Every quarter, someone asks how many people completed their training. No one ever asks how many of them still remember it.
TL;DR
- Certificates capture a moment in time. Without ongoing practice and reinforcement, the skills behind them fade.
- Only 37% of companies measure learning success by business results. The rest rely on completion metrics that hide real capability gaps.
- Recertification, structured learning paths, and readiness reporting turn one-time certifications into lasting, measurable expertise.
- The shift: from tracking who finished a course to knowing who’s actually ready.
Skills on paper don’t win. Skills in practice do.
Think about your driver’s license. You passed the test years ago. You technically know the rules.
But if you haven’t driven since, no one’s handing you the keys to their car. At least not happily!
Certificates work the same way. They confirm someone learned something once, on one day. They say nothing about whether that knowledge survived the quarter.
And yet, scroll through LinkedIn on any given Monday, and you’ll see a feed full of freshly earned badges and “proud to announce” posts. It looks like progress. But most of it is skill-bombing. Broadcasting competence without proving it still holds up.
The research is clear. Skill loss after 365+ days of non-practice is significant.
And the skills themselves aren’t standing still either. 39% of workers’ core skills are expected to change by 2030, according to the World Economic Forum.
Employees feel it too. 41% say their skills are becoming outdated faster than ever due to technological change.
So skills expire. But most organizations aren’t set up to notice.
Recent data from The TalentLMS 2026 L&D Benchmark Report show that 86% of employees build skills by figuring things out on the job rather than through formal training. And only 37% of companies measure learning success by business results. The rest track who finished the course. Who earned the badge. Who checked the box.
That leaves a gap between what the organization thinks its workforce can do and what they actually can.
Not a knowledge gap. A visibility gap. And certificates alone will never close it.
Chief Marketing Officer, TalentLMS
Elena has been with TalentLMS for over a decade, helping shape the product and the team since the early days.
Expert Quote: Why Standing Still Means Falling Behind
The baseline keeps moving fast. If you’re not continuously learning, you’re not standing still; you’re actually falling behind. In marketing, what worked yesterday might not work today. We’re constantly relearning the job, testing new things, and adapting. That’s what keeps it challenging and energizing.
Four ways to turn certificates into lasting capability
Certificates don’t have to be a dead end. With the right structure behind them, they become the starting point for something that actually holds up over time. Here are four ways to make that shift.
Set certificates to expire on purpose
It sounds counterintuitive. Why build something just to let it expire? But that’s exactly the point. A certificate with no expiration date sends a quiet message: you’re done learning this. One with a built-in shelf life says the opposite: come back and prove you still know it.
Set expiration periods based on how fast the field moves. Annual for compliance. Every two years for technical skills. Automate reminders so renewals happen before anyone slips through the cracks.
The result isn’t more admin work. It’s a recurring proof cycle. Every renewal is a checkpoint that keeps your team aligned with the latest standards, not stuck on what they learned two years ago.
With the right compliance training software, certificate expiration and recertification notifications run automatically, so the whole cycle happens without manual follow-up.
Build reinforcement loops, not one-off exams
A single exam captures what someone remembers on one day. That’s it. It says nothing about whether they can apply that knowledge three months later when it actually matters.
Reinforcement loops change the equation. Instead of “passed the test in March, assumed competent in December,” it becomes “demonstrated capability in March, reinforced in June, reassessed in September.”
Structure Learning Paths where each course builds on the last. Add scenario-based assessments that test real-world application, not just recall. Use skills mapping to track whether competencies are maintained over time, not just initially acquired.
You don’t need to map everything. Run a skills gap analysis on 5–10 skills tied to your biggest business priorities, and reassess at least twice a year. Skills clarity beats skills completeness.
The shift is subtle but significant: from checking a box once to building a pattern of proof.
Track readiness, not just badges
Here’s a question most L&D dashboards can’t answer: how many people on your team are actually ready right now?
Not how many finished a course. Not how many earned a badge. How many are current on the skills that matter, today.
That’s the difference between completion reporting and readiness reporting. One tells you who showed up. The other tells you who’s prepared.
Make the shift: move from “X people completed course Y” to “X% of the team is current on [skill], Y% are due for renewal, and Z% have gaps.” That’s the kind of visibility that turns training data into something a manager can actually act on.
TalentLMS custom reports let you track certifications, learner progress, and skill gaps across teams, so you see who’s current and who’s falling behind.
Make practice part of the job, not a separate event
Skills decay fastest when training lives in a separate world from the actual work. A two-hour course in January doesn’t help someone who needs to recall a safety protocol in July.
The closer practice is to the real task, the longer it sticks.
Embed short knowledge checks into regular workflows. Reinforce key concepts between formal training cycles. Give people on-demand refreshers right when they need the knowledge, not just during scheduled sessions.
The goal: learning becomes something that fits inside the workday, not something that pulls people out of it. This isn’t a stretch. The TalentLMS 2026 L&D Benchmark Report shows that 68% of employees already prefer to learn during their workday, and research from Software Advice shows that 58% are more likely to engage when content comes in shorter segments.
How EVBox turned recertification into a competitive advantage
EVBox builds electric vehicle charging infrastructure across 55+ countries, with over 100,000 charging ports installed worldwide. When the company grew from 60 to 750+ employees in just two years, their training setup couldn’t keep up.
The problem wasn’t a lack of training. It was a lack of structure. Their previous platform offered no learning paths, no branching, and no visibility into who was current and who wasn’t.
“There were no learning paths; you couldn’t branch it out. You couldn’t really look into the data,” says Madalina Buzdugan, Strategy Business Partner at EVBox.
That mattered most for their partner and installer certifications. EVBox certifies value-added resellers, distributors, and the technicians who physically install charging stations. These aren’t nice-to-have credentials. Installer certification is tied directly to warranty activation. If a technician’s certification lapses, it creates a real business problem.
With TalentLMS, EVBox built a recertification system with automatic expiration and renewal notifications. Partners and installers get flagged before their certifications lapse. The team sees exactly who’s current, who’s expiring, and who needs to re-certify, without chasing anyone manually.
The result: certification went from a one-time checkbox to an ongoing quality signal across their entire partner and installer network.
Make recertification your competitive advantage
See who’s compliant, who’s not and keep everyone up to date on compliance training with TalentLMS.
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Certificates get you started. Skills keep you ready.
Certificates aren’t the problem. Treating them as the finish line is.
The companies that get this right don’t stop at “who completed the course.” They ask, “Who’s ready today?”
They treat proof as something ongoing, not something that happened once.
That’s the shift: from tracking what your team learned to knowing what they can do. From collecting badges to building capability that holds up when it counts.
The certificate gets someone started. What comes after is what keeps them ready.
Turn skills into your most powerful asset.
See exactly which capabilities your team has, who’s ready for promotion, and what training closes skills gaps with TalentLMS.
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