Crews rotate on and off your sites constantly — so the orientation path is built once and pre-assigned to every worker before day one: they show up already cleared, on their phone and in their language, not waiting on a trailer sign-in. A new laborer’s path runs site orientation, fall protection, silica & hazard awareness, then the equipment for their trade — with OSHA and site-safety proof ready the moment the inspector points at anyone.
From the trades to the trailer — one standard, proven on every crew.
Every General contractor and safety lead runs into the same wall:
A new subcontractor crew shows up Monday, and I’m the one chasing paper to prove every one of them sat through the orientation.
Half my crew thinks in another language. Reading them an English toolbox talk on fall protection and hoping it landed isn’t training anyone.
There’s no Wi-Fi past the gate. Whatever training I want done has to work on a phone in the field with no signal, or it doesn’t happen.
An inspector walks on, points at a worker, and asks if he’s current on fall protection. Right now that answer is buried in binders and inboxes.
Deliver orientation and toolbox talks in each crew’s first language, with comprehension you can prove.
Learn more →Train on a phone at the trailer or in the field, even with no signal; it syncs when it reconnects.
Learn more →Subcontractor crews train in your platform; their results show in your dashboard, while they never see your internal staff data.
Learn more →All of it runs on one connected system — your branded LMS, always current.
Crews churn between phases and the trained workers move on — but the orientation path is tied to the role, not the person. The next laborer or operator is assigned the same path and is cleared before day one, so the standard on your site never walks off with the last crew.
Learn more →Whatever the inspector points at — an orientation, a toolbox talk, a cert — you pull it up in one click. One audit-ready ledger across all your subcontractor crews, no digging through binders or chasing paper.
Learn more →A General contractor has each subcontractor crew complete site induction in the platform; results show in the General contractor’s dashboard, with no access to internal staff data.
A crew is trained on fall protection in their first language, with comprehension proven per worker.
An EHS manager confirms a contractor’s whole crew is trained and compliant before they arrive on site.
You answer to standards like these — and they change. When one does, we flag the affected training and prepare the update for you to approve, so no one is ever trained on last year’s rule.
Built, deployed, and kept current — in days, not years.