SLA Management - Service Level Agreement Tracking

Track response times, monitor compliance, and automatically escalate overdue cases with configurable SLA policies for whistleblowing reports.

SLA Management

Meet response time commitments and regulatory requirements with powerful SLA (Service Level Agreement) policies. Track compliance, prevent breaches, and automatically escalate overdue cases.

What is SLA Management?

SLA Management in Disclosurely allows you to set response time targets for different priority levels and automatically monitor compliance. When cases risk breaching SLA targets, the system can escalate to senior handlers or send alerts.

Key Benefits:

  • Regulatory Compliance: Meet EU Whistleblowing Directive timing requirements
  • Accountability: Track team response times
  • Automatic Escalation: Overdue cases auto-escalate to leadership
  • Risk Reduction: Prevent cases from falling through cracks
  • Performance Metrics: Measure team performance against targets
  • Whistleblower Confidence: Demonstrate commitment to timely handling

Understanding SLAs

What is an SLA?

A Service Level Agreement (SLA) defines expected response times for different priority levels. For whistleblowing:

Common SLA Targets:

  • Critical: 24 hours (1 day)
  • High: 48 hours (2 days)
  • Medium: 120 hours (5 days)
  • Low: 240 hours (10 days)

Regulatory Requirements

EU Whistleblowing Directive:

  • Acknowledgment: Within 7 days
  • Follow-up: Within 3 months
  • Feedback: Regular status updates

SOX Requirements:

  • Prompt investigation
  • Documented timelines
  • Audit trail of response times

Disclosurely SLA Policies help meet these requirements automatically.

SLA Policy Components

Each SLA policy includes:

1. Policy Name

Purpose: Identify and describe the policy Examples:

  • "Standard SLA Policy"
  • "EU Directive Compliance"
  • "High-Risk Cases"
  • "Enterprise Standard"

2. Response Time Targets (Hours)

Set maximum response times for each priority level:

Critical Response Time:

  • Time allowed for initial response to critical cases
  • Default: 24 hours
  • Range: 1-168 hours (1 hour to 7 days)
  • Recommendation: 24-48 hours

High Response Time:

  • Time allowed for initial response to high-priority cases
  • Default: 48 hours
  • Range: 1-336 hours (1 hour to 14 days)
  • Recommendation: 48-72 hours

Medium Response Time:

  • Time allowed for initial response to medium-priority cases
  • Default: 120 hours (5 days)
  • Range: 1-720 hours (1 hour to 30 days)
  • Recommendation: 5-7 days

Low Response Time:

  • Time allowed for initial response to low-priority cases
  • Default: 240 hours (10 days)
  • Range: 1-720 hours (1 hour to 30 days)
  • Recommendation: 10-14 days

3. Escalation Settings

Escalate After Breach:

  • Toggle: On or Off
  • When enabled: Cases auto-escalate when SLA is breached
  • When disabled: Track SLA but no automatic action

Escalate To User:

  • Select senior team member to receive escalations
  • Examples: Director of Compliance, General Counsel, HR Director
  • Receives notification when case breaches SLA
  • Gains visibility into overdue cases

4. Default Policy Flag

Set as Default:

  • Toggle: On or Off
  • Only ONE policy can be default per organization
  • Default policy applies to all new cases automatically
  • Non-default policies can be manually assigned to specific cases

Creating SLA Policies

Accessing SLA Policies

  1. Navigate to Dashboard > Workflows
  2. Click the SLA Policies tab
  3. Click Create Policy button

Configuration Steps

Step 1: Name Your Policy

Example: "Standard Enterprise SLA"

Step 2: Set Response Times

Critical:  24 hours (urgent issues)
High:      48 hours (serious issues)
Medium:   120 hours (routine issues)
Low:      240 hours (minor issues)

Step 3: Configure Escalation

☑ Escalate after SLA breach
Escalate to: director@company.com

Step 4: Set as Default (Optional)

☑ Set as default policy

Step 5: Save Click "Create Policy" to activate.

Example SLA Policies

Example 1: EU Directive Compliance

Policy Configuration:

Name: EU Whistleblowing Directive
Critical Response: 24 hours
High Response: 48 hours
Medium Response: 168 hours (7 days)
Low Response: 168 hours (7 days)
Escalate: Yes
Escalate To: compliance-director@company.com
Default: Yes

Purpose:

  • Meets 7-day acknowledgment requirement
  • All cases acknowledged within 7 days maximum
  • Critical/high cases get faster response
  • Escalates to compliance director if breach occurs

Example 2: High-Risk Cases

Policy Configuration:

Name: High-Risk Rapid Response
Critical Response: 8 hours
High Response: 24 hours
Medium Response: 48 hours
Low Response: 120 hours
Escalate: Yes
Escalate To: general-counsel@company.com
Default: No

Purpose:

  • Aggressive timelines for high-risk cases
  • Manually assign to legal matters, fraud, serious misconduct
  • Escalates to General Counsel if breach
  • Not default (used selectively)

Example 3: Standard Business Hours

Policy Configuration:

Name: Standard Business SLA
Critical Response: 48 hours
High Response: 120 hours (5 business days)
Medium Response: 240 hours (10 business days)
Low Response: 480 hours (20 business days)
Escalate: Yes
Escalate To: hr-director@company.com
Default: Yes

Purpose:

  • More relaxed timelines for smaller organizations
  • Accounts for business hours (not 24/7 team)
  • Suitable for lower-risk environments
  • Escalates to HR Director

Example 4: Tracking Only (No Escalation)

Policy Configuration:

Name: Performance Tracking
Critical Response: 24 hours
High Response: 48 hours
Medium Response: 120 hours
Low Response: 240 hours
Escalate: No
Escalate To: (none)
Default: Yes

Purpose:

  • Track response times without automatic escalation
  • Measure team performance
  • Review SLA compliance in reports
  • Manual escalation decisions

Managing SLA Policies

Viewing Policies

Desktop View (Table):

  • Name, Critical, High, Medium, Low, Default, Actions
  • All response times visible at a glance
  • Quick identification of default policy
  • Sort by any column

Mobile View (Cards):

  • Condensed card format
  • All key information visible
  • Touch-friendly interface
  • Optimized for small screens

Editing Policies

  1. Click Edit button (pencil icon)
  2. Modify any field
  3. Click Update Policy
  4. Changes apply to future cases (existing cases keep original SLA)

Common Edits:

  • Adjusting response times based on performance data
  • Changing escalation recipient
  • Enabling/disabling escalation
  • Setting a different policy as default

Deleting Policies

  1. Click Delete button (trash icon)
  2. Confirm deletion
  3. Policy is permanently removed

Warnings:

  • Cannot delete policy if assigned to active cases
  • Cannot delete the default policy (change default first)
  • Deleted policies cannot be recovered

Changing Default Policy

To change which policy is default:

  1. Edit the policy you want to make default
  2. Toggle "Set as default policy" to ON
  3. Save
  4. Previous default policy automatically becomes non-default

Only ONE policy can be default at a time.

How SLA Tracking Works

Timeline Calculation

Start Time:

  • SLA clock starts when report is submitted
  • Recorded in UTC
  • Does not account for business hours (runs 24/7)

Response Time:

  • Time to first meaningful response
  • Can be:
    • First message to reporter
    • Status change to "Investigating"
    • Assignment to handler
    • First case note

Breach Time:

  • When response time exceeds SLA target
  • Example: Critical case with 24h SLA breaches after 24 hours, 0 minutes

SLA Status Indicators

On Track (Green):

  • Response provided within SLA target
  • Status: "SLA Met"
  • No action required

Warning (Yellow):

  • Approaching SLA breach (e.g., 75% of time elapsed)
  • Status: "SLA Warning"
  • Prompt handler to respond soon

Breached (Red):

  • Response time exceeded SLA target
  • Status: "SLA Breached"
  • Escalation triggered (if enabled)
  • Requires immediate attention

Automatic Escalation

When escalation is enabled and SLA is breached:

  1. Case Auto-Escalates: Assigned to escalation recipient
  2. Notification Sent: Email alert to escalation recipient
  3. Dashboard Alert: Escalation visible on dashboard
  4. Workflow Log Created: Escalation action logged
  5. Reporter Notified: Optional notification to whistleblower
  6. Original Handler: Remains assigned (dual assignment)

Escalation Example:

Original Assignment: case-handler@company.com
SLA Policy: 24-hour critical response
Time Elapsed: 26 hours
Action: Auto-escalate to compliance-director@company.com
Result: Both handler and director now assigned

SLA Monitoring & Reporting

Dashboard Indicators

Cases Dashboard:

  • SLA status badges on each case
  • Color-coded indicators (green/yellow/red)
  • Time remaining until breach
  • Overdue case count

Analytics View:

  • SLA compliance rate (percentage)
  • Average response time by priority
  • Breach count by team/handler
  • Trend over time (improving/declining)

SLA Reports

Available Metrics:

  • SLA Compliance Rate: % of cases meeting SLA
  • Average Response Time: By priority level
  • Breach Count: Total SLA violations
  • Team Performance: Compliance by team member
  • Priority Distribution: Case priority breakdown

Export Options:

  • CSV download
  • PDF report
  • Excel format
  • Scheduled reports (Enterprise)

Workflow History

View all SLA-related events:

  1. Navigate to Workflows > History tab
  2. Filter by action type: "SLA Escalation"
  3. View breach details and escalation actions

Log Information:

  • Report ID
  • SLA policy applied
  • Target response time
  • Actual response time
  • Escalation details
  • Timestamp

Best Practices

Setting Response Times

Be Realistic:

  • Consider team size and capacity
  • Account for weekends/holidays
  • Match organizational capabilities
  • Start conservative, tighten later

Align with Regulations:

  • EU Directive: 7-day acknowledgment minimum
  • SOX: Prompt investigation requirement
  • Industry standards: Research benchmarks
  • Legal obligations: Consult counsel

Differentiate by Priority:

  • Critical: Very urgent (hours)
  • High: Urgent (days)
  • Medium: Normal (week)
  • Low: Routine (weeks)

Example Progression:

Conservative: 48h, 120h, 240h, 480h
Standard:     24h, 48h, 120h, 240h
Aggressive:   8h, 24h, 48h, 120h

Escalation Strategy

Choose the Right Person:

  • Senior enough to intervene
  • Available and responsive
  • Appropriate for case types
  • Empowered to act

Common Escalation Recipients:

  • Director of Compliance
  • General Counsel
  • Chief Ethics Officer
  • HR Director
  • Head of Internal Audit

Escalation Tiers: For multiple policies:

Standard cases → Manager
High-risk cases → Director
Critical cases → C-suite

Policy Design

Start with One Default Policy:

  • Keep it simple initially
  • Add specialized policies later
  • Measure compliance first
  • Adjust based on data

Create Specialized Policies for:

  • High-risk case types
  • Different departments
  • Regulatory requirements
  • Customer commitments

Avoid Over-Engineering:

  • Don't create too many policies
  • 2-3 policies usually sufficient
  • More policies = more complexity
  • Focus on compliance, not perfection

Troubleshooting

SLA Not Applying

Check:

  1. Is there a default policy?
  2. Is the policy enabled?
  3. Does case have manual SLA override?
  4. Check workflow logs for errors

Solution:

  • Set a policy as default
  • Verify policy configuration
  • Check case details for manual assignment

Wrong SLA Applied

Cause:

  • Manual assignment to non-default policy
  • Default changed after case created
  • Case priority changed after creation

Solution:

  • Cases keep original SLA when created
  • Manually update case SLA if needed
  • Future cases use current default

Escalation Not Happening

Check:

  1. Is "Escalate after breach" enabled?
  2. Is escalation recipient valid?
  3. Has SLA actually been breached?
  4. Check notification settings

Solution:

  • Enable escalation in policy
  • Verify escalation user is active
  • Confirm breach occurred
  • Check workflow logs

False Breach Alerts

Cause:

  • Case was responded to but not marked properly
  • Status not updated
  • Message sent but not logged
  • System timing issue

Solution:

  • Update case status after response
  • Log all actions in case notes
  • Train team on proper workflow
  • Review SLA criteria

Compliance & Audit

Audit Trail

All SLA events are logged:

Tracked Events:

  • SLA policy assignment
  • SLA start time
  • Response actions
  • Status changes
  • Breach occurrences
  • Escalation actions
  • Policy changes

Audit Uses:

  • Regulatory compliance reporting
  • Performance reviews
  • Process improvement
  • Dispute resolution
  • Legal defense

Reporting Requirements

EU Whistleblowing Directive:

  • Prove 7-day acknowledgment
  • Document follow-up timeline
  • Show continuous engagement

SOX Compliance:

  • Demonstrate prompt investigation
  • Document response times
  • Show escalation procedures

Disclosurely Provides:

  • Automated tracking
  • Tamper-evident logs
  • Exportable reports
  • Timestamped evidence

Advanced Features

Multiple SLA Policies

Use Cases:

  • Different departments have different capabilities
  • Specialized policies for high-risk cases
  • Varying customer commitments
  • Regulatory vs. internal standards

Example Structure:

Policy 1: "Standard" (Default)
  - 24h, 48h, 120h, 240h
  - Escalate to: Manager

Policy 2: "High-Risk"
  - 8h, 24h, 48h, 120h
  - Escalate to: Director

Policy 3: "EU Compliance"
  - All levels: 168h (7 days)
  - Escalate to: Compliance Officer

Assignment:

  • Default applies automatically
  • Manually assign high-risk policy to specific cases
  • EU policy for Europe-based reports

Conditional SLA Assignment

Combine with Assignment Rules:

Strategy:

Assignment Rule:
  Category: Financial
  Urgency: Critical
  → Assign to: CFO
  → SLA Policy: High-Risk (manual step)

Future enhancement: Automatic SLA assignment based on conditions.

SLA Pausing

Coming Soon: Ability to pause SLA clock:

  • Awaiting external information
  • Whistleblower unresponsive
  • Legal hold
  • Scheduled maintenance

Currently: SLA runs continuously from submission.

Pricing & Availability

SLA Management is available on:

  • Pro Plan: ✅ Up to 3 policies
  • Enterprise Plan: ✅ Unlimited policies
  • Basic Plan: ❌ Not available

Features by Plan:

  • Pro: Basic SLA tracking, escalation, 3 policies
  • Enterprise: Advanced reporting, unlimited policies, scheduled reports

Getting Started

Ready to implement SLA policies?

  1. Determine Your Requirements:

    • Regulatory obligations
    • Team capacity
    • Risk tolerance
    • Current performance
  2. Create Your First Policy:

    • Use EU Directive template
    • Set realistic timelines
    • Enable escalation
    • Mark as default
  3. Monitor Compliance:

    • Check dashboard daily
    • Review weekly reports
    • Adjust as needed
    • Train team on importance
  4. Refine Over Time:

    • Measure compliance rates
    • Gather team feedback
    • Tighten timelines gradually
    • Add specialized policies

Example First Policy:

Name: EU Whistleblowing Directive
Critical: 24 hours
High: 48 hours
Medium: 120 hours (5 days)
Low: 168 hours (7 days)
Escalate: Yes → compliance@company.com
Default: Yes

Support

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SLA Management ensures you never miss a commitment, meet regulatory requirements, and maintain accountability—automatically tracking every case from submission to resolution.

SLA Management - Service Level Agreement Tracking | Disclosurely Docs