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Global Relay

Global Relay

Software Development

Vancouver, BC 67,720 followers

A leading provider of end-to-end communications compliance solutions for highly regulated industries.

About us

Global Relay is a leading provider of end-to-end compliance solutions for the regulated industries. Founded in 1999, Global Relay delivers services to over 20,000 customers in 90 countries, including 22 of the top 25 banks. From the Global Relay App for compliant communications, through to intelligent archiving, superior data connectors, and proactive surveillance, Global Relay’s integrated compliance solutions enable regulated organizations to meet collaboration, privacy, and security requirements.

Website
http://www.globalrelay.com
Industry
Software Development
Company size
1,001-5,000 employees
Headquarters
Vancouver, BC
Type
Privately Held
Founded
1999
Specialties
Message Archiving, Compliance, eDiscovery, IM, Bloomberg, Software-as-a-Service, SaaS, Mobile Instant Messaging, VoIP, Collaboration, Agile development, 17a-4 SEC, FINRA, Refinitiv, Compliant Text Messaging, MiFID II, GDPR, Post-trade Reconstruction, Surveillance, AI, Surveillance, Regulation, and Archive

Locations

Employees at Global Relay

Updates

  • Voice communications are the riskiest channel for regulated industries because they’re often where compliance gaps are the hardest to spot. 🔍 What’s the main voice compliance challenge that your organization is currently navigating?

  • Still honored. Still grateful. 🌟 Being part of the Platinum Club Member for Canada’s Best Managed Companies reflects what we’ve built and reminds us what we’re still building. Thank you to Deloitte, all the program sponsors, and, of course, our entire Global Relay team.

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    21,818,169 followers

    We are proud to announce the 2026 Canada's Best Managed Companies. Congratulations to this year's winners. These are the entrepreneurs defining what Canadian business excellence looks like. Each company was evaluated by an independent panel across four pillars of management excellence: - Strategy - Culture and Commitment - Capabilities and Innovation - Governance and Financials See the full list: https://delo.tt/6042BBxPQp #DeloitteCanada #BestManaged #CanadianBusinessExcellence

  • Is financial regulation entering its Atkins diet era? 💭 As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission shifts focus away from “regulation by enforcement,” many firms are asking the same question: do fewer enforcement actions mean lower compliance risk? Rob Mason, our Director of Regulatory Intelligence, explores what the SEC’s latest enforcement results really signal and why off-channel communications still matter. As enforcement priorities evolve, the expectation to maintain complete, accessible records hasn’t changed. 👇

  • We’re happy to be named a 2026 Platinum Club winner of Canada’s Best Managed Companies. For us, this award reflects more than 25 years of deliberate investment in the trusted technology, and people who make it all possible. Thank you to the entire Global Relay team: this is yours. 🌟

  • View organization page for Global Relay

    67,720 followers

    The compliance landscape for life sciences is at an inflection point, and the organizations pulling ahead are the ones that treat communications monitoring as an ongoing, risk-prioritized necessity. Our VP of Sales for Healthcare and Life Sciences, Jeff Hyre, was recently at the Pharmaceutical Compliance Congress (PCC) with Informa Connect Life Sciences, where the conversations focused on how too many compliance programs aren't meaningfully adapting to change. 📝 The most successful programs continuously adjust to evolving risks by: - Identifying which activities carry the most exposure - Quantifying risk, so it can be tracked and compared over time - Using the tracked data to drive concrete action Mobile device compliance was another defining theme at the conference. Life sciences organizations are still working through whether to restrict communications on personal and corporate devices or allow them with robust archiving and monitoring tech. There's no simple answer, but the pressure to make a decision is mounting. The DOJ's updated ECCP guidance and recent settlements signal clearly that regulators expect compliance programs to perform in practice, not just in theory. Over the next 12–18 months, we expect to see more life sciences firms move decisively toward tech for compliance, particularly for mobile communications and social media oversight.

    Great conversations at the PCC event last week. What stood out most: The life sciences industry is at an inflection point on compliance monitoring. The organizations that are making real progress are the ones treating monitoring as a continuous, risk-prioritized discipline — not a periodic exercise. They're asking the right questions about which activities carry the most risk, making those risks measurable, and then driving actual behavior change from the findings. Mobile device compliance was a recurring theme throughout the conference. The debate between restricting communications and enabling them with proper archiving and monitoring technology is one most organizations are still working through — and the pressure to get it right is mounting. The DOJ's ECCP guidance, and recent settlements make that clear. The next 12–18 months will be telling. I expect to see more life sciences firms move decisively toward technology-enabled compliance — particularly around mobile and social media — as the regulatory environment continues to raise the bar. Proud to represent Global Relay, which is assisting organizations with navigating this risk.

  • Communications in financial services are getting more complex, so surveillance should be getting smarter. 💡 At FINRA's Annual Conference, we're showcasing AI-enabled surveillance capabilities designed to help compliance teams detect risk with improved accuracy and less noise. Visit our Surveillance Command Center in the Mint Room (M4) throughout the conference for a personalized demo to see how we’re redefining surveillance. And check out the latest enhancements to Global Relay Surveillance as well as our vision for the future of communications compliance: https://ow.ly/U5ME50YYm8g

  • Canada's government already has strong digital infrastructure, but conversations like this one are shaping what its future looks like. We recently welcomed two of Canada's Ministers, Evan Solomon and Gregor Robertson, to our Vancouver headquarters for a working lunch with our CEO Warren Roy, plus key members of our leadership team Sahar Kayhani, Kelvin Ng, Eric Parusel, and Tony Meredith. They discussed AI, secure digital infrastructure, and the future of trusted communications in Canada. The conversation also covered how communications data that's captured and archived under Canadian jurisdiction and made AI ready becomes foundational infrastructure for a digital-first government. That framing reflects the work we've been doing for more than two decades. We're glad to be part of what comes next.

    Today, Global Relay had the privilege of hosting Minister Evan Solomon and Minister Gregor Robertson at our Vancouver headquarters for a working lunch on AI, secure digital infrastructure, and the future of trusted communications in Canada. The conversation moved quickly to specifics the use cases where communications data, captured and archived under Canadian jurisdiction and made AI-ready, becomes foundational infrastructure for a digital-first government. As Minister Solomon noted afterward, secure digital infrastructure and trusted communications platforms are becoming essential to Canada's competitiveness in a digital-first economy. That framing matches the work, and it was meaningful to share what we've been quietly building here in Vancouver for more than two decades. Canada's sovereign digital infrastructure isn't only a future ambition in key areas, it already exists. Built here. Owned here. We're proud to be part of building what comes next.

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  • View organization page for Global Relay

    67,720 followers

    An employee uploads confidential client data into ChatGPT, gets a summary, and deletes the chat. Would you ever know? 💭 If you manage communications monitoring or information governance, this scenario should concern you. Watch Erin Clemens, Head of Capital Markets Compliance at StoneX Group Inc., discuss why prompt capture is not only a compliance function but also a data protection, policy enforcement, and risk prevention function. For more exclusive takeaways, explore our latest report, Data Insights: Communication Capture Trends in 2025/26: https://lnkd.in/ehWNp5X4

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