Cookie Policy

UK Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) Compliant.

1. Introduction

Like most professional websites, Precision Forklift Training uses cookies to improve your browsing experience, remember your preferences, and track aggregate site analytics. This document explains what cookies are, how we use them, and your rights to manage them.

What are Cookies?

Cookies are small text files stored in your computer or mobile device’s memory when you load a web page. They assist in retaining user configurations, logging secure session tokens, and forwarding navigation trends to analytical tools so we understand how visitors navigate our resources.

2. Categorization of Cookies We Use

A. Strictly Necessary Cookies (Mandatory)

These cookies are vital for the operational core of our platform. They enable basic security settings, page structures, and let you load contact or quotation forms across the website successfully. They do not store any personally identifiable information.

B. Performance & Analytics Cookies

We collect anonymous statistics concerning which landing pages, RTITB courses, or training guides receive the highest engagement volume. This helps us optimize site performance, ensure quick page speeds, and refine content layout density to better serve on-site warehouse managers.

C. Marketing & Social Cookies

Our platform occasionally links external elements like Google Maps geolocation or TrustPilot reviews. These third-party APIs may deposit cookies to count user views or record visual rendering trends.

3. How to Manage and Block Cookies

You are completely free to restrict, refuse, or purge cookies inside your native web browser instructions at any point. Most standard Web browsers (Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Apple Safari) provide a dedicated “Privacy and Security” settings panel where cookies can be audited or completely blocked.

Please note: if you choose to globally disable cookies in your web browser interface, some features of our site (such as preserving typed fields in the quotation selector or loading embedded maps) might operate with degraded functionality.