As the recent 2026 State of Online Learning report highlighted, in 2025 alone, airport and aviation professionals generated 12,678 enrollments and 62,972 hours of structured online learning across 148 countries.
That is not experimentation. That is infrastructure.
The latest State of Online Learning report for airport and aviation professionals, published by our sister company the Online Learning Centre, confirms what many airport leaders already feel on the ground: digital professional development is no longer a side initiative owned by HR. It is embedded in how airports manage capability, compliance, and operational oversight.
But when you look beyond the volume, something even more important emerges.
The data doesn’t just show how much training is happening. It reveals how airports are designing their workforce.
When awareness programs are separated from structured professional development, a clear pattern appears.
More than 54.5 percent of all professional development hours are concentrated in Airport Operations programs. No other discipline comes close.
That level of time investment tells us that airports are committing to deep operational certification, governance capability, and structured progression pathways.
They are diploma and certificate programs designed to build supervisory and operational leadership capability over time, not simple compliance refreshers.
In other words, operational certification has become the backbone of workforce development.
While operations dominates hours, safety dominates participation.
Safety programs account for 43 percent of professional development enrollments, but only 15 percent of total hours.
That imbalance shows that safety capability is distributed broadly across the workforce through shorter, targeted modules. Airports are reinforcing shared standards, regulatory alignment, and day-to-day resilience at scale.
The result is a layered model:
Deep investment in operational governance.
Broad distribution of safety capability.
Structured sequencing across roles and seniority.
This is not random enrollment behavior but intentional workforce architecture.
Perhaps the most revealing insight is not about hours or enrollments, but completion.
Across more than 13,000 module-level enrollments analyzed, 77.8 percent resulted in successful completion, with completion rates exceeding 83 percent in core operational and safety disciplines. That figure stands in stark contrast to widely reported low completion rates in open online courses.
Why the difference?
Because in airports, training is tied to accountability.
Completion is highest where learning is directly connected to defined roles, certification requirements, and operational responsibility. When professional development is embedded in governance frameworks, people finish what they start.
The data makes this clear: engagement improves when training is structurally integrated into workforce systems.
After analyzing this global dataset, one thing became impossible to ignore.
Airports are investing heavily in training, they are embedding role-aligned programs, they are achieving strong completion rates, but many are still managing workforce skills visibility across fragmented systems.
Training records may live in an LMS.
Job descriptions sit in separate HR platforms.
Competency frameworks exist in static documents.
Compliance tracking often relies on spreadsheets.
Succession planning is disconnected from certification pathways.
The learning is happening, the strategy is there, but the connective tissue is often missing.
And that gap carries risk.
Without real-time visibility into how training aligns with job roles, compliance requirements, and progression pathways, airports struggle to answer critical questions:
Do we have the right certified people in the right roles?
Where are our future supervisory gaps?
Which compliance risks are emerging?
Training volume alone cannot answer those questions. Workforce intelligence can.
Klayo was born directly from this dataset.
As the sister company to the Online Learning Centre, we have access to one of the most comprehensive global views of airport online training activity. That insight made one thing clear: the industry did not have a training delivery problem, it had a workforce visibility problem.
Klayo was built to close that gap.
Instead of managing courses in isolation, Klayo connects:
Job roles and competency frameworks
Certification pathways
Compliance requirements
Skills mapping and progression
Workforce planning insights
It moves professional development from a reporting function to a strategic advantage.
The 2026 State of Online Learning report confirms that online professional development is now core workforce infrastructure.
The next step is evolution.
Airports that treat training as part of their workforce architecture and not just a catalog of courses will be better positioned to manage regulatory complexity, operational risk, and retention challenges.
62,972 hours of learning tell us that airports are serious about capability.
The question now is not whether training is happening, it is whether that investment is fully visible, aligned, and strategically managed.
That is where the future of airport workforce management begins.