Entity management requires expert knowledge in jurisdictional differences, cultural customs, and ways of doing business. While many corporate legal departments leverage technology in day-to-day operations, many are failing to take advantage of entity management solutions that are currently available.
What is entity management? Finding a best-in-class solution
What is entity management?
Entity management refers to the responsibilities and obligations that an organization has for its legal business entities with regard to the owners, government regulations, and other stakeholders. Proper management of these entities is crucial to the success of an organization.
A complete entity information management solution provides the capability to work from one central repository to help ensure compliance and support transactions. From the corporate secretary to paralegals to auditors, an entity management solution benefits each part of a business.
Entity management needs may differ depending on the type of company. Public companies may have different requirements than private companies, for example. Companies with federal regulations will have additional information that they need to track. Entity management will be based on the information that is the foundation of a particular company and the compliance regulations that they must abide by.
Why is entity management important?
Entity management is important for several reasons, especially in business and organizational contexts:
Legal compliance: Proper entity management ensures that a company or organization complies with all relevant laws and regulations. This includes maintaining accurate records, filing necessary documents with government authorities, and adhering to reporting requirements.
Risk mitigation: Effective entity management helps mitigate risks associated with legal, financial, and operational aspects of the business. It ensures that the entity is structured and managed in a way that minimizes exposure to liability, protects assets, and enhances overall risk management strategies.
Operational efficiency: Well-managed entities typically operate more efficiently. Clear organizational structures, defined roles and responsibilities, and streamlined processes contribute to smoother operations and better decision-making. This efficiency can lead to cost savings and improved productivity.
Transparency and accountability: Good entity management promotes transparency within the organization and accountability among stakeholders. It ensures that shareholders, directors, officers, and other relevant parties have access to accurate information about the entity's activities, financial health, and performance.
Entity management challenges
Global growth is a driving force for change across legal departments. As the business scales and more jurisdictions come into play, entity management becomes increasingly challenging.
Companies are often composed of any number of subsidiary entities — all of which must be managed to ensure proper compliance and governance. Many of these associated tasks are extremely mundane but necessary. Any failure to perform these functions can lead to penalties and business disruption.
This problem is compounded by jurisdictional differences in the way laws are administered, such as customs and regulations in specific industries, as well as constant regulatory changes. These all contribute to an exponential growth in complexity.
Another challenge is data accuracy. The process of manual data entry is prone to error, and individuals may be asked to input and maintain over 100 unique data fields on a single entity.
Unlike with contract management, the knowledge required for entity management can’t be easily distilled into software. When it comes to the nuances in overseeing entities between jurisdictions, as well as the need to keep up with changing regulations, even skilled in-house teams can struggle with entity management.
How best-in-class entity management can transform operations
The right entity management solution can help your company achieve several mission-critical objectives.
First, such a solution fulfills the need for accurate, up-to-date information on your business entities. Having standardization processes helps to ensure data integrity and reduce risk by eliminating repetitive, manual, inputting of data. Additionally, the work is underpinned by the support of local experts who can update information and process it in the system to reflect changes in jurisdictional requirements. You can have confidence that your entity data is not only complete but current.
An entity management system can also foster departmental cross-collaboration. Given the large number of stakeholders who may need access to data — tax and finance departments, auditors, general counsel, corporate secretary, paralegals, and finance, for example — facilitating close collaboration and data accessibility are important objectives. Data accessibility also plays an essential role in supporting transactions. Having accurate entity data furnished promptly can have a huge impact on whether a deal goes smoothly.
Finally, adopting the right entity management system enables the creation of a database of record — a resource that allows multiple stakeholders to access the same data source. In other words, it becomes a single source of truth for corporate records.
Examples of why entity management is important
Here are some examples of where companies have achieved greater efficiencies with an entity management solution:
- Seamless integration of filings and transactions with a central system of record
- Additional bandwidth created by the inclusion of a managed service team into the entity workflow
- Shifting employees from data inputters to data managers
- Documenting corporate actions and other entity-driven events
- Reduced time for updating data in your central system of record
- A central communication point to receive and document information from entities around the globe
- Easy and secure distribution of information to relevant teams within your organization
What to look for in an entity management solution
The expertise and willingness of your chosen vendor to provide ongoing support beyond implementation play an important role in keeping you current with industry best practices. Carefully assess the vendor’s capabilities, infrastructure, and adherence to security and quality standards. Ask about their track record for successful system implementations, training programs, as well as their handling of complex or unexpected situations.
Look for data management that gives you the most flexibility, and that can automate as many routine processes as possible. For example, a system that integrates your entity data with jurisdictional rules and tools will automate compliance tasks. The ability to access your data from multiple perspectives — for example, by ownership, locations, and time frame — helps you quickly respond to internal requests for information.
An entity management system fuels many corporate activities with vital information, so another key area to assess is how well the system can drive timely, secure collaboration across your organization. Good indicators of this include the ability to allow an unlimited number of users, and whether the system offers robust and flexible reporting capabilities.
Once the vendor meets these baseline criteria, next assess for level of support, quality of data management, and ease of use.
Conclusion
Entity management is a central function of corporate governance for compliance professionals. Technology, plus industry expertise and world-class service, can help you manage, access, and share corporate data at a moment’s notice. Consider evaluating your own entity management practices to see whether an entity management solutions provider can streamline your compliance and governance processes.
Learn more
To learn more about how CT can help you navigate your entity management needs, contact a CT Corporation specialist today.