Student Results
ISO 19650 is built on a simple idea - information should flow through a project in a structured, accountable way. But bridging the gap between understanding that idea and applying it on real projects is where training matters most. This week's reviews come from professionals who made that transition - from learning concepts like AIR, EIR and information delivery workflows to seeing how they connect to actual BIM project tools and processes.
Three themes from this week's new reviews
- How AIR, EIR and information standards translate into structured digital workflows
- Applying ISO 19650 concepts directly inside a project management platform
- The value of learning principles alongside the tools that implement them
- Structuring project requirements and defining team responsibilities
- Managing information delivery across a project lifecycle
- Building a practical foundation for BIM planning and collaboration
- Centralized data management with built-in verification workflows
- Automated model checking to maintain information quality
- Streamlined handover processes that reduce project risk
When training connects concepts to real workflows
Plannerly's ISO 19650 training is structured around a progression from foundational concepts to expert-level project delivery. What makes this week's reviews stand out is that each student highlights a different part of that journey - from understanding how ISO 19650 requirements map to digital tools, through to using those tools for centralized document management and project handover.
The common thread is practical application. These are not students who memorised definitions - they are professionals who connected the standard's principles to their own work. That is the difference between passive learning and structured ISO 19650 certification built around real project scenarios.
Bridging ISO 19650 theory and practical platform workflows
From AIR and EIR concepts to structured digital implementation
The challenge: ISO 19650 defines clear requirements for how information should be managed on a project - from Asset Information Requirements (AIR) and Exchange Information Requirements (EIR) through to project information standards and delivery milestones. Understanding these concepts on paper is one thing. Seeing how they translate into a structured digital workflow is where the real learning happens.
The outcome: Shantanu Pande completed the Level 2 Information Manager - Advanced course. He highlighted how the course connects theoretical information management principles with practical workflows - showing how requirements such as AIR, EIR and project information standards can be structured and managed digitally. His observation that the course is especially valuable when combined with hands-on platform access reflects the design intent: learning ISO 19650 is most effective when you can apply it immediately.

The Level 2 course is designed to take practitioners beyond the basics of ISO 19650 and into the structured workflows that make it work on real projects. When a student identifies the connection between requirements like AIR and EIR and their digital implementation, it confirms that the training is doing what it should - building competence that carries directly into project delivery. For professionals who want to progress further, the Level 3 ISO 19650 Expert course takes this to the next level.
Building a practical foundation in BIM information management
Clear structure for project requirements, responsibilities and delivery
What professionals need: BIM information management is not just about software - it is about understanding how to structure project requirements, define who is responsible for what, and manage the flow of information from design through to delivery. Getting that foundation right is what separates projects that run smoothly from those that struggle with information gaps and miscommunication.
The result: Igor Snegar completed the course and described it as a clear and practical introduction to BIM information management. His review highlights exactly the fundamentals that matter most - structuring project requirements, defining responsibilities, and managing information delivery in a structured way. These are the core capabilities that BIM and information management training should develop.
When a practitioner singles out requirements structuring, responsibility definition and information delivery as key takeaways, it points to a course that is covering the right ground. These are not abstract concepts - they are the day-to-day capabilities that BIM managers need to run a project effectively. Igor also noted the course is a good starting point for anyone looking to strengthen their BIM management skills, which aligns with how Plannerly's training pathway is designed - accessible entry, with clear progression routes ahead.
Centralized data, automated checks and streamlined handover
Using Plannerly for end-to-end project information management
The project reality: On any BIM project, information needs to be centralized, verified and handed over in a controlled way. ISO 19650 sets out the framework for this, but the practical challenge is having a platform that makes centralized document management, automated verification and clean handover processes straightforward - not an additional administrative burden on the delivery team.
The experience: Ramanand Vishwakarma completed the training and highlighted specific capabilities that matter on live projects - centralized data management, built-in verification workflows, and an automated modelling checking system that maintains information quality. He also pointed to the handover process as a key benefit, describing Plannerly as very useful for project management and handover. These are exactly the outcomes that Plannerly's accountability and documentation tools are built to deliver.
The features Ramanand highlights - centralized data, automated checks, clean handover - are the practical building blocks of ISO 19650 compliance. When a student finishes training and can immediately identify how the platform supports each of these workflows, it confirms that the learning has connected. For teams looking to implement these capabilities on their own projects, Plannerly's full training catalogue provides the structured pathway from understanding the concepts to applying them in practice.
What these reviews tell us about effective ISO 19650 training
Theory becomes valuable when it connects to practice
These three professionals came to Plannerly's training from different starting points: one focused on how ISO 19650 requirements like AIR and EIR translate into digital workflows, one on building a solid foundation in BIM information management, and one on using Plannerly for centralized data management and project handover. All three left with practical knowledge they could apply immediately.
That progression - from understanding ISO 19650 concepts to applying them through structured workflows and project tools - reflects how Plannerly's training is designed. The goal is not to teach the standard in isolation, but to connect every concept to the workflows and tools that make it work on real projects.