Cookies Policy

Data Controller
David Coomer, Director, SEED Training
Cookies Policy & Privacy Notice
What are cookies?
Cookies are small text files placed on your device to help our website function efficiently and to provide us with aggregate statistical information about site performance.
How we use cookies under the UK Data (Use and Access) Act
To provide you with the best experience, SEED Training utilises cookies categorised into two areas:
- Essential & Functional Cookies: These are strictly necessary for core website features, such as remembering your preferences or maintaining secure logins. These are active by default.
- Performance & Analytics Cookies: We use first-party tools to gather anonymous, aggregate data regarding how visitors interact with our site, helping us make performance improvements. Under the DUAA, these low-risk analytical cookies are active to help improve our services, but we do not share this data with third parties for cross-site tracking.
Automated Decision-Making and Profiling
SEED Training does not currently use automated decision-making or profiling that produces legal or similarly significant effects on individuals. If this changes, we will update this Privacy Notice and provide information about the logic involved, significance and likely consequences of such processing.
Managing your choices and your rights
You can change your preferences or opt-out of non-essential tracking at any time by clicking the link to Cookie Settings/Preferences Manager in your browser, or by clicking on 'reject' in the cookie consent pop-up banner.
Our Data Protection Commitment & Complaints
SEED Training is committed to clear data transparency. If you have any questions or wish to exercise your statutory privacy rights, you can submit a formal inquiry via our info@seed-training.co.uk email address. In accordance with the DUAA, we will acknowledge and respond to all direct privacy complaints within 30 days of receipt.
If you are unsatisfied with how SEED Training handles your direct 30-day privacy inquiry, you maintain the statutory right to escalate your concern to the UK regulatory authority. You can submit a report or seek independent guidance online via the Information Commission Web Portal (ico.org.uk).
