In child care, staying compliant isn’t optional — it’s essential.
Background checks, medical forms, training hours, and credential renewals are all critical to ensuring a safe, high-quality environment for children. But managing these requirements manually can be one of the most time-consuming and error-prone parts of running a center.
Today’s workforce — and today's technology — demand a better way.
Automating your compliance processes — both for initial onboarding and ongoing tracking — not only saves time for administrators, it also makes the employment experience smoother for your staff, who are typically accustomed to mobile-first, app-driven communication.
Here’s why automation should be a priority — and how you can build a system that works for both your team and your bottom line.
Traditional, human-led compliance processes — email reminders, spreadsheets, sticky notes, binder checklists — introduce risk at every step:
Deadlines are missed.
Paperwork goes missing.
Staff frustration grows.
Admins lose hours chasing documents instead of focusing on operations.
Even the most organized administrators struggle to maintain real-time visibility across multiple staff members and credential types. And when a mistake happens, the stakes are high — noncompliance can mean licensing violations, fines, or worse, a disruption to children's care.
Simply put: human-led compliance is not sustainable at scale.
Automated compliance tracking transforms the process into something far more sustainable — and far less stressful.
Key benefits include:
Real-time monitoring: See at a glance who is cleared, who is pending, and who needs follow-up.
Automated reminders: Workers receive prompts for expiring credentials, upcoming training renewals, and outstanding onboarding steps — without administrators manually emailing.
Mobile-first experience: Today’s workforce expects app-based instructions, updates, and checklists. Automation meets them where they already are.
Audit readiness: Digital documentation ensures you’re prepared for licensing reviews at any time.
These shifts also reflect a broader trend in what today’s workforce wants: clarity, speed, and convenience. As discussed in What Motivates Today’s Child Care Workforce, clarity and efficiency play a major role in whether workers feel confident stepping into a new role — or drop out of the process entirely.
If you're ready to streamline your compliance tracking, we recommend focusing on two key phases: initial onboarding and ongoing credential maintenance.
Your onboarding compliance process should:
Provide workers with mobile-friendly checklists that clearly outline steps to start.
Automate communication when background checks, medical clearances, or orientation hours are complete.
Minimize unnecessary in-person steps where possible (such as utilizing telehealth clinicians for required medical forms to save time and money).
Offer transparent progress updates — workers should always know where they are in the process.
(At Tandem, we use a mobile-first app that guides workers through onboarding requirements seamlessly, helping them complete state-mandated steps quickly and efficiently.)
This phase is especially important when workers have already accepted an offer — but are waiting on clearance to begin. As covered in Keeping Candidates Engaged After the Interview, this is a high-risk point for candidate drop-off. Automation keeps them informed, while a strong onboarding experience keeps them committed.
Even after a worker starts, compliance never stops.
Licenses expire. Background checks need updating. State-specific health forms must be re-submitted annually.
A strong ongoing compliance system should:
Track credential expiration dates automatically
Send workers early renewal reminders (ideally 30–60 days before expiration)
Allow administrators to manage status updates in a single dashboard
Reduce last-minute scrambles that could impact staffing ratios
This is especially critical as you plan for long-term growth. If you’re mapping out enrollment increases or opening new rooms, your staffing plan needs to account not only for hiring — but for keeping everyone fully cleared. (We walk through how to structure that in How to Determine Your Staffing Needs.)
Whether you use a dedicated compliance software or create structured automation with tools you already have, the goal is the same: take the admin work out of reminding and instructing workers.
This not only saves time — it also removes points of friction that can discourage new hires or disengage existing staff.
In a field where competition for talent is fierce and compliance requirements are non-negotiable, automation isn't just a convenience. It's a strategic advantage.
Like Cliff Notes, but for child care: