
Compliance has traditionally been assessed through periodic testing.
Controls are reviewed quarterly. Evidence is gathered before audits. Issues are discovered after exposure has already occurred.
Continuous compliance monitoring changes that model.
It treats compliance as an ongoing operational state rather than a periodic event.
Why periodic compliance testing falls short
Periodic models:
- miss intraday or emerging issues
- rely heavily on manual evidence collection
- create audit-season stress
They are backward-looking by design.
What continuous monitoring enables
Continuous models:
- track controls in near real time
- surface deviations early
- reduce surprises during audits
This aligns compliance oversight with how modern financial systems actually operate.
How automation makes it possible
Automation:
- embeds compliance checks into workflows
- monitors thresholds continuously
- logs evidence automatically
Without automation, continuous monitoring overwhelms teams.
Regulatory perspective
Supervisors increasingly expect:
- proactive oversight
- early identification of control weaknesses
- demonstrable monitoring between reviews
Continuous compliance supports those expectations.