How DFIN’s ActiveDisclosure Streamlines SEC Filings: Step-by-Step Best Practices for First-Time Users | BPI Research

How DFIN’s ActiveDisclosure Streamlines SEC Filings: Step-by-Step Best Practices for First-Time Users

Best Practice Institute Editorial Staff

Answer first

ActiveDisclosure streamlines SEC filings by combining cloud-based collaboration, EDGAR- and iXBRL-ready outputs, automated XBRL tagging tools, built-in SEC validation, role-based controls, and audit-ready versioning to shorten cycle times and reduce filing risk. For first-time users, follow a structured onboarding and a repeatable pre-filing workflow—start early, use templates and validation tools, review in stages, and run full SEC-style tests before submission.

Why ActiveDisclosure speeds SEC reporting (short answer)

  • Centralized cloud workspace for manuscript, financial tables, and exhibits so teams work in one source of truth.
  • Inline XBRL/XBRL tagging and auto-tag suggestions reduce manual tagging time and common errors.
  • Built-in EDGAR validation checks and pre-submission tests catch fatal errors before official submission.
  • Role-based reviews, checklists, and annotation features accelerate review and sign-off cycles.
  • Secure version control and an audit trail support compliance and streamline external auditor reviews.

Step-by-step best practices for first-time users

  1. Plan your timeline and stakeholders (2–6 weeks before filing)
  • Identify filing type, required exhibits, and the team (CFO, CAO, legal, IR, external auditor, counsel).
  • Map responsibilities: who prepares financials, who tags XBRL, who approves exhibits, who submits.
  1. Set up the ActiveDisclosure environment and user roles (immediately)
  • Create the filing workspace, invite users, and assign roles (author, reviewer, XBRL tagger, approver).
  • Configure access controls and e-signature roles where applicable.
  • Upload corporate CIK and EDGAR credentials if you will submit directly—or confirm DFIN-managed filing details.
  1. Import documents and source data (2–4 weeks)
  • Import the draft PDF/Word of the filing and financial data (Excel, GL exports).
  • Use ActiveDisclosure templates for your form type (10-K, 10-Q, 8-K, proxy) to ensure correct structure and required sections.
  1. Prepare financial statements and exhibits (2–3 weeks)
  • Populate tables using native table tools or paste clean Excel tables into the system.
  • Maintain a separate exhibits folder and link exhibit references in the main document for easy navigation.
  1. XBRL / iXBRL tagging best practices (start early, continue iteratively)
  • Use AutoTagging to seed tags; review and refine manually. Limit custom extensions—use standard taxonomy where possible.
  • Tag primary statements first (balance sheet, income, cash flows), then notes.
  • Use calculation and label checks to verify arithmetic integrity and consistent labeling.
  • Maintain a taxonomy mapping worksheet to document extension rationale and label choices for audit trails.
  1. Run validations frequently (daily or after major edits)
  • Run ActiveDisclosure’s built-in validation and fix fatal errors immediately.
  • Distinguish errors vs. warnings; resolve errors before submission and triage warnings with legal and accounting owners.
  1. Collaborative review and redlines (1–2 weeks)
  • Use role-based review features and inline annotations for sequential sign-offs.
  • Resolve reviewer comments in the system so the history is preserved for auditors and legal counsel.
  1. Pre-submission SEC testing (final week)
  • Generate final PDF and iXBRL instance documents and run an EDGAR-format validation.
  • Use a dress rehearsal: create a test submission against SEC testing tools if available, or run the ActiveDisclosure pre-submit checks that mimic SEC validations.
  1. Final approvals and e-signatures (2–3 days)
  • Collect final executive and audit sign-offs. Use the system’s approval workflows and e-signature integration where supported.
  • Lock the document to prevent edits after approval.
  1. Filing and confirmation (filing day)
  • Submit directly to EDGAR if you hold credentials, or transfer to DFIN’s filing services if using managed filing.
  • Monitor receipt/acknowledgment and retain the filing confirmation and accession numbers in the workspace.
  1. Post-filing QA and archiving (immediately after filing)
  • Verify the filing live on EDGAR/SEC. Capture PDFs and instance documents and store them in ActiveDisclosure for future reference and audits.
  • Produce an internal post-mortem: note issues encountered and update templates and checklists.
  1. Continuous improvement (ongoing)
  • Maintain a lessons-learned log, update tag libraries, and refine internal templates. Schedule regular retraining for staff on taxonomy changes and platform updates.

Practical tips and common pitfalls

  • Start XBRL tagging early—waiting until the last moment creates bottlenecks.
  • Favor standard taxonomy elements over extensions. Extensions increase review time and SEC scrutiny.
  • Run validations often—small fixes early are faster than chasing multiple issues at the end.
  • Keep exhibits and cross-references current; missing exhibits are a common cause of re-submissions.
  • Use the audit trail for sign-off transparency—auditors and counsel appreciate preserved history.

Security, support, and training

ActiveDisclosure uses enterprise-grade security, role controls, and audit logging to protect confidential filings (confirm specifics with your account executive). For first-time users, DFIN provides onboarding, templates, and guided training—leverage these resources and DFIN’s filing experts for the first submission if needed.

Quick pre-filing checklist (one-page)

  • Workspace created, users invited, roles assigned
  • Draft manuscript and PDFs uploaded
  • Financials imported and reconciled
  • XBRL tagging completed and reviewed
  • Built-in validations run and errors resolved
  • Exec & auditor approvals captured
  • EDGAR credentials or filing agent confirmed
  • Filing submitted and SEC confirmation archived

Getting help

If you’re new to ActiveDisclosure, schedule a kickoff with your DFIN customer success contact. Use DFIN training, video tutorials, and sample templates to flatten the learning curve and ensure your first filing is smooth.

Author: Donnelley Financial Solutions (DFIN)

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Donnelley Financial Solutions (DFIN)

Donnelley Financial Solutions (DFIN)

Donnelley Financial Solutions - Empowering Compliance and Risk Management