What Employers Need to Know About Electrical Training for Staff

  • April 20, 2026
  • | News
Electrical training for companies UK is like giving your team a safe toolbox and a clear map. When people know what to do, jobs run smooth and safe.

In this guide, you will learn how to pick the right courses, meet rules, and see real payback. At Bespoke Electrical Training in Lichfield, we teach small groups, with one-to-one tutor help and free resist from an EAL and LCL Awards approved centre.

Start smart — electrical training for companies UK made simple

Electrical training keeps your people safe and steady. In the UK, you must manage risks and use competent workers, as set out in HSE guidance for businesses and HSE guidance on competence. Good courses map skills to the IET Wiring Regulations so work follows current rules. Choose training that suits the job, your sites, and the tools your teams use.

  • Clear job roles linked to the right course level.
  • Time saved from fewer reworks and safer methods.
  • Managers get reports to track passes and gaps.
  • Small classes mean more hands-on practice.
Approach Speed Cost Risk Best for
Ad-hoc toolbox talks Fast Low High Quick reminders
Accredited short course Days Medium Low Upskilling on a topic
Full qualification Weeks to months Higher Low New roles and promotion
No plan None None Very high None

Think like a maintenance plan for skills

Training is like servicing a van. Small, regular checks beat a big fix. Set refresh dates. Note who needs testing, 18th Edition, EV, or solar next.

Keep a simple schedule by team and site. Fit learning around real jobs so people practice on tasks they do each week.

  • Tag each role to a core course.
  • Book refreshers every 3–5 years or when rules change.
  • Rotate cohorts to keep cover on site.
  1. List tasks your teams do.
  2. Match each task to a course.
  3. Set dates and targets.

Use short, hands-on sessions to keep memory fresh and safe habits strong.

Practical tools you can use this week

Start with a one-page skills map. Keep it in your site folder. Update it after each pass.

Set a quick huddle each month to spot new kit coming in, like EV chargers or solar inverters, and plan the right course.

  • Skills list by person.
  • Pass dates and next refresh.
  • Manager notes on on-the-job checks.
  1. Print the list.
  2. Walk the site.
  3. Book training for the top gaps.

Small, steady steps keep risk low and work flowing.

See real gains — training benefits that show up on the job

Training pays back. Skilled teams waste less time, fix more first time, and stay safe. UK research on learning and development links training to better performance and retention, as shown by the CIPD learning and development factsheet. Strong skills also support productivity, backed by ONS productivity measures. Plan steady upskilling for new tech like EV charge points in line with the IET EV charging code of practice.

  • Fewer call-backs from better testing and inspection habits.
  • Faster troubleshooting saves site hours.
  • Safer work reduces incident downtime.
  • Clear paths help keep good staff.
Focus Impact Time to see Example
18th Edition update Compliance Immediate Correct RCD use
Inspection and testing Fewer faults missed Weeks Better EICR reports
EV charger install New revenue Months Workplace installs
Solar PV New revenue Months Commercial rooftop jobs

Make ROI easy to see with simple numbers

Pick two or three numbers. Track them each month.

Good starters are first-time fix rate, rework hours, and incidents. Link gains back to the course date to see the lift.

  • First-time fix rate up by 10 percent.
  • Rework hours down by 20 percent.
  • Zero incidents on new EV installs.
  1. Set a baseline.
  2. Train the team.
  3. Review after 30, 60, 90 days.

Small wins add up fast when every van and hour counts.

Stories from site that managers can use

Think of ads like a boiler — they need checks. Training is the same. A quick refresher keeps settings right and stops small leaks in time and cost.

Ask supervisors for one short example each month of time saved after a course. Share it with the team.

  • Simple before and after notes.
  • Photos of safe setups.
  • Lesson shared at the next toolbox talk.
  1. Collect one story.
  2. Share it.
  3. Book the next group.

Real stories help learning stick better than long reports.

Stay compliant — standards and rules without the headache

Compliance rests on three pillars. Follow the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989, use current BS 7671 wiring rules, and choose regulated qualifications via the Ofqual register. These guides set duties, methods, and proof. Together, they keep work safe, documented, and recognised across the UK.

  • Risk control and competent persons under EAWR.
  • Design, install, and testing methods under BS 7671.
  • Recognised awards listed by Ofqual.
  • EV and solar need topic-specific skills.
Standard Who cares What it means Training match
EAWR 1989 Employers Manage electrical risk General safety and competence
BS 7671 18th Edition Designers, installers, testers Up-to-date wiring rules 18th Edition course
Ofqual regulated HR, managers Recognised qualifications Level 2, Level 3, EWA
EV and PV codes New tech teams Safe, modern installs EV and Solar PV courses

Simple steps to stay on top of rules

Keep a short register of who holds each ticket and when it was earned.

Book updates when the wiring rules change or you add new kit like EV charge points or solar PV.

  • 18th Edition refresh on rule changes.
  • Inspection and testing before EICR work.
  • EV charging and Solar PV for new services.
  1. Check current tickets.
  2. Fill gaps by role.
  3. Set refresh dates now.

Written proof makes audits simple and keeps work moving.

Match courses to jobs on your sites

Shops, schools, care homes, and warehouses all need different checks. Pick courses that fit those tasks.

For example, testing teams need safe isolation and reporting skills. EV teams need earthing and RCD knowledge for modern chargers.

  • Inspection and testing courses for maintainers.
  • EV charger installation for facilities upgrades.
  • Fire alarm and emergency lighting for duty holders.
  1. List site types.
  2. Map tasks to training.
  3. Plan dates by site.

Right skills for the right task keeps people safe and saves time.

Choose the right partner — proof, support, and smooth delivery

Pick a partner that proves quality. Check they offer Ofqual regulated qualifications and appear as an approved centre with awarding bodies like EAL and LCL Awards. Look for small groups and one-to-one support so staff pass first time. Ask for clear outcomes and manager reports.

  • Small class sizes, maximum eight learners.
  • One-to-one tutor support during and after.
  • Free resits to keep confidence high.
  • Accredited by EAL and LCL Awards; ECA accredited.
Provider type Pros Cons Good fit
Approved regional centre Hands-on, flexible Limited seats Small cohorts
Large national provider Many dates Big classes High volume
On-site corporate course Tailored to your kit Needs space and kit Teams on same site

How Bespoke Electrical Training makes it easy

We keep classes small, with up to eight learners. Your staff get time on the tools and direct help.

You get pass data, feedback, and simple reports. If someone needs another go, we offer a free resit to get them over the line.

  • Level 2 and Level 3 pathways.
  • Experienced Worker Assessment for mature staff.
  • 18th Edition, Testing, EV, Solar PV, Fire systems.
  1. Pick dates.
  2. Share your goals.

Training should fit your work, not the other way round.

What to ask a training partner before you book

Keep it simple. Ask for proof of approval, class size, and what your staff will be able to do after.

Ask how they support managers with progress and resits.

  • Are the courses regulated or industry-recognised
  • How many learners per class
  • What practical tasks are included
  • What reports do managers get
  1. Check approval pages.
  2. Review outcomes.
  3. Agree success measures.

A short checklist saves time and avoids poor fit.

Ready when you are — a soft next step that makes sense

Ready to plan Training needs regular care. HSE explains the duty to manage electrical risk in its electricity guidance, and the IET wiring regulations are updated over time. If you are adding workplace EV charging, see the GOV.UK Workplace Charging Scheme. We can shape a simple plan that fits your teams.

  • Short calls to map roles and gaps.
  • Clear course plans by site and shift.
  • Fast booking and manager updates.
  • Options for on-site delivery.
Next step Time Cost Outcome
Quick scoping call 20 minutes Free Draft plan and dates
Pilot cohort 1–3 days Low Proof of value
Quarterly schedule Ongoing Medium Steady skills growth

A simple 30, 60, 90 day plan

Day 0–30: Book 18th Edition updates and testing for key staff.

Day 31–60: Add EV or Solar PV for growth. Review pass data.

  • Keep cover on shifts.
  • Share quick wins with the team.
  • Plan resits early if needed.
  1. Pick your first cohort.
  2. Schedule dates.
  3. Review and repeat.

Small steps beat big delays. Start, learn, and keep moving.

Make it easy for managers

Give managers a one-page tracker. Green for passed, amber for booked, red for gaps.

Review it in monthly ops meetings so training stays part of the plan, not an afterthought.

  • Simple traffic-light tracker.
  • Shared folder access.
  • Notes on on-the-job checks.
  1. Create the tracker.
  2. Update weekly.
  3. Act on reds first.

What gets seen gets done. Keep it clear and quick.

Keep the flow going — train, test, and track

Think of your team like a well-kept van. Regular checks keep it running. A steady plan for skills does the same. Small steps each month keep you safe and ready for new work.

  • Map roles to the right course level
  • Book 18th Edition refresh and testing updates
  • Plan EV and solar skills for new jobs
  • Set simple KPIs for pass rates and first-time fixes
  • Use our corporate training page to schedule cohorts