The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) exists to protect personal information across the European Union. In practice, it means companies have to be transparent about what data they collect, why they collect it, and who can access it. That matters more than ever now that so much of work and business happens digitally.
For companies with frontline workers—in retail, hospitality, logistics—GDPR compliance isn't always straightforward. That's where a tool like Ommnio comes in.
The GDPR requires that personal data is handled transparently and only for defined purposes. Ommnio gives companies a secure place to store and manage frontline employee information — contact details, schedules, training records — without relying on personal emails or private phone numbers. That reduces the risk of data leaks and keeps access limited to the right people.
Before the GDPR, each EU country had its own data protection framework, which made life complicated for any company operating across borders. Having everything on one platform makes it easier to apply consistent policies across all locations rather than managing compliance country by country.
The GDPR gives individuals the right to access, correct, delete, or export their personal data (Articles 15–22). Employees can view and update their own information directly in Ommnio and exercise those rights without having to go through HR or IT as an intermediary.
The GDPR requires organisations to be able to demonstrate compliance, not just claim it. Ommnio supports this by logging all data processing activity, tracking who accessed what and when, and maintaining a full audit trail of actions on the platform — which makes a DPO's job considerably more manageable.
Under Article 33, organisations must notify the relevant authority within 72 hours of a breach that affects individuals' rights. Ommnio's access logs and internal security protocols help detect and document incidents quickly, supporting that obligation.
For companies with operations outside the EU, the GDPR places restrictions on how data can be transferred to countries with different legal frameworks. Ommnio's role-based access controls and encryption help limit data exposure and keep transfers within regulatory boundaries.
GDPR fines can reach €20 million or 4% of global annual turnover, whichever is higher. Keeping employee data well-managed and traceable is one of the more straightforward ways to reduce that risk.
Beyond legal compliance, handling employee data responsibly has a practical reputational benefit. Employees notice when their information is managed carefully, and it matters — particularly for companies that rely on frontline workforces where trust between employer and employee is easy to lose.