The Consumer Rights Act is all about making sure products meet legal standards and knowing what customer rights are

  • Business Compliance
  • 40 languages
  • 30m

Learning outcomes

  • Understand who the Consumer Rights Act apply to
  • Know how to resolve any disputes
  • Understand what liability you have regarding digital content

Covered in this course

Course contents

This training course is broken down into 4 sections

  1. 1
    Background
  2. 2
    Customer Rights Act
  3. 3
    Terms and Conditions
  4. 4
    Disputes

About this course

Online resources provide a lot of information for consumers. This includes their rights as customers and the procedures they can follow if they’re unsatisfied with digital content they have purchased.

THIS course has been written for the RETAILER. It’s been created for anyone who sells any type of digital content to the public.

It clearly states a customer’s rights in the eyes of the law, and it provides practical guidance on how to deal with customer complaints. It also explains how retailers can make sure their digital content meets legal standards.

Anyone that sells digital content should have a thorough understanding of consumer rights. Our consumer rights for retailers course looks into The Consumer Rights Act 2015 in detail, as well as looking into terms & conditions and how to deal with customer disputes effectively.

Selling goods or services? Take a look at our Consumer Rights Training for Goods & Consumer Rights Training for Services.

Presented by

The importance of Consumer Rights Training for Retailers – DIGITAL CONTENT

It's important that you comply with the law and understand the positive impact this training course can have on your organisation and employees.

Find out more

Available in 40 languages

All inclusive

Machine translated* content is included for free with all our popular courses

It covers LMS navigation, course transcripts and test questions. If you don’t see a course listed in the language you require, just let us know.

*Content which is not English may be machine translated and is for assistive purposes only. We cannot guarantee the accuracy of translations.

Our most popular languages

Italian
German
Romanian
French
Polish
Lithuanian

Consumer Rights Training certificate

Download and print

Each of our courses ends with a multiple-choice test to measure your knowledge of the material.

This Consumer Rights Training for Retailers – DIGITAL CONTENT course concludes with a 20 question multiple choice test with a printable certificate. In addition, brief in-course questionnaires guide the user through the sections of the training and are designed to reinforce learning and ensure maximum user engagement throughout.

As well as printable user certificates, training progress and results are all stored centrally in your LMS (Learning Management System) and can be accessed any time to reprint certificates, check and set pass marks and act as proof of a commitment to ongoing legal compliance.

What does my certificate include?

Your Consumer Rights Certificate includes your name, company name (if applicable), name of course taken, pass percentage, completion date, expiry date and stamps of approval or accreditations by recognised authorities.

Please note if you are using our course content via SCORM in a third party LMS then we are unable to provide certificates and you will need to generate these in your host LMS yourself.

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Why is this training important?

Compliance

It’s important that you comply with the law and know the ways in which it affects you and the way you work.

In October 2015 Consumer law was subject to some big changes as the Consumer Rights Act came into force. The changes included:

  • What to do when goods are faulty
  • What happens when there are unfair terms in a contract
  • More flexibility for enforcers to respond to breaches in law
  • Digital Content – What happens when it’s faulty? Consumers now have the right to replacements or repair
  • Changes to how services should be match up to what was agreed between the consumer and the seller

Digital content to be of satisfactory quality

(1) Every contract to supply digital content is to be treated as including a term that the quality of the digital content is satisfactory.
(2) The quality of digital content is satisfactory if it meets the standard that a reasonable person would consider satisfactory, taking account of—

(a) any description of the digital content,
(b) the price mentioned in section 33(1) or (2)(b) (if relevant), and
(c) all the other relevant circumstances (see subsection (5)).

Chapter 3, Digital Content, Section 34 – Consumer Rights Act

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