Fraud Prevention Training Hub
Online compliance courses for staff
Financial loss. Regulatory scrutiny. Reputational damage. Personal liability for senior leaders. These are the real pain points driving organisations to rethink their approach to fraud prevention.
With the introduction of the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence under ECCTA 2023, businesses can no longer rely on reactive controls or informal processes. The expectation is clear: it’s necessary to actively assess fraud risk, implement reasonable prevention procedures, and demonstrate compliance with formal failure-to-prevent fraud guidance.
Our fraud prevention training is designed to provide staff with clear direction, practical guidance, an understanding of the consequences of fraud and the confidence they need to stay compliant. With flexible training solutions, you can choose from ready-to-use fraud prevention courses or build a fully customised plan tailored to your organisation’s specific needs.
Who's this for
This training is ideal for organisations seeking to take a structured, defensible approach to fraud prevention and FTPF compliance.
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Compliance and Risk Professionals:
Provides practical, defensible guidance aligned to regulatory expectations, helping to assess fraud risk, implement reasonable procedures, and evidence compliance with confidence -
Human Resources (HR) and Learning & Development (L&D) teams:
Offers structured compliance e-learning courses that make fraud prevention part of everyday behaviour for staff -
Finance and Operational teams:
Builds the awareness and practical skills needed to spot red flags early, reduce exposure to financial loss, and support effective fraud prevention management
See similar compliance topics
Effective bribery prevention strengthens overall fraud prevention compliance by reducing risk
Fraud prevention is an area of financial crime compliance, working together to safeguard your firm
Risk management guards against reputational and financial harm, reinforcing fraud prevention
Prepare your team to maximise fraud prevention
43%
Of all estimated crime in England and Wales is fraud-related*
£629.3 million
Was stolen by fraudsters in the first half of 2025 - 17% increase from the previous year.**
The [Skillcast] team is exceptionally responsive, capable and committed to excellence. They will try new things, and the extremely customisable system means they’re often delivering things way beyond what we originally expected or had set out to achieve.
Talent Development Business Partner
Kentro Capital
Fraud Prevention
Fraud can have grave consequences for companies, employees, and customers.
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Fraud Prevention
Fraud is criminal or deceptive behaviour aiming to secure an unfair or unlawful gain through deliberate or dishonest misrepresentation.
Abuse of Position
Fraud by abuse of position occurs when someone in a position of trust dishonestly exploits their role for personal gain or to cause loss to others.
Understanding Fraud
Fraud is a deliberate act of deception aimed at obtaining an unfair advantage, often causing harm to individuals or organisations.
Identity Fraud
Identity fraud occurs when criminals steal personal information to commit fraud, often leading to financial loss and reputational damage.
Identity Crime
Identity theft involves criminals obtaining and misusing someone's personal data to commit fraud.
Read more
Failing to Disclose Information
Fraud can occur when someone deliberately withholds information to gain an unfair advantage or cause loss to others.
Customer Fraud
Customer fraud poses serious risks to businesses, from chargeback fraud to false complaints.
Supplier Fraud
Supplier fraud occurs when vendors engage in deceptive practices, such as false invoicing, overpricing or bribery.
Authorised Push Payment Fraud
Authorised push payment fraud occurs when scammers impersonate trusted figures to trick individuals into transferring money.
False Representation
Fraud by false representation happens when someone deliberately provides misleading or untrue information for personal or financial gain.
Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 expands corporate liability for fraud and financial crimes.
Employee Fraud and Insider Threats
Employee fraud can take many forms, from theft and false expense claims to data misuse and conflicts of interest.
Fraud Offences and Penalties
Fraud is any dishonest action or omission intended to gain or cause a loss, regardless of whether it is temporary or permanent.
Mandatory Leave
Mandatory leave is time off that certain organisations enforce to help prevent fraud, errors and other risk incidents.
Preventing Corporate Fraud
Corporate fraud involves illegal activities committed by an organisation or individuals acting on its behalf.
The Fraud Triangle
Fraud is often committed by ordinary people who find themselves in difficult situations and make poor choices.
Abuse of Position
Abuse of position is a type of fraud that employees can commit, sometimes inadvertently, when they use their position at the Company for their personal gain.
Financial Integrity
The integrity of financial reports is paramount for any company.
Fraud Prevention for Managers
The consequences of fraud are very serious for both companies and employees alike.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF)
Learn how the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence works, what it means for our Company, and how you can help reduce risk by recognising fraud and supporting prevention procedures.
Read more
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) for Managers
Learn how the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence works, what it means for our Company, and how you, as a manager, can help reduce risk by recognising fraud and supporting prevention procedures.
Read more
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF)
Refresh your understanding of how the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence works, what it means for our Company, and how you can help reduce risk by recognising fraud and supporting prevention procedures.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Types of Fraud
Understand the various types of fraud that could lead to the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence and how to help prevent them in my role.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Offence
Understand the legal implications of the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence and how to ensure compliance in my role.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Scope
Understand the scope of the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence and its implications for different types of companies.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Financial Services
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Financial Services for Managers
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Fraud Prevention
Fraud is criminal or deceptive behaviour aiming to secure an unfair or unlawful gain through deliberate or dishonest misrepresentation.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Insurance
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Insurance for Managers
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Prevention
Understand the six principles of fraud prevention to design and support effective anti-fraud controls.
Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 expands corporate liability for fraud and financial crimes.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF)
Learn how the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence works, what it means for our Company, and how you can help reduce risk by recognising fraud and supporting prevention procedures.
See the course
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) for Managers
Learn how the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence works, what it means for our Company, and how you, as a manager, can help reduce risk by recognising fraud and supporting prevention procedures.
See the course
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF)
Refresh your understanding of how the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence works, what it means for our Company, and how you can help reduce risk by recognising fraud and supporting prevention procedures.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Types of Fraud
Understand the various types of fraud that could lead to the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence and how to help prevent them in my role.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Offence
Understand the legal implications of the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence and how to ensure compliance in my role.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Scope
Understand the scope of the Failure to Prevent Fraud offence and its implications for different types of companies.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Financial Services
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Financial Services for Managers
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Insurance
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Understanding Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) in Insurance for Managers
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF) is a corporate offence that holds organisations criminally liable if they do not have reasonable measures in place to stop fraud committed by someone acting on their behalf.
Failure to Prevent Fraud (FTPF): Prevention
Understand the six principles of fraud prevention to design and support effective anti-fraud controls.
Stay audit-ready with a single source of truth
Confidently demonstrate compliance with fraud-related legislation, reduce regulatory and fraud risk, and save time with everything you need in one place. The Skillcast Compliance Portal gives your firm a central hub to simplify fraud prevention and compliance management, track staff knowledge retention, and monitor adherence to regulations.
Simplify compliance with automated tools
Remove the complexity and manual effort of managing fraud prevention compliance across teams. The Skillcast Compliance Portal automates routine tasks, including reminders, follow-ups, and training tracking. This ensures every member of staff completes essential fraud-prevention training on time, helping reduce regulatory risk and protect your organisation from financial and reputational damage.
Drive engagement and prove compliance
Empower your teams to spot, prevent, and respond to fraud with confidence through engaging, high-impact compliance training. From gamified assessments that sharpen real-world decision-making to bite-sized modules that fit seamlessly into busy schedules, this drives stronger knowledge retention and practical fraud-prevention competency.
Seven years of award-winning service
- Have confidence in your compliance programme, supported by a provider trusted by organisations across regulated industries
- Spend less time resolving issues and more time driving value, with award-winning, responsive support when regulations change or challenges arise
- Ensure stronger assurance for regulators and stakeholders with a market-recognised, award-winning solution that demonstrates due diligence and quality
Standard plan:
Ideal for organisations wanting a branded, flexible and fully-managed compliance training platform.
Explore the plan
Recommended
Enhanced plan:
Designed for firms wanting to elevate compliance learning, making it more personal, engaging and efficient.
Explore the plan
Premium plan:
Built for organisations that want a fully integrated, automated compliance platform to simplify compliance at scale.
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Start your compliance e-learning journey with a free trial
With this no-obligation free trial you'll have access to our libraries and compliance platform.
Ready to start? Complete the form, and a member of the Skillcast team will be in touch with further details on how your trial works, what's included, and how to get started.
Feefo Customer Rating ★★★★★ 4.9/5
Common questions about our fraud prevention compliance solution
Fraud Prevention
Failure to Prevent Fraud
Compliance Portal
How can I ensure employees are aware of our Fraud Prevention policies and procedures?
How can employees report suspicions of fraud anonymously?
How can I make sure every employee has read and agreed to our anti-fraud and conduct policies?
How can I measure my employees’ awareness of fraud risks and identify gaps in understanding?
How can I provide employees with a safe and anonymous way to report suspected fraud?
What are the most common types of fraud in construction?
- Bid rigging and collusion during tendering
- False invoicing and overbilling
- Theft or misuse of materials and equipment
- Manipulation of progress reports or timesheets
- Warranty or insurance fraud after project completion
Why is the construction industry especially vulnerable to fraud?
How can companies detect fraud early?
Early detection is about combining good oversight with smart tools. For example:
- Monitoring financial records for irregular billing.
- Using data analytics to flag suspicious payment patterns.
- Carrying out site inspections and inventory checks.
- Providing safe, anonymous channels for employees to raise concerns.
What role does leadership play in fraud prevention?
- Making anti-fraud policies clear and accessible.
- Enforcing rules consistently — no exceptions for "star performers."
- Rewarding ethical behaviour alongside project results.
We have identified we need to train external contacts we consider to be Associated Persons, what is an effective way to do this?
We would usually send out the same Fraud course to all staff, why does Skillcast offer Managers versions of the courses?
How can I make sure every employee has read and agreed to our anti-fraud and conduct policies?
How can I measure my employees’ awareness of fraud risks and identify gaps in understanding?
How can I give employees a secure way to record suspicious activity so we can act quickly?
Our Suspicious Activity Register allows staff to log concerns or irregularities they observe, helping you detect potential issues early. The secure register can be reviewed by compliance teams, enabling prompt investigation and action.



