Leaders and managers who oversee program accountability and governance decisions.
Leaders and managers who oversee program accountability and governance decisions.Professionals responsible for approvals, reporting, or reviewable documentation.Stakeholders coordinating cross functional delivery and oversight.
This course suits professionals seeking structured frameworks and practical application.Focus is on competencies that translate directly to workplace responsibilities.
“Built for professionals who need practical iso 42001 lead implementer expertise.”
This ISO/IEC 42001 Lead Auditor training prepares audit, risk, and compliance professionals to assess Artificial Intelligence Management Systems (AIMS) in a structured, defensible way. The course focuses on planning, conducting, and closing ISO/IEC 42001 audits in real organizational environments, addressing governance, ethical use of AI, risk management, and regulatory expectations shaping 2024–2025. Participants learn to interpret ISO/IEC 42001 requirements from an auditor’s perspective, evaluate objective evidence, and formulate audit conclusions that stand up to certification scrutiny and executive review.
View courseThis Lead AI Risk Manager training prepares professionals to design, operate, and defend an AI risk management program aligned with regulatory and governance expectations. The course focuses on practical risk identification, decision traceability, and defensible mitigation strategies across the AI.
View courseISO/IEC 27001 formation and certification is no longer a differentiator but a baseline expectation. This training prepares professionals to implement and manage an Information Security Management System that actually works in operational environments.
View courseManagers, consultants, and project leaders involved in social responsibility; advisers focused on sustainable development; and professionals responsible for compliance or promoting responsible behavior across the organization.
byHélène TAUZIN
Leaders and managers who oversee program accountability and governance decisions.
byChristophe MAZZOLA
Leaders and managers who oversee program accountability and governance decisions.
byPhani SRIPADA
AIMS scope defines which AI activities, systems, and organizational units are covered. Context analysis examines stakeholders, legal requirements, and organizational objectives to ensure the AIMS is fit for purpose.
A Statement of Applicability documents which controls are selected for the AIMS and why they apply, creating traceability between risks, requirements, and controls.
Common gaps include incomplete risk assessments, generic policies not tailored to AI risks, insufficient training, and weak monitoring. Address them through stakeholder involvement, evidence-based controls, and continual review.
You scope an AIMS by defining organizational context and boundaries, then setting the AIMS scope so policies, risks, controls, and operations match what is in-scope.
ISO 27001 gives you a head start on ISO 42001, not a free pass. Here is what carries over, what is new, and how to extend your ISMS to an AIMS, step by step.
Regulation (EU) 2024/1689 is the EU's first comprehensive risk-based horizontal AI law, applying in stages from 2025 to 2027 (with Article 6(1) deferred to 2027). Complete guide.
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