What Is a Workplace Skills Plan (WSP) and Why It Matters

A Workplace Skills Plan (WSP) is the annual document in which an employer sets out the training it plans to deliver to its staff over the coming year, submitted to the relevant SETA to access skills-development grants and support B-BBEE points. In short, it is your training roadmap for the year ahead — and the gateway to recovering part of the Skills Development Levy you already pay. This page explains what a WSP is, who needs one, what it contains, and how BOTI helps you turn that plan into accredited training your team actually completes.

If you are an HR or L&D lead, business owner or finance manager trying to make training spend work harder — for capability and compliance — the WSP is where it starts.

The business problem a WSP solves

Most South African employers above the payroll threshold pay the Skills Development Levy (SDL) at 1% of payroll every month — whether or not they see a cent of it back. The WSP turns that levy from a pure cost into a partial refund and a planning discipline.

Without a WSP, the pattern is familiar: training happens ad hoc, nobody claims the mandatory grant, the B-BBEE scorecard suffers, and the levy disappears. With a WSP in place, the same business can:

  • Recover part of its levy through the SETA mandatory grant once the WSP and Annual Training Report (ATR) are submitted and approved.
  • Plan training deliberately against real skills gaps rather than reacting to crises.
  • Strengthen its B-BBEE scorecard, since skills-development spend is measured against 6% of the leviable amount (not 6% of payroll).
  • Demonstrate a credible training record that supports tenders, audits and growth.

What is a Workplace Skills Plan, in detail?

A WSP is forward-looking. It records the training your organisation intends to provide to employees in the year ahead, mapped against identified skills needs and aligned to your SETA’s reporting requirements. Its partner is the Annual Training Report (ATR), which looks backward at the training you actually delivered. Together they form the core of the SETA grant cycle:

Document Direction Purpose
WSP (Workplace Skills Plan) Forward-looking Plans the training you intend to deliver next year
ATR (Annual Training Report) Backward-looking Reports what you actually delivered last year

Both are usually submitted to your SETA by the annual deadline (commonly 30 April), prepared and signed off by your Skills Development Facilitator (SDF).

Who needs a WSP?

A WSP matters most to employers who pay the Skills Development Levy and want a return on it — South African businesses developing their own staff, not individual job-seekers. It is especially relevant to:

  • HR and L&D managers building an annual training calendar and grant submission.
  • Business owners and MDs of levy-paying SMEs who want to recover spend and improve their scorecard.
  • Finance managers linking the SDL line on the payroll to a tangible benefit.
  • Skills Development Facilitators (SDFs) compiling and submitting the WSP and ATR.

If your organisation pays SDL, a WSP is the practical route to making some of that money work for you.

Need help turning your WSP into delivered training? Request a quote or a free 15-minute callback. Phone 011-882-8853 or use the BOTI contact form — we aim to respond within 15 minutes. Ask for our free Training Needs Analysis (TNA) template to map your skills gaps before you plan.

What a Workplace Skills Plan covers

The template varies by SETA, but a credible WSP generally addresses these building blocks:

  1. Company profile and levy details — your organisation, SDL number, headcount and demographic breakdown.
  2. Skills gap analysis — the gap between the competencies your business needs and what your people currently have, usually informed by a Training Needs Analysis.
  3. Planned training interventions — the courses, programmes and learnerships you intend to run, ideally accredited where formal recognition matters.
  4. Beneficiary breakdown — who will be trained, by occupational level, race, gender and disability status, feeding your B-BBEE skills-development reporting.
  5. Alignment to scarce and critical skills — how your plan supports your SETA’s priority skills and the National Skills Development Plan.
  6. Budget and timelines — what you plan to spend and when each intervention will run.

A strong WSP is not paperwork done in isolation — it flows from a genuine skills audit and feeds into the accredited training you then book and deliver. That is where a partner like BOTI fits.

How BOTI supports your WSP

BOTI does not replace your SDF or your SETA, but we make the delivery side of your WSP straightforward. Once your plan identifies the skills your team needs, we turn it into completed, reportable development:

  • Accredited, credit-bearing courses aligned to the relevant SETA or QCTO, mapping to NQF-level unit standards — training that carries weight in your WSP and ATR.
  • Skills-focused courses for fast, practical capability where formal credits are not the priority.
  • Documented delivery — attendance, outcomes and certificates your SDF can report cleanly against the plan.

With 450 courses across management, finance, HR, sales, compliance and technical skills, BOTI helps you populate the planned-interventions section of your WSP with real, deliverable programmes rather than placeholders. Where credit or compliance is the point, choose accredited; where fast capability is the point, a practical course may suit better — browse the full accredited course catalogue.

Delivery formats and national reach

How training is delivered affects both cost and completion. BOTI delivers throughout South Africa in the format that suits your operation:

  • In-house / on-site at your premises — usually the most cost-effective option for a team, with the strongest transfer back to the job.
  • Public scheduled courses — open programmes for individual staff members.
  • Virtual / remote instructor-led sessions — efficient for teams across multiple sites.

Reach spans Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban and Pretoria, with remote delivery nationwide. Per-delegate cost falls as group size grows, so in-house delivery is usually the most economical way to deliver the volume a WSP commits to. For training to count toward your skills-development goals it generally needs to be accredited — recognised by the relevant SETA or QCTO and mapped to NQF-level unit standards or a registered qualification.

Funding: the Skills Development budget and B-BBEE points

This is where the WSP pays for itself. As general guidance:

  • The Skills Development Levy (SDL) is 1% of payroll for employers above the threshold. By submitting an approved WSP and ATR, levy-paying employers can recover a portion through the mandatory grant, and may access discretionary grants for priority programmes.
  • The B-BBEE skills-development target is measured against 6% of the leviable amount — not 6% of payroll — so a well-executed WSP that develops staff, particularly from designated groups, directly supports your transformation scorecard.

So WSP training can do double duty: building team capability, recovering levy spend and earning scorecard points. On tenders, note that the PPPFA 2022 regulations score “specific goals” (such as HDI ownership by race, gender and disability, and RDP objectives) rather than a generic B-BBEE level, and the Public Procurement Act 28 of 2024 introduces set-asides — so a strong skills record can support your bid positioning too. This is general information, not financial or legal advice — confirm specifics with your SETA, SDF or B-BBEE verification professional.

Why BOTI

BOTI (Business Optimization Training Institute) is an accredited South African corporate training provider with 450 courses and a client base that includes Sasol, Glencore and the City of Johannesburg. A WSP rarely sits alone — most clients pair it with related programmes and resources:

Unsure which courses best populate your WSP? Our team can map a learning path that suits your skills gaps, compliance needs and budget.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Workplace Skills Plan (WSP)? A WSP is the annual document in which an employer sets out the training it plans to deliver to staff in the coming year. It is submitted to the relevant SETA, usually with the Annual Training Report (ATR), to access skills-development grants and support B-BBEE points — your training roadmap and the route to recovering part of your Skills Development Levy.

What is the difference between a WSP and an ATR? The WSP is forward-looking — it plans the training you intend to deliver next year. The ATR (Annual Training Report) is backward-looking — it reports what you actually delivered last year. They are usually submitted together to your SETA, commonly by 30 April, and together they unlock the mandatory grant.

How does a WSP help with funding and B-BBEE? An approved WSP and ATR let levy-paying employers recover a portion of the SDL (1% of payroll) via the mandatory grant, and access discretionary grants. The planned training also supports your B-BBEE skills-development scorecard, measured against 6% of the leviable amount — not 6% of payroll. This is general guidance, not financial advice.

Can BOTI deliver the training in our Workplace Skills Plan? Yes. Once your WSP identifies the skills your team needs, BOTI provides the accredited and skills-focused courses to deliver it — in-house, public or remote across Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, Pretoria and nationwide. We document attendance and outcomes so your SDF can report cleanly. Request a quote on 011-882-8853.

Turn your Workplace Skills Plan into delivered training

A WSP is only as valuable as the training that follows it. Request a quote or a free 15-minute callback — phone 011-882-8853 or use the BOTI contact form. Ask for our free Training Needs Analysis template to map your skills gaps before you spend a rand.

Need help building and submitting your Workplace Skills Plan? Explore BOTI’s SETA-accredited courses & learnerships or request a tailored training proposal — rated 4.9 from 649 Google reviews.

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