Why Regulatory Programs Stall After Approval & How to Design Ones That Run
Details
Join Fatimah Abbouchi for a focused virtual session examining why regulatory programs often struggle after approval — and what needs to change for them to operate sustainably in business-as-usual.
Most regulatory programs do not fail because obligations were misunderstood.
They fail because execution models were never designed to run.
This session is about regulated delivery, not license interpretation.
Using AFSL as a practical example, the discussion examines recurring execution breakdowns seen across regulated change programs, including:
• delivery models optimised for approval rather than operation
• obligation-led planning that fragments accountability
• governance structures that do not survive transition to BAU
The session focuses on how to design regulatory programs that:
• embed into operating models
• maintain clear capability ownership
• reduce rework, fatigue, and reset cycles
What This Session Will Cover
• Why obligation led delivery creates structural fragmentation
• The difference between approval readiness and operational execution
• How to design capability ownership that outlives the program
• The minimum governance and delivery cadence required for regulated change
What This Session Is Not
• Not license-specific advice
• Not legal interpretation
• Not tool- or vendor-driven
Event Details
📅 Date: Thursday, 5 March 2026
🕛 Time: 12:00pm – 1:00pm AEDT
⏱ Duration: 60 minutes
💻 Platform: Zoom
🎟 Cost: Free (registration required)
REGISTER TO ATTEND OR TO RECEIVE THE RECORDING POST-EVENT:
👉 https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/S2G_0rY0TDWSxQFWmHsUZw
Can’t make it live? No problem — all registrants will receive a copy of the recording after the event.
