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Tue Feb 10, 2026
If you’re working in AML, you already know the reality: most days are alerts, alerts, alerts. The people who grow fastest aren’t the ones who close the most alerts—they’re the ones who can explain risk clearly and escalate correctly.
Here’s a practical workflow you can follow on almost any alert.
Step 1: Clarify the alert “why”
Before you click through five screens, answer:
A good investigator always compares expected vs observed activity.
Step 2: Quick customer risk snapshot (60 seconds)
Check:
You’re building context before interpreting data.
Step 3: Identify the story in the transactions
Most suspicious patterns fall into a few repeatable “stories”:
Step 4: Document like a professional (the note template)
A strong AML investigation note is short and structured:
1) Trigger: What generated the alert (rule + time range)
2) Customer Context: Who they are + expected activity
3) Findings: What you observed (amounts, frequency, counterparties, corridor)
4) Risk Indicators: Which red flags apply and why
5) Conclusion: Clear decision (close/escalate/request info)
6) Next Action: E.g., EDD refresh, RM outreach, monitoring, escalation
Step 5: Escalate with confidence (when to stop “closing”)
Escalation is appropriate when:
Good AML teams protect the institution by escalating early with clean documentation—not by “waiting for the next alert.”
Where most analysts lose marks (and jobs)
How SSDA programs help
Two SSDA programs directly map to this workflow:
Related programs you can link at the bottom:
AML & Financial Crime Compliance Analyst • CAMLA • KYC, CDD & EDD • CAPDA Pro (analytics advantage)

Stanford Skill Development Academy
Stanford Skill Development Academy (SSDA) is a premier global training institution dedicated to bridging the professional skills gap in finance, audit, and compliance.