(As performance and client reporting teams — and other internal groups — gear up to comply with the SEC Marketing Rule, Form ADV, and Reg BI, they will welcome the end of data silos, says Rab Govil, CEO and founder of Naehas, a provider of customer engagement and compliance automation solutions. Govil, who has been an investor and founder in several marketing and software companies, recently answered questions from FTF News about silos and more. Naehas is also a sponsor of the FTF Performance Measurement & Client Reporting event taking place in NYC on Feb. 29th)
Q: First, could you please tell us how Naehas got started and what the name of the company means?
A: Naehas is a leading customer experience platform purposely built for financial services. We are always striving to create value for our customers. Our sole purpose for existing is to help financial services companies to deliver exceptional customer experiences. We do this by delivering personalized products, pricing, offers, disclosures, and customer communications faster and more efficiently while reducing risk.
I founded the company in 2006 and named it after my daughter, Neha.
Q: What are some of the essential first steps that firms need to take to address the pain points of the SEC Marketing Rule? What changes should a firm consider as far as the management and delivery of disclosure content? What about tracing and auditing the content?
A: The SEC Marketing Rule introduces new challenges for U.S. financial market participants, particularly in the management and delivery of disclosure content, as well as the tracing and auditing of content in scope for the rule.
To effectively address these pain points, firms should consider the following essential first steps:
Centralized System of Record: This system serves as a single source of truth, reducing risk and ensuring consistency across all materials. A centralized repository simplifies the management and retrieval of disclosures, which is essential for maintaining compliance with the SEC Marketing Rule.
Lifecycle Management: Firms should implement a standardized approach to manage the entire lifecycle of disclosures, from creation to distribution and archiving. This includes establishing clear processes for drafting, reviewing, approving, updating, and retiring disclosure documents.
Auditability and Transparency: To maintain regulatory trust, solutions that offer complete auditability, traceability, and transparency are necessary. This means having systems in place that can track changes, approvals, and publication history, providing a clear audit trail for regulators.
Automation: Automating the deployment of disclosures across all channels can drive consistency and accuracy. Automation tools can help ensure that the correct version of a disclosure is used every time, reducing the risk of human error and non-compliance.
Speed to Market: Firms need to be agile, with the capability to swiftly revise and distribute disclosures to stay compliant with regulations.
Stakeholder Experience: Improving the experience of stakeholders involved in the disclosure change management process is also key. Automation and a unified user interface streamline workflows, reduce manual tasks, and enhance collaboration among compliance, marketing, legal, and other teams involved in the process.
Q: What kinds of IT, workflow, and data management changes would help performance measurement and client reporting teams to meet the firm’s SEC marketing rule requirements?
A: The focus should be on enhancing compliance and efficiency through technological and procedural updates.
The SEC’s rule, which consolidates and updates previous advertising and cash solicitation rules, emphasizes the need for accurate and compliant presentation of performance results, the use of testimonials and endorsements, and the inclusion of hypothetical performance under certain conditions.
To align with these requirements, firms should consider the following changes:
Q: Could you explain how Naehas integrates with client reporting platforms and systems? How do you work with firms that use their own systems to support client reporting?
A: The Naehas Disclosure Management solution integrates with client reporting platforms and systems to produce various client-facing materials such as company and product-related website content, marketing offers, product and service offerings, fund factsheets, pitch decks, and all other forms of client and performance reporting.
The integration process involves several key components and features:
For firms that prefer to use their own systems, Naehas offers:
Q: Another SEC requirement is the two-part Form ADV, which requires disparate data to be gathered for compliance. How difficult are the issues that firms encounter when complying with Form ADV?
A: Complying with the Form ADV requires automating and consolidating financial information, advisor disciplinary history, products, pricing, advisor business practices, conflicts of interest, and operational data. This requires sophisticated systems capable of handling different data formats and structures.
Ensuring the accuracy and consistency of the collected data is paramount, as it involves validating the data against multiple sources and maintaining it over time, especially in dynamic environments where information changes frequently.
Integrating various systems for automating data collection and consolidation can be technically challenging and may require substantial IT resources.
The data collected must also be compliant with SEC regulations, adding a layer of complexity.
Given the sensitive nature of much of the required data, firms must also ensure that their data consolidation and automation practices adhere to strict security and privacy standards to protect client information.
Q: Yet another SEC rule, Regulation Best Interest (BI), is proving to be contentious among firms. Can you discuss the Compliance Obligation to establish, maintain and enforce, written policies and procedures? Are there other aspects that are burdensome?
A: Reg BI presents several disclosure challenges:
Q: What are some other aspects of Reg BI that can be burdensome for firms?
Q: Lastly, are data silos within firms coming down? If so, why is this happening?
A: Yes, data silos that have traditionally hindered disclosure and compliance within firms are indeed coming down. This shift is happening due to several compelling reasons:
To effectively dismantle data silos, firms are taking steps such as adopting integrated data management platforms that can handle diverse data types and sources, fostering a culture of collaboration, investing in training and change management, and implementing data governance frameworks.