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Global Affairs Governance for Platform Regulators

$199.00
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A focused course, tailored for you

Global Affairs Governance for Platform Regulators

Turn fragmented regulatory responses into a single, defensible governance framework your policy and legal teams can execute consistently.

When regulators from three jurisdictions ask the same question in the same quarter, platform governance teams discover quickly whether they have a system or a collection of individual responses. This course builds the system.

$199 one-time
Tailored to your situation. Access within 24 hours. 30-day money-back.

Includes a hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access, generated for your specific situation.

Why this course

The European Commission's DSA formal notices, the UK CMA information requests, and the FTC civil investigative demands do not arrive on a schedule you control. Each triggers a cross-functional scramble involving policy, legal, product, trust and safety, and communications. Without a governance layer that sits above those verticals, each response is drafted fresh, inconsistencies accumulate in the record, and the regulator notices. The risk is not any single response. The risk is that your governance posture looks reactive, and reactive postures invite escalation. This course addresses the structural gap: how to design, staff, and run a platform governance function that produces consistent, defensible outputs regardless of which jurisdiction is asking.

What you walk away with

  • Design a governance layer that sits above policy, legal, and trust-and-safety verticals and produces consistent regulatory outputs.
  • Build a cross-functional decision tree that assigns ownership of each response category before the inquiry arrives.
  • Develop a regulator engagement sequence that maintains a defensible record across formal and informal contacts.
  • Implement a precedent registry so that prior regulatory positions are retrievable and applied consistently in subsequent responses.
  • Run a structured tabletop exercise that surfaces coordination gaps before a live formal inquiry.
  • Produce the quarterly governance health report that your General Counsel and Head of Policy use to assess risk posture.

The 12 modules

Module 1. The Platform Governance Mandate
Defines what platform governance actually means in the context of multi-jurisdictional regulatory scrutiny, distinguishing it from compliance, legal, and public policy. Covers the three failure modes most platforms exhibit under sustained regulatory pressure: siloed responses, undocumented positions, and ad hoc escalation. Introduces the governance architecture this course builds across twelve modules, and explains why the sequence matters.
Module 2. Mapping Your Regulatory Surface
Structured method for cataloguing every active regulatory relationship across jurisdictions: formal inquiries, informal engagements, industry working groups, and pending legislation that will create new obligations. Output is a live regulatory surface map that your team updates quarterly. Covers how to weight relationships by escalation risk, distinguish observation from obligation, and identify which regulators share intelligence across borders.
Module 3. The Cross-Functional Decision Tree
Covers how to build the pre-assignment matrix that determines, before any specific inquiry arrives, which function owns which category of regulatory ask. Works through the fifteen most common request types platforms receive across DSA, DMA, GDPR, UK Online Safety Act, and FTC/state AG frameworks. Includes the escalation trigger criteria that route decisions to senior leadership and the sign-off protocol that prevents individual functions from committing the organisation without review.
Module 4. Response Architecture for Formal Inquiries
The structural template for formal regulatory responses: the opening position statement, the evidentiary appendix, the scope-limiting footnotes, and the reservation-of-rights language that protects your position in subsequent exchanges. Covers how to sequence disclosure when you have incomplete information, how to respond to information requests without creating an implicit admission, and how to handle multi-part requests that span more than one function's knowledge.
Module 5. The Precedent Registry
Design and implementation of the precedent registry: the internal database of prior regulatory positions, commitments, and characterisations that your team must apply consistently in future responses. Covers the tagging schema, the search workflow, and the review gate that requires retrieval before any new response is drafted. Includes the conflict protocol for cases where a new regulatory ask appears to contradict a prior position and requires a decision on whether to distinguish, update, or maintain.
Module 6. Regulator Engagement Sequencing
Covers the difference between formal and informal regulatory contact and how each type of engagement creates record. Works through the engagement calendar: proactive briefings, reactive responses, and the relationship-maintenance contacts that reduce the likelihood of surprise formal action. Includes the documentation standard for informal contacts that your legal team needs to reconstruct the engagement history during formal proceedings.
Module 7. Coordinating Product and Trust and Safety Inputs
The two functions that hold the technical evidence regulators most frequently request are product and trust and safety, and neither is structured to produce regulatory-ready output on short timelines. This module covers how to build standing data extraction protocols, the pre-cleared disclosure categories that product and T&S can release without per-request legal review, and the working group cadence that keeps technical leads aligned with the governance team's current regulatory posture.
Module 8. The Communications Constraint
Regulatory responses and public communications about regulatory matters must be consistent, and inconsistency between them is one of the most damaging patterns a platform can create. Covers the review gate that flags every external communication touching a live regulatory matter, the approved language bank for commonly asked questions, and the protocol for handling press inquiries received during an active formal proceeding. Includes the scenario where a leak of a regulatory response requires a rapid public response.
Module 9. Multi-Jurisdictional Consistency
When the DSA rapporteur and the FTC are asking related questions at the same time, a position taken for one may be cited by the other. This module covers the cross-jurisdictional consistency check: the workflow that surfaces potential contradictions between responses being drafted for different regulators simultaneously. Includes the position hierarchy document that establishes which jurisdiction's framing is authoritative when they conflict, and the escalation path for decisions that require VP or C-suite sign-off.
Module 10. The Tabletop Exercise
A structured simulation format for stress-testing your governance system before a live formal inquiry. Covers how to design a realistic scenario (typically a coordinated multi-regulator inquiry with a 30-day response window), how to run the cross-functional tabletop, how to score the output against the governance architecture built in prior modules, and how to produce the gap analysis that drives your governance improvement roadmap for the following quarter.
Module 11. The Governance Health Report
The quarterly report that gives your General Counsel and Head of Policy a current view of regulatory risk posture: active inquiries by jurisdiction and status, precedent registry coverage by topic area, cross-functional readiness scores from the most recent tabletop, and the top three governance gaps requiring remediation. Covers the reporting cadence, the audience segmentation (board-level summary vs. operating detail), and the metrics that track governance maturity over time.
Module 12. Sustaining the Governance Function
Covers the operating model questions that determine whether your governance function survives a reorganisation or leadership change: headcount structure, reporting line, budget ownership, and the artefact set that preserves institutional knowledge. Includes the onboarding protocol for new governance team members, the annual governance review cycle, and the trigger events (new legislation, major enforcement action against a peer platform, leadership change) that should prompt a full governance architecture review.

How this addresses your situation

Specific modules that map to what you said you are dealing with.

You received a formal information request with a 30-day response window and three functions are drafting independently: modules 3, 4, 5.
A regulator has asked a question that appears to contradict a position your team took six months ago: modules 5, 9.
Your CEO is testifying before a parliamentary committee and needs a briefing that is consistent with all current regulatory positions: modules 8, 9, 11.
You are onboarding a new Head of Policy and need to transfer institutional knowledge about your current regulatory posture: modules 5, 6, 12.

What you get with this course

  • 12 written modules covering governance architecture, cross-functional coordination, and regulator engagement sequencing
  • Downloadable templates: regulatory surface map, cross-functional decision tree, precedent registry schema, response architecture template, governance health report format
  • Tabletop exercise scenario and scoring rubric
  • The hand-built implementation playbook tailored to your role and regulatory context, delivered alongside course access

What you will have in hand by Day 1, Week 1, Month 1

Within 24 hours your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it.

Before and after

Before

Each regulatory inquiry triggers a fresh cross-functional scramble. Responses are drafted independently by policy, legal, and T&S, reconciled under time pressure, and filed without a consistent record of prior positions. The next inquiry starts from scratch.

After

A governance layer sits above the functional verticals. The decision tree pre-assigns ownership. The precedent registry makes prior positions retrievable. Each response is consistent with the record and defensible under formal scrutiny.

What happens if you do not address this

Regulators conducting formal proceedings review the complete history of your responses. Inconsistency in prior positions weakens your current response and invites follow-up requests that extend the proceeding. Platforms that visibly lack governance coordination become higher-priority targets for enforcement action.

Who it is for

You lead governance, policy, or global affairs at a technology platform that is under active regulatory scrutiny in multiple jurisdictions. You are accountable for the quality and consistency of your organisation's responses to formal regulatory inquiries, and you have a cross-functional team whose inputs you need to coordinate under time pressure.

Who this is NOT for. Single-market compliance managers focused on one regulator. Legal counsels who handle regulatory work as litigation rather than ongoing governance. Founders of early-stage companies not yet under formal regulatory review.

How it arrives

Text-based course in the Art of Service learning environment, plus downloadable templates and worked examples for every module, plus the hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access.

Time investment. Each module is designed to be completed in 45-60 minutes. The full course is 10-12 hours of focused reading and template work. Most governance leads complete it over two to three weeks alongside active regulatory work.

Why $199 is the right number

External law firms charge $500-$2,000 per hour for governance design work and produce advice, not a transferable system. Industry association working groups share general principles without the implementation layer. This course builds the system your team operates, with templates and a playbook tailored to your specific role.

FAQ

Is this specific to any one platform or regulatory regime?
No. The governance architecture applies across DSA, DMA, GDPR, UK Online Safety Act, FTC, and state AG frameworks. Module 9 specifically addresses multi-jurisdictional consistency when different regulatory regimes are asking related questions simultaneously.
How is the implementation playbook tailored?
After purchase, the implementation playbook is built specifically for your role and the regulatory context you described. It maps the course frameworks to your current active regulatory relationships and the specific coordination challenges your team is navigating.
What if my governance function already has some of these elements?
The tabletop exercise in Module 10 is designed to surface gaps in existing governance systems. Most teams that have built parts of this independently find the precedent registry and the cross-jurisdictional consistency check are the elements most commonly missing or underdeveloped.

30-day money-back guarantee. If after a week of working through the materials this is not what you needed, reply to the receipt email and a full refund is processed. No questions, no forms.

Within 24 hours your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it.