Digital signatures are now widely used across regulated industries. Legal firms, financial advisers, education providers and healthcare organisations are all moving away from paper-based processes in favour of faster, more efficient digital workflows.
But not all digital signature solutions are created equal.
In many cases, what works for simple agreements falls short when applied to regulated environments - where compliance, auditability and accountability matter just as much as speed.
This is where problems start to appear.
It’s easy to assume that once a document is signed digitally, the job is done.
But in regulated sectors, a signature is only one part of the picture.
What really matters is:
Without this, a signature on its own can quickly lose value.
Many tools record that a document was signed, but not the full context around it.
In regulated environments, that context is critical. You may need to show:
If this information isn’t available, it becomes much harder to demonstrate compliance.
A signed document tells you that something happened, but not how it happened.
For example:
Without visibility into the interaction, these questions are difficult to answer.
In many cases, organisations rely on the assumption that processes were followed correctly.
But in regulated sectors, assumptions are not enough.
If a decision is challenged - whether internally, by a regulator, or in a legal setting - you need to be able to provide clear, verifiable evidence of what took place.
Not all digital signature tools are designed with regulated industries in mind.
A solution that works well for basic agreements may not meet the requirements of:
Using the wrong tool can introduce risk, even if the process appears efficient on the surface.
To support compliance and reduce risk, digital signing processes need to go beyond capturing a signature.
They should provide:
In short, the process should be auditable, transparent and defensible.
Regulated industries are facing increasing scrutiny around:
At the same time, processes are becoming more digital and remote.
This combination makes it even more important to ensure that digital tools don’t just improve efficiency, but also strengthen compliance.
At Videosign, we focus on providing a complete record of the agreement process, not just the final signature.
This includes:
This approach helps organisations move from relying on trust to providing clear, verifiable evidence.
Digital signatures are an important step forward, but they are not a complete solution on their own.
In regulated industries, the real question is not just:
“Was this signed?”
But:
“Can we clearly demonstrate what happened, and stand behind it if challenged?”
That’s where the difference lies.
If you’re reviewing your current processes, it’s worth asking:
If not, it may be time to rethink how your digital signing process works.
👉 Videosign for Legal Services
👉 Videosign for Financial Advisers