Checklist: How to Pick the Right Compliance Screening Tool

04/16/2026

When compliance needs to be your company's priority, choosing the right compliance screening tool is key.

We all agree that compliance is an incredibly important part of your business, right? That’s great. But if you manage risk and compliance at your company, you probably have a lot of pressures coming at you from all sides – be it pressure from the leadership team, time constraints leading to short cuts, or competitive threats. This is where having the right compliance screening tool can be extremely valuable in building and managing your compliance program so that you aren’t caught off guard by potential violations from your customers or suppliers. 

But not all compliance screening tools are created equal. To help, we’ve created a checklist you can use when choosing a compliance screening tool for your business. 

Table of Contents

Do your customers or suppliers have any potential violations?

Chapter 1

The summary

The right compliance tool should:

  1. Cover you from multiple types of violations
  2. Be easy to use and streamline your processes
  3. Give you few or no false positives
  4. Be quick and easy to onboard
  5. Contain reliable data
  6. Give you automated alerts
  7. Seamlessly integrate across your tech stack
  8. Provide unlimited access across teams 
Chapter 1

1. Make sure the tool covers you from multiple types of compliance violations

One of the most difficult parts of compliance is the fact that there isn’t just one part of compliance to be worried about. Compliance covers multiple areas, like:

  •  Fraud and financial crimes
  • Employment laws
  • Data privacy regulations
  • Government sanctions

You could land in hot water for violating the data privacy of your customers just as easily as you could for working with a sanctioned entity. 

Your compliance screening tool needs to cover all the potential risks your business faces. You should look for a tool that provides alerts about:

  • Financial crimes
  • Money laundering
  • Sanctions risks
  • Reputational damage 

And a tool that screens for: 

  • PEPs (Politically Exposed Persons)
  • Legal filings
  • Profiles of interest
  • Adverse media

... Will give you the full picture of your potential customers and suppliers well in advance.  The best compliance screening tool will verify its data by pulling from a large volume of sources. That way, you can make smarter decisions about who you work with.

A woman checks on data on a laptop with monitors around her
Chapter 1

2. Make sure the tool is easy to use and streamlines your existing processes

When you introduce new technology to your business, it can come with a learning curve. Depending on the experiences of your team, that curve can feel more like a mountain. You should remember that the point of introducing a compliance screening tool into your processes is to make things easier, not harder. 

So, what’s the solution? Your compliance screening tool needs to be easy to use and show information in a way that’s easily understandable. 

The tool should:

  • Be easy to learn and use
  • Allow employees to quickly sort through large volumes of compliance alerts
  • Provide reliable alerts
  • Not include false positives

Your compliance screening software should make it easy to do due diligence on a business in just a few clicks. Rather than using multiple platforms or complicated workflows to perform due diligence, look for a compliance screening tool that simplifies the process. 

Chapter 1

3. Choose a tool that results in few or no false positives

When you’re deciding who to do business with, there are some things you need to know. But the most important thing to understand before you sign a contract is whether working with a company will harm your business. In compliance, that could mean:

  • Reputational damage from working with an unethical company
  • Fines and legal fees that come from working with a sanctioned entity

 But what happens if your screening tool matches a company with a compliance violation and gets it wrong?

When your compliance screening tool brings up a false positive, you could be spending valuable time and resources investigating a potential compliance violation that was never actually a problem in the first place.

While it’s usually great to be overly cautious (especially when it comes to compliance), you also want to make sure that your compliance screening tool has the best possible data. That way, you’ll reduce your chances of getting a false positive in a search. Compliance screening tools can do this by:

  • Making sure their data is always up to date and clean
  • Checking for duplicates, aliases, and other information that could potentially confuse the compliance process

Do your research on the data your tool uses – it should be sourced from local authorities and regularly updated.

A woman looks at a clipboard and a laptop in an office
Chapter 1

4. Make sure it's quick and easy to onboard the tool across your company

In our recent research study, 80% of respondents said they currently use a compliance screening tool that provides regular alerts for potential violations by their customers and suppliers. That’s a great start. 

But 20% said they either don’t use a compliance screening tool, or they’re unsure if they do. So, we asked this group about what’s holding them back from using a compliance screening tool and the results were eye-opening. Nearly half (48%) said it was hard and confusing to find information within the tool and 23% were worried it would be too difficult to sift through a high volume of alerts. 

The right compliance screening tool makes the process so easy and straightforward that it cuts down on customer onboarding time. 

The businesses you work with will appreciate the fact that you can onboard them in a matter of hours rather than days. And the sales, finance and compliance teams will appreciate being able to close deals faster and with less risk. I’m pretty sure that makes it a win-win-win-win.

Chapter 1

5. Choose a tool with robust and reliable compliance risk data

At the end of the day, your data is everything when it comes to compliance. Laws and regulations can change quickly. So, your data needs to be:

  • Comprehensive
  • Accurate
  • As reliable as possible

If you’re making business decisions based on outdated, inaccurate or missing compliance data, you’re going to be more exposed to bad actors like fraudsters or people involved in unethical practices. You also run the risk of incurring hefty fines for working with sanctioned entities. 

A study from Accenture found that 52% of compliance experts claimed a lack of data and information about business partners exposes a business to compliance risks. Make sure your compliance screening tool is based on up to date, accurate and reliable data. Look for tools that source data from trusted local authorities and validate it to make sure it’s correct.

A woman shows a man something on a monitor in an office
Chapter 1

6. Make sure you can set up automated alerts

It’s great if your compliance screening tool can verify if a company has potential compliance issues at the beginning of your relationship with them, but what happens after the deal’s been sealed?

Our recent research study found that 50% of the respondents only check their customers and suppliers for compliance violations at the start of their relationship. 

Meanwhile, 18% only do so if they suspect something could be amiss. 

But what’s most worrying is that only 26% of businesses continuously monitor their customers for compliance issues throughout the customer lifecycle. 

If something changes – either in the law or with the business themselves – it could pose new risks to your company. That’s why automated alerts are key for compliance.

For example, you could set up an alert to receive a notification when a new legal filing is on record for a company. That way, your compliance program is always aware of changes and updates, but your employees can save their time for more immediate compliance concerns.

Chapter 1

7. Choose a tool that can seamlessly integrate across your tech stack

Gaps in your workflow can lead to more compliance violations being missed. 

Plus, when it comes time to prove you’ve been running the required checks, having a disjointed workflow makes creating your audit trail more difficult. 

Having compliance data readily available in your tech stack:

  • Eliminates those gaps in workflow
  • Helps your employees make more educated decisions
  • Helps you build stronger, more long-term relationships with your customers and suppliers

When you’re on the hunt for a compliance screening tool, seamless integration is a huge green flag.  Look for a compliance screening tool that uses open API to integrate with your current software. Many tools can integrate with popular platforms like Salesforce, but you should always make sure that your compliance screening tool integrates with your existing processes. 

A man presents data to a boardroom of colleagues
Chapter 1

8. Make sure you get unlimited access to the tool

We’ve talked on the blog before about how important it is to create a culture of compliance in your business. 

Compliance should be baked into everything you do in terms of working with other businesses and sourcing products or services for your own business. The more people that feel responsible for keeping your business compliant, the easier it becomes to stay compliant.

Some compliance screening tools restrict or limit the number of users that have access to the data. But if only a handful of people are able to run compliance checks, it can create a bottleneck in customer onboarding. Your compliance screening tool should have room for everyone – unlimited users means that everyone can be involved in the compliance process. Not only does it contribute to a wider compliance culture, but it also helps speed up your workflow.

Seamlessly run compliance checks on your customers and suppliers

Bill James

About the Author

Bill James, Director, Enterprise Sales, Creditsafe

With over 15 years of experience in finance, risk management and data analytics, Bill James understands exactly what enterprise businesses should be thinking about as they build their corporate growth and risk strategies. Prior to joining Creditsafe in 2021, he spent six years at Dun & Bradstreet as Area Vice President of Finance Solutions and Third-Party Risk & Compliance. 

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