As part of our ongoing Diagnostic-Action program, a number of Infologo employees have taken part in a certification course with the HEG in Geneva, designed to raise awareness of digital responsibility among companies.
Our ambition to help companies make the transition to sustainability continues, and we’ll continue to share this with you throughout the year.
What is Corporate Digital Responsibility (CDR)?
Corporate Digital Responsibility (CDR) presents both a major opportunity and a major challenge for our economy and our society.
The Department of Economy and Employment (DEE) has set up a program to raise awareness and provide training in NER, in order to support the digital and technological transition of companies.
The program includes a one-day training course at the Geneva Business School (HEG Genève) and an online course.
The project was developed in collaboration with the canton’s major professional and economic organizations (FER Genève, CCIG, NODE and Après GE).
Providing guidelines for navigating today’s often complex and ever-changing digital landscape is the aim of Corporate Digital Responsibility (CDR).
It offers many advantages to companies that adopt a responsible approach to the challenges presented by digital uses.
It enables companies to stand out in the digital world while making a positive contribution to society.
RNE covers a wide range of topics, from digital sobriety and artificial intelligence, to legal issues of data protection and political issues such as the notion of digital sovereignty.
These challenges can be approached from several angles:
- An environmental aspect
- An economic factor
- A social factor
- An important technological aspect.
RNE certification training at HEG Geneva
This one-day training course, taught by HEG Geneva lecturers, covers the regulatory bases (nLPD) and the economic, social and environmental issues associated with ENR.
The State of Geneva covers the costs of this training.
Following the course, HEG Geneva grants certification.
At Infologo, 5 of our employees– Pierre, Mickael, Patrick and Bertrand – have already trained by the end of 2023.
Others are registered for the next sessions in 2024.
Our aim is to arouse the curiosity and interest of our team in this subject.
Of course, this approach is a matter of individual choice, and we do not oblige all our employees to follow it.
Their experience of Digital Corporate Responsibility training
I liked the way the day was run: it was collaborative, with everyone able to contribute a personal experience linked to the context.
The insights provided by the moderators are among the information we can only accept thanks to the evidence demonstrated.Patrick Boulmier, HES engineer
Very interesting training that helps you ask yourself the right questions, especially about the collection, storage and protection of personal data.
And then put the right actions in place.Mickaël Jeantet, Sales Administration