The Compliance Lens: Seeing compliance through real‑world advisor practice
In today’s life insurance landscape, documentation supports more than compliance…it supports you as an advisor. Clear records demonstrate that you have met your obligations to clients and supports the safeguarding of your practice.
Good vs poor documentation
Regulatory examiners expect documentation that allows an independent third- party (Regulator, Insurer, Investigator, etc.) to clearly answer three questions:
- What did the advisor know at the time?
- What options were discussed and why?
- How did the client make an informed decision?
Good documentation answers all three questions. Poor documentation may leave them unclear. The difference isn’t how much you write…it’s whether your records clearly tell the client’s story.
Strong documentation provides evidence of professional advice. ivari offers advisor resources designed to support advisors in capturing client needs clearly, confidently and compliantly.
Demonstrating client‑first advice
Documentation plays a key role in showing that recommendations were based on the client’s needs and circumstances. Records of fact‑finding, needs analysis, product discussions, and rationale for recommendations help show that advice was assessed as suitable based on the client’s needs at the time it was given.
This is especially important when products are complex, when policy replacements are involved, or when a client’s circumstances change. Written notes and signed disclosures provide evidence that clients were properly informed and that decisions were made transparently.
Through a compliance lens, documentation becomes a practical tool that helps support clients, reinforces professional advice, and supports your practice. Clear records show not just what was recommended, but why, reinforcing trust and confidence for everyone involved.
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Disclaimer
This article is intended for general information purposes only and should not be considered specific advice, nor is it a substitute for advice from a qualified professional. The article may contain information obtained from third-party sources. While reasonable efforts have been made at the time of publication to ensure that the contents of this article have been derived from reliable and accurate sources, including third party sources, ivari provides the information “as is” and ivari does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein.
Neither ivari nor its affiliates, officers, employees or any other person accepts any liability whatsoever for any direct, indirect or consequential loss arising from any use or reliance on the information or opinions contained herein.
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