With just over a year until penalties kick in, companies across Germany are racing to certify employees in artificial intelligence skills. Starting August 2, 2026, violations of Article 4 of the European Union’s AI Act—which requires firms to ensure staff have adequate AI competence—will become punishable by fines. Certificate courses are already flooding the market to meet the legal benchmark.
The urgency is backed by hard numbers. The TÜV Continuing Education Study 2026 found that 56 percent of all businesses identify a major need for improvement in digital skills. Among companies with more than 250 employees, that figure jumps to 74 percent. Retail and public administration show the widest qualification gaps, followed by the service sector.
On June 26, a specialist conference hosted by North Rhine-Westphalia’s Labour Ministry in Essen tackled exactly how AI is reshaping workplaces. Labour Minister Karl-Josef Laumann invited experts including Prof. Dr. Christiane Woopen and Prof. Dr. Isabell M. Welpe to discuss the transformation of offices. The shift is also hitting sales and hospitality: late June saw the launch of dedicated online training that combines sales psychology with technology, subsidies available under the Qualifizierungschancengesetz (Opportunity Qualification Act).
Beyond AI, labour law remains a core requirement. A certificate programme for HR management specialists runs from mid-September to mid-December 2026, covering topics from personnel selection to employment legislation. Non-members pay €3,490. Specialised seminars bridge payroll and VAT issues: a June 26 webinar examined tax compliance, mobility offerings, and the tax treatment of company events. The public sector is not forgotten—late July brings sessions on job descriptions under the TVöD collective agreement. For the Swiss market, seminars on employment references, dismissal law, and working time models are scheduled from late June onward.
Emotional engagement among workers tells a stark story. Last year’s Gallup Engagement Index recorded that only 10 percent of employees feel a strong emotional bond to their employer. That disconnect is spurring new learning formats. Experiential educational leave for managers now includes sailing yachts, where resilience and communication are tested under pressure. The mental health of younger workers is also getting attention. On June 26, several chambers of industry and commerce and craft chambers organised an online workshop on prevention and conversation techniques for psychological strain during apprenticeships. The UKE Academy offers training on dealing with Generation Z, with sessions set for early July.
Mid-June saw the University of Worms and industry leaders discuss the future of work, focusing on modern leadership and lifelong learning. Unstructured networking events supplement these efforts—such as the monthly gatherings in Osnabrück, whose next meeting is scheduled for July 8, 2026 at Dock49.








