Why buyers care about training
A batch record is weaker if the people performing critical steps were not trained for those steps. For cannabis, harvest timing, hygiene, drying-room entry, trimming controls and sampling handling all depend on competent execution.
The matrix turns personnel evidence from scattered certificates into a reviewable control system.
Matrix structure
A useful matrix connects role, task, SOP, training date, trainer and competence evidence.
- Role: grower, harvest lead, drying operator, trimmer, warehouse operator, sampler, QA reviewer.
- Task: the actual activity, not a generic department label.
- SOP/version: the procedure the person was trained on.
- Evidence: attendance, quiz, observation, sign-off or retraining record.
- Validity: date trained, refresher interval and change-triggered retraining.
- Batch link: critical tasks performed by trained personnel only.
Red flags
Buyer confidence drops when all staff share the same training date, when records lack SOP versions, when retraining after process changes is missing, or when temporary workers perform critical steps without documented qualification.
CannaWorld should make those red flags visible early and convert them into remediation tasks.
GACP/GMP feasibility check
Critical batch tasks are performed by personnel with current task-specific training.
Evidence: Training matrix, SOP version links, batch task assignment logs.
Training exists but is generic or not linked to current SOP versions.
Evidence: Retraining plan and controlled matrix update.
Route partner requires GMP-interface training evidence for handover, sampling or packaging steps.
Evidence: Partner training requirements and role responsibility map.
