Compliance Dispositions and Statuses
Krew's platform is built with compliance at its core. Compliance dispositions and escalation statuses help determine how consumers should be handled and whether outbound engagement should continue, be rerouted, or be suppressed.
Understanding the difference between these two categories is important, because they do not behave the same way in the platform.
Compliance Dispositions
Krew supports 9 primary compliance dispositions:
Do Not Call
Do Not Text
Call Attorney
Cease & Desist
Bankruptcy
Disputed
Do Not Email
Deceased
Refuse to Pay
These dispositions are detected during consumer conversations with AI and are then updated accordingly in the platform.
While the system is designed to identify these signals as accurately as possible, errors may still occur in production. Teams should ensure they have appropriate review and operational controls in place for compliance-sensitive workflows.
What Happens When a Compliance Disposition Is Active
When any of the compliance dispositions above are active, the consumer will not be contacted through outbound engagement.
These dispositions function as contact suppression controls and are intended to prevent further outreach when a compliance-related restriction has been identified.
Escalation Statuses
In addition to compliance dispositions, Krew also supports 3 escalation statuses:
Escalation Required
High PTP Required
On Payment Plan
These statuses are used to indicate whether a consumer may require live-agent involvement or whether they are currently associated with a payment-related workflow, such as an active payment plan.
Escalation Statuses Do Not Block Contact
Unlike compliance dispositions, escalation statuses do not automatically prevent outbound communication.
A consumer may be marked as requiring escalation, identified as high propensity to pay, or placed on a payment plan while still remaining eligible for continued engagement.
This is intentional. For example:
A consumer who is on a payment plan but experiencing hardship may still benefit from follow-up communication, such as outreach that provides access to support options or relevant resources.
A high propensity to pay consumer may benefit from continued or even increased engagement.
How to Suppress Contact for Escalation Statuses
If you want to stop outbound communication for consumers with one of these escalation statuses, you should explicitly configure your workflows to do so.
This typically means routing those accounts into the appropriate workflow path and adding logic that blocks outbound engagement.
Escalation status alone is not enough to suppress contact. You must configure workflow logic to enforce suppression.
AI Detection and Operational Review
Compliance dispositions are identified during AI conversations and updated automatically when detected. Because automated classification may not be perfect in every case, we recommend validating your workflow design and ensuring your team has a process for reviewing edge cases, exceptions, or unexpected outcomes.
This is especially important for accounts where compliance treatment has legal or regulatory implications.
Current Limitations
At this time, custom dispositions are not yet supported. Custom dispositions are on the roadmap and are expected to become available in Q2 2026.
Best Practices
Treat AI categorization as assistive, not exhaustive
Maintain appropriate review processes for communications that have operational, legal, or compliance significance
Validate workflow design to ensure contact suppression works as intended
Do not rely on escalation status alone to block outreach
Configure explicit suppression logic in workflows when contact should be stopped
Summary
Compliance dispositions and escalation statuses serve different purposes in Krew:
Compliance dispositions are contact suppression controls and prevent outbound engagement
Escalation statuses are workflow signals and do not automatically block outreach
If you need outreach to stop, make sure your workflows are configured to suppress contact explicitly rather than relying on escalation status alone.