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managing-advertising-compliance

Reviews marketing materials against SEC, FINRA, and state regulatory requirements. Use when reviewing investment advertising, ensuring compliance of marketing materials, or managing ad review.

personAuthor: jakexiaohubgithub

Managing Advertising Compliance

When To Use

  • Reviewing investment adviser or broker-dealer marketing materials before publication
  • Auditing existing advertisements, sales literature, or social media posts for regulatory compliance
  • Responding to a FINRA advertising review letter or SEC examination request related to marketing
  • Establishing or updating an ad review program (new product launch, firm registration change, merger)
  • Evaluating third-party content, testimonials, endorsements, or performance claims under the SEC Marketing Rule

Inputs To Gather

  • Marketing materials under review: advertisements, pitch decks, factsheets, website copy, social media posts, video scripts, seminar presentations
  • Firm registration type: RIA (SEC or state-registered), broker-dealer, dual registrant, or exempt reporting adviser
  • Product/strategy details: asset class, investment vehicle (fund, SMA, model portfolio), fee structure
  • Performance data: gross/net returns, benchmark comparisons, time periods, composite methodology (GIPS compliance status)
  • Existing compliance policies: current ad review procedures, approval workflows, prior exam findings or deficiency letters
  • Distribution channels and audience: retail, institutional, qualified purchasers; public website vs. one-on-one presentation
  • Testimonial/endorsement details: if applicable, compensation paid, material conflicts, required disclosures under Rule 206(4)-1

Workflow

  1. Classify the material

    • Determine whether the piece is an "advertisement" or "testimonial/endorsement" under the SEC Marketing Rule (Rule 206(4)-1) [VERIFY current rule text and SEC FAQ guidance]
    • For broker-dealers, classify as "retail communication," "correspondence," or "institutional communication" under FINRA Rule 2210
    • Identify whether pre-use filing with FINRA is required (e.g., new member firm within first year, options content, CMOs, leveraged/inverse ETFs) [VERIFY FINRA filing requirements for specific product types]
  2. Review substantive content

    • Check all performance presentations: net-of-fee returns required for advertisements; gross returns permitted only alongside net; time periods must be consistent [VERIFY whether extracted performance is shown for 1/5/10-year or since-inception periods as required]
    • Evaluate claims for misleading statements, cherry-picked data, or omitted material risks
    • Confirm that any hypothetical, backtested, or model performance includes required disclosures and is not shown in materials distributed to retail mass audiences
    • Verify testimonials and endorsements include the required disclosures: clearly identified as such, compensation disclosed, material conflicts stated, and the $1M/qualified-purchaser exemption applied correctly if relied upon
  3. Assess required disclosures

    • Material risks of the strategy or product
    • Fee and expense disclosure sufficient for the audience
    • Conflicts of interest (proprietary products, revenue sharing, soft dollars)
    • For broker-dealers: FINRA membership, SIPC coverage, and any state-specific legends [VERIFY state-specific advertising requirements for states where materials will be distributed]
  4. Check formatting and procedural requirements

    • Principal pre-approval documented per firm WSPs
    • Filing deadlines met (FINRA Advertising Regulation Department: within 10 business days of first use, or pre-use where required)
    • Retention of all drafts, approvals, and distribution records per SEC Rule 204-2 / FINRA Rule 4511 (minimum 3-year/6-year retention)
  5. Document findings and recommendations

    • Compile a findings log with issue severity (must-fix vs. recommended improvement)
    • Provide redline or annotated markup of required changes
    • Summarize open items requiring legal or business-unit input
    • Track remediation to completion before clearing for publication

Output

Produce an Advertising Compliance Review Report containing:

  • Material identification: title, version/date, intended audience, distribution channel
  • Classification: regulatory category (SEC advertisement, FINRA retail communication, etc.)
  • Filing status: whether FINRA filing is required and current filing status
  • Findings table: each issue with rule citation, severity rating, and recommended correction
  • Performance review summary: confirmation that returns are presented net of fees, with appropriate time periods and benchmarks, or notation of deficiencies
  • Testimonial/endorsement compliance: checklist of Marketing Rule disclosure requirements met or outstanding
  • Approval chain: record of reviewer(s), approval date, and any conditions
  • Remediation tracker: open items, responsible parties, and target completion dates

Quality Checks

  • Every finding cites the specific rule or regulation (e.g., "Rule 206(4)-1(d)(2)" not just "SEC Marketing Rule")
  • Performance data has been independently verified against source records — do not rely solely on marketing team representations
  • Net-of-fee calculations use the firm's actual highest fee schedule or model fee, not a hypothetical lower fee [VERIFY firm's fee methodology for net performance]
  • All [VERIFY] items are flagged for human compliance officer resolution before the material is cleared
  • Confirm no guarantees or promises of future results appear anywhere in the material
  • Review accounts for both explicit and implied claims — phrases like "proven track record" or "consistently outperforms" require substantiation or removal
  • State-level blue sky advertising rules checked for materials with broad geographic distribution [VERIFY applicable state requirements]