Why Your Governance Binder Won’t Save You in 2025

Why Your Governance Binder Won’t Save You in 2025

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Governance · QA4

Why Your Governance Binder Won’t Save You in 2025

A governance policy proves you can write one. It doesn’t prove you govern. The single biggest change in the 2025 Standards is that accountability now sits, by name, on your governing persons — and “we have a governance framework” is no longer an answer an auditor accepts.

What actually changed

Quality Area 4 reframes governance from a back-office function into a named leadership responsibility. Governing persons are expected to be fit and proper, to make informed decisions that facilitate compliance, and to lead a culture of integrity. That last phrase is the one doing the work — you cannot produce “a culture” as a document. You have to evidence it as a pattern.

From the audit table: the question that exposes most boards is simple. “Show me how the board identified, discussed and acted on a compliance risk last quarter.” If the honest answer is “we received the compliance report and noted it,” that’s reception, not oversight. Oversight is visible decisions and visible follow-through.

The two patterns that fail

  • The annual-review trap. Governance that consists of one board review a year cannot evidence active, ongoing oversight. Compliance risk moves faster than your AGM.
  • The shadow director. Someone exercises real influence over the RTO but isn’t recognised as a governing person. Auditors look past the org chart to who actually holds sway — and a gap here undermines your whole fit-and-proper position.

What good evidence looks like

Not a binder. A trail. Minuted governance decisions with owners and dates. A risk register the board actually engages with, that visibly moves. Risks identified, actioned and closed. Decisions that chose integrity over convenience — especially the uncomfortable ones, because those are your strongest evidence of leading a culture. Governance that an auditor can watch happening across the year, not reconstruct from a single document.

What a CEO should do this quarter

  1. Put governance on a cadence. Monthly or quarterly, minuted, with owners and follow-through — not annual.
  2. Make the risk register live. The board touches it every meeting: new risks in, closed risks out, ratings reviewed.
  3. Map real influence. Ensure everyone who genuinely influences the RTO is recognised and assessed as fit and proper.
  4. Create a paper trail of culture. The hard calls that favoured compliance are exactly what you want on record.
Could your board evidence oversight?

The free checklist includes the governance checks an auditor would test.

Frequently asked questions

Quality Area 4 places accountability for integrity and a culture of compliance on governing persons, who are expected to make informed decisions that facilitate compliance and lead a culture of integrity. It is a clear move toward personal accountability at the leadership level.
Because the 2025 approach assesses whether governance actually operates, not just whether it is documented. Evidence comes from a pattern over time — minuted decisions, a live risk register, risks actioned and closed — rather than a single framework document.
Someone who exercises genuine influence over the RTO without being formally recognised as a governing person. Auditors look past the org chart to actual influence, and an unrecognised influencer creates a gap in your fit-and-proper assurance.
Keep reading

Fit and Proper Person: the check that ignores your training quality

“Looks fine on paper”: the gap that collapses at audit

Run the audit-readiness checklist

About the author

Ben Thakkar

Ben Thakkar

15+ yrs experience

Compliance, Training & Business Specialist · VET Advisory Group

Ben Thakkar is a Compliance, Training, and Business specialist in the education industry. He has held senior management roles, including General Manager, with leading Registered Training Organisations (RTOs) and Universities. With over 15 years of experience, Ben brings extensive expertise across audits, funding contracts, VET Student Loans, CRICOS, and the Standards for RTOs 2025.

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