What is Regulatory Compliance

Sustainability attributes are data points or labels that describe how a product supports environmental or social responsibility. These attributes help consumers quickly identify products that align with their values.

Examples

Example What it shows
GDPR compliance for user data The company follows the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation when collecting and storing customer information.
Labeling products per FDA rules Product packaging includes ingredient lists and nutrition facts to meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration guidelines.
RoHS compliance for electronics Electronic products are manufactured without restricted hazardous substances, as required by EU standards.
Meeting sustainability reporting laws The company includes emissions and resource usage data in annual reports to comply with regional climate transparency regulations.

A brief history

Regulatory compliance began as a response to industry-specific risks, especially in sectors like finance, healthcare, and manufacturing, where failing to meet government standards could have serious legal or safety consequences.

As global trade, digital operations, and data privacy concerns grew, so did the scope of regulations businesses had to follow.

Today, regulatory compliance touches nearly every aspect of how companies operate, from product labeling and data protection to environmental impact and supply chain transparency.

Good to know

Regulatory compliance often requires coordination across departments, from legal to product to marketing. Make sure everyone working with product data understands what’s required, where that information lives, and how it gets updated.

Know more

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know which regulations apply to my products?
It depends on what you sell and where. To figure it out:Check country-specific rules like EU CE marking, California Prop 65, or UKCA labeling for each market you sell in.Talk to your legal or compliance team (or hire one if you’re scaling) to identify required certifications, documentation, and disclosures.Use tools like compliance checklists or software platforms that specialize in regulated product categories.
What kind of information counts as “compliance data”?
It can include anything required by law or industry standard, like safety warnings, recycling labels, material disclosures (like BPA-free), certifications (like RoHS or REACH), and more. This info often lives alongside your core product data and needs to be kept up to date.
Do I need to display compliance info on my product pages?
If a regulation says it must be visible to buyers, then yes. Otherwise, it’s still a good idea to include it, especially if it builds trust (like showing “certified organic” or “made with recycled materials”). Always double-check what’s required for each sales channel or region.