Review
The review step shows the disclosure in its final document layout before issuance. It is where the issuer confirms that the assembled language reads correctly as a complete record.
Review is not issuance. It is the last opportunity to test the document as a reader will actually see it.
What to check during review
- Whether the main claims are accurate and proportionate.
- Whether disclosures and limitations add the right context.
- Whether the signatory, subject, and any listed systems are correct.
- Whether the document would still make sense to a reviewer reading it later without extra explanation.
Why review matters
Statements that seem fine in isolated fields can read very differently once assembled into a single issued record. Review is where the issuer can catch overstatement, ambiguity, or missing context before the record is fixed.
Making changes
If something needs to change, it should be changed in the draft before issuance. Review is a confirmation step, not the place where the issued record becomes editable.