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Fabiyan Anik
Fabiyan Anik

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Compliance Shouldn't Be a Fire Drill

Compliance Shouldn't Be a Fire Drill
Every startup founder knows the feeling. Your first big enterprise prospect asks for your SOC 2 report. Or your healthcare client needs proof of HIPAA compliance before signing. Or your payment processor wants PCI DSS evidence before you can go live.

And suddenly you're in fire drill mode.

You scramble to find a consultant. You book an auditor. You spend 3–6 months and $30,000+ trying to recreate evidence that should have been collected continuously for the past year. You pass — barely — and then forget about compliance until the next renewal.

This is how compliance works at most small businesses. And it's broken.

The Problem with Point-in-Time Audits
Traditional compliance is snapshot-based. An auditor shows up (virtually or in-person), reviews your controls for a specific time window, and issues a report. The moment the audit ends, your posture starts drifting.

An engineer removes a firewall rule "temporarily."
A contractor gets access that never gets revoked.
A new service gets spun up without logging enabled.
MFA gets disabled on one account "just for testing."
None of these trip an alarm. They just quietly accumulate until your next audit window — at which point you're scrambling again.

The Frameworks Are Actually Clear
PCI DSS, SOC 2, and HIPAA aren't mysterious or arbitrary. They're specific:

PCI DSS (57 controls): Governs how you handle cardholder data. Administrative policies, physical safeguards, technical network controls. If you process payments, you need this.

HIPAA (37 controls): §164.308 administrative safeguards, §164.310 physical safeguards, §164.312 technical safeguards. If you touch health data, you need this.

SOC 2 (44 controls): All five Trust Service Categories — Security, Availability, Processing Integrity, Confidentiality, Privacy. If you're a SaaS company selling to enterprise, you need this.

That's 138 controls total. The challenge isn't understanding what's required. It's continuously monitoring 138 controls across your infrastructure without a dedicated compliance team.

What Continuous AI Monitoring Actually Looks Like
The idea behind Complytics is simple: instead of an annual snapshot, you get a live compliance score updated continuously.

Here's how it works:

You connect your infrastructure — cloud providers, access controls, logging systems
An AI agent maps your configuration against the relevant frameworks — automatically checking each control
You get a score with a breakdown — what's passing, what's failing, what's drifting
Alerts fire when your score drops — catch that removed firewall rule before it becomes an audit finding
The audit becomes a formality — because you've been collecting evidence continuously, not retrospectively
The difference is posture vs. paperwork. Continuous monitoring means you're always audit-ready, not audit-scrambling.

Who This Is For
This isn't enterprise GRC software. It's built for:

E-commerce startups that just crossed the threshold requiring PCI DSS compliance
Healthcare SaaS companies (telehealth, EHR, wellness apps) that need HIPAA but can't justify a full-time compliance officer
B2B SaaS companies approaching Series A where SOC 2 is table stakes for enterprise deals
If you're a 5–50 person company that handles sensitive data and compliance is still a quarterly fire drill, this is built for you.

The Mindset Shift
The goal isn't to pass audits. The goal is to be the kind of company that never has to worry about audits — because your posture is maintained automatically, not assembled manually.

Compliance as invisible infrastructure. The audit as a formality, not a crisis.
Try Complytics
https://complytics.polsia.app/

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