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Emojis. Once a playful sentence garnish for messages between friends, they’ve now infiltrated business communications, from Slack to Teams, SMS and even emails. And while they may seem harmless, they’re a growing compliance risk that most firms aren’t equipped to handle.
In regulated industries, every piece of communication — every “thumbs up” 👍, every “fire” 🔥, even the occasional “crying laughing” 😂 is now under compliance scrutiny. Regulators are aware that these tiny symbols can carry big implications. Their challenge is understanding what’s being said when a single emoji can mean different things depending on the context, the sender, and even the recipient’s mood. Compliance teams can no longer afford to handle digital shorthand in a world where intent matters.
🚦 Why Compliance Teams Can’t Ignore Emojis Anymore
For years, compliance teams have focused on text-based communications, but in 2025, the way we communicate at work has shifted. Conversations happen in short, snappy messages, often sprinkled with emojis. Regulators have taken notice.
Overlooking emojis as ornamental message dressing is over. Like a skilled boxer in silk gloves, emojis land an emphatic punch, and compliance teams that ignore them do so at their own peril.
🤷♂️ The Problem? Emojis Are Subjective
The real challenge isn’t just tracking emoji usage—it’s understanding what they actually mean.
For compliance teams, manually decoding emojis across thousands—sometimes millions—of messages isn’t just difficult - it’s unfeasible.
📱 AND YET - For Gen Z, Emojis May Actually be the Solution
A recent survey from software development company Atlassian found that over 1/3 of global respondents waste 40+ hours per year figuring out unclear workplace communication - that's more than an entire workweek.
The report suggests that adding more emotion to written communication could be the key to improving productivity. Teams that incorporate emotional expression into their messages and daily interactions are three times more likely to be “highly productive.”
Emojis are a double-edged sword, helping and entertaining some while impeding and irritating others.
💡 Best Practices for Emoji Compliance
Your employees are going to use emojis – the shortcut is ingrained into their everyday lives – so rather than trying to ban them, it's better to set some ground rules:
🚫 Define what’s off-limits. Some emojis have clear compliance risks (looking at you, Mr eggplant). Make it clear to your team what’s acceptable in a professional setting.
📚 Train employees to use emojis responsibly. Ensure your teams understand that emojis, like any other form of communication, can be misinterpreted.
📊 Use tech to eliminate guesswork. Modern communications supervision solutions remove the ambiguity from monitoring emojis, so compliance teams can focus on the risks that really matter.
🤖 Leveraging Technology for Smarter Emoji Compliance Monitoring
Understanding and monitoring emoji use at scale requires advanced technology. Modern communications supervision solutions can help by:
Organizations that embrace technology-driven compliance strategies can better navigate the complexities of digital communication while maintaining efficiency and employee morale.
🔮 Emoji-onal Intelligence: Using Emojis to Your Advantage
The rise of emojis in professional settings underscores the evolving nature of workplace communication. As regulators continue to recognize their impact, compliance teams must adapt their strategies to keep pace.
Rather than struggling with manual oversight, organizations can leverage compliance technology to interpret and flag digital intent with accuracy and efficiency, while providing maximum contextual insight.
By proactively addressing these challenges, businesses can ensure they remain compliant while fostering a streamlined, modern communications culture – one in which boomers and Gen Z employees can interact compliantly and coexist peacefully!
This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author.
Ivan Nevzorov Head of Fintech Department at SBSB FinTech Lawyers
07 March
Kate Leaman Chief Analyst at AvaTrade
06 March
Oleg Stefanet Chief Risk Officer at payabl.
Jamel Derdour CMO at Transact365 - www.transact365.io
04 March
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