Continuous compliance, before the audit letter arrives.
Weekly scans of your IR website against the regulatory stack. Targeted alerts when something drifts. A quarterly compliance report you can hand to your NOMAD or your audit committee.
What the Monitor scans.
Every page of your IR website, every week, against twelve frameworks: AIM Rule 26, DTR 4, DTR 6, DTR 7.2, UKLR 6, MAR Article 17, WCAG 2.2 AA, the Modern Slavery Act, Gender Pay Gap reporting, SECR, PECR, and the Companies Act stakeholder reporting requirement. Scans cover the structural elements (Rule 26 schema completeness, document archive metadata, governance code statement) and the content elements (significant-shareholders update freshness, retention horizons on archived documents, accessibility regressions, broken structured-data fields).
How alerts work.
When the Monitor detects a drift, the IR lead and the Company Secretary receive an email within twenty-four hours. Alerts are tiered. A red alert means a current obligation is breached, for example, the significant-shareholders block has not been updated in six months and is now non-compliant with Rule 26. An amber alert means a soft deadline is approaching, for example, the AGM document retention horizon expires in thirty days. A blue alert is informational, for example, a new framework version has been published and a re-test is due. Alerts are de-duplicated, so the inbox does not flood when the same drift repeats across weekly scans.
The quarterly compliance report.
Every quarter, the Monitor produces a written report covering: the current compliance status against every framework on the regulatory stack, every alert raised in the period and how it was resolved, structural changes recommended for the coming quarter, and accessibility regressions found and fixed. The report is designed to be tabled at the audit committee or shared with the NOMAD without further work. It is plain English, evidence-based, and signed by Actually AI.
The single most-breached element of Rule 26.
The six-month significant-shareholders update. Rule 26 requires the published shareholders block to be updated within six months of any material change. In our audits, this is the most frequently quietly breached element. Issuers update once on annual report publication, and the next mandatory refresh slips. The Monitor watches the timestamp on this block and alerts the IR lead at the five-month mark, so the update lands ahead of the deadline rather than after a NOMAD query.
How to subscribe.
The Monitor is included as part of the Foundation plus Managed Service tier (£18 to 28k build plus £450 to 750 a month). It is also available as a standalone subscription for issuers who already have an IR site they are not yet ready to rebuild. Standalone pricing is £99 to 249 a month depending on issuer size and the breadth of the regulatory stack relevant to your governance code. We onboard a standalone subscription in two weeks: an initial audit, the first scan run live, and the IR lead introduced to the alerting cadence.
NEXT STEP
Free 30-minute Discovery call.
Go to the contact page and tell us a little about your situation. We reply within one working day.