclosure is any declaration of information which shows one or more of the following:

  • dangers of health and safety
  • risk or damage to the environment
  • unlawful activities or criminal acts in an organisation e.g. fraud
  • miscarriages of justice
  • failure to comply with legal obligations e.g. organisations not having the right insurance
  • the belief that someone is covering up wrongdoing

Business impact of PIDA Non-Compliance

If an employee blows the whistle on an organisation then they have the right to compensation from an employment tribunal which could cost thousands of pounds.

A recent example of someone being fined for whistleblowing includes Barclays boss being fined £642,430 for trying to unmask a whistleblower.

This is a great example of why whistle-blowing training applies to everyone in an organisation.

Data Protection Act 2018 and General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)

Whilst not focussed on whistleblowing there are provisions in place to hable the protection of personal data of companies complying on the lawful basis of processing whistleblower ’protected disclosures’ which includes respecting individuals rights 

Business impact of GDPR Non-Compliance

Breaching a whistleblowers rights may subject you to private claims of compensation for damages suffered. This may be on a mental health basis, loss of earnings. These can be commenced by consumer protection bodies and unions on behalf of individuals. 

The business may also be subject to a maximum fine under the EU GDPR is €20 million or 4 percent of the business's total annual turnover.

Business benefits

It’s important that everyone at your organisation understands what Whistleblowing means, what legal protections they have, and what processes are in place for appropriately reporting their concerns.

Employees trained to understand Whistleblowing feel safer, increasing loyalty, and will draw attention to any wrongdoing, helping you act against it sooner. Strong protections and good awareness also increase the likelihood that misconduct can be dealt with internally, minimising the impact on your organisation’s reputation.

This Whistleblowing Training will equip your employees with the knowledge and the confidence to tackle wrongdoing, if it should ever arise, within your organisation.

Why should your business have a whistleblowing policy?

Any organisation can benefit from a whistleblowing policy as creating a hostile work environment is unproductive and will cost you time and money.  Without a set policy in place whistleblowers can be subject to retaliation from employees and employers; retaliation against whistleblowers. Retaliation can take various forms, including ostracization, harassment, demotion, or even wrongful termination. These actions can instil a culture of fear in your workplace and may defer them from reporting genuine concerns.

Not only this but without a policy in place it escalates legal issues as it allows unethical behaviour to go unchecked. This can lead to serious legal and reputational issues.  Unaddressed wrongdoing may result in financial fraud, safety violations, discrimination, or other forms of misconduct, exposing the organisation to legal liabilities, regulatory investigations, fines, lawsuits, and damage to your business’ reputation.

What should a whistleblowing policy contain?

A whistleblowing policy should provide clear reporting channels, outline investigation procedures, and ensure that whistleblowers are treated with fairness and respect.

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Frequently asked questions

The purpose of the Whistleblowing Training course is to provide employees with information on when and why they need to report illegal activities at their workplace such as money laundering. The course aims to explain the importance of having a whistleblowing policy and how to protect staff from any abuse or mistreatment when they blow the whistle.