Payment plan

INTEREST-FREE PAYMENT PLAN

At The Learning Resources Group, we understand that one of the biggest challenges facing your business today is managing your cash flow. 

In light of this we offer an interest-free direct debit payment plan that allows you to receive access to your resources upfront without having to pay for them in full.

This gives you the opportunity to put them to work and have them earning money while you pay them off in weekly installments over time. 

This can be done in three simple steps:

  1. Contact us on 1300 221 729 or email through a list to sales@tlrg.com.au and let our sales team know exactly which units or qualifications you need.
  2. We will then notify you of the exact payment structure that your order requires and if you are happy to go ahead we send through the paperwork for your approval.
  3. Once we receive the deposit and completed paperwork you will have immediate access to all of the products via your own dedicated Customer Centre accessed by logging into our website where you can download the relevant files and start training.

TERMS OF AGREEMENT

We require a 30% deposit up front and a minimum weekly payment of $350 per week from your nominated bank account for a maximum of 50 weeks. 

If the amount will exceed the 50 week limit we increase the weekly payment to suit. 

You can also add extra resources to your agreement as you need them by the exact same process. We simply add them to the current outstanding amount less your 30% deposit and recalculate the weekly payment to fit within a 50 week limit. 

If you have any questions or would like to know more please call us on 1300 221 729 or email sales@tlrg.com.au


Read More

Competency Isn’t Enough: Rethinking Digital Skills in 2026

Competency-based training still matters, but on its own, it’s not enough for digital skills. It does a great job of proving someone can perform a task under known conditions. The problem is that digital environments don’t stay consistent. Tools change, workflows shift, and AI introduces new layers of complexity. Learners can be “competent” in training and still struggle when those conditions change.

The gap isn’t in effort or ability; it’s in underlying understanding. That’s where capability comes in. Capability is what allows someone to adapt, question outputs, and transfer their skills into new or unfamiliar systems. It’s what keeps performance intact when the environment evolves. The takeaway is simple:

Keep competency as the outcome & start building capability as the method.

That shift is what turns short-term success into long-term effectiveness.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with competency-based training. In fact, it’s one of the strongest features of the Australian VET system. It gives us clarity. It defines expectations. It creates a shared understanding of what “good” looks like in the workplace.

But when it comes to digital skills, something isn’t quite lining up anymore.

Not in a dramatic, system-breaking way. More in the quiet, familiar sense that learners can complete the training, tick the boxes, and still feel uncertain when they hit the workplace. Or worse—they feel confident right up until the moment something changes.

And in digital environments, something always changes.