Go-to-Market Effort Aims to Broaden Compliant Deployment of Microsoft Office 365 in the Financial Services Industry(Smarsh)
Smarsh, enabling organizations to manage the risk and uncover the value within their electronic communications, announced that Enterprise Supervision is now co-sell ready as part of the company’s participation in the Microsoft One Commercial Partner (OCP) program. The enterprise-grade application enables compliance teams to efficiently and effectively review employee electronic communications in support of regulatory compliance obligations and risk mitigation efforts.
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“Global compliance teams are challenged with the oversight of a growing volume and diversity of communications channels. Enterprise Supervision enables them to review more content faster, to eliminate noise and to surface the problematic content that truly merits attention”
Both Enterprise Supervision and the Smarsh Enterprise Archive can be deployed on Microsoft Azure, and both applications have secured OCP co-sell ready status. Smarsh and Microsoft go to market together with these integrated solutions to accelerate the compliant adoption of Microsoft Office 365 (including Microsoft Teams) within the financial services industry.
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“Global compliance teams are challenged with the oversight of a growing volume and diversity of communications channels. Enterprise Supervision enables them to review more content faster, to eliminate noise and to surface the problematic content that truly merits attention,” said Brian Cramer, Smarsh CEO. “Smarsh and Microsoft have a shared vision to bring Azure-powered scale and performance to supervisory review. We are excited to work alongside Microsoft to help the financial services industry solve modern communications compliance challenges.”
Financial services organizations regulated by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) turn to Enterprise Supervision to meet their supervisory review obligations for employee electronic communications. Internationally, similar requirements exist from the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC), the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) in the European Union, among others.
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