The Information Management competency involves the secure and timely delivery of legal insurance documents (like the OAP 1 or a Policy Certificate) to the consumer. Under Ontario Regulation 991, a broker is obligated to deliver these documents within 21 days of the transaction.
Standard delivery methods (A, B, and C) all involve a "sender-to-recipient" communication where a human (the insured) receives a readable version of the document. Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) (D), however, is a technical process used for "computer-to-computer" exchange of information in a standardized format. In the insurance industry, EDI is used primarily between the brokerage's management system (BMS) and the insurance company’s portal to transmit policy data, updates, and billing information without manual entry.
EDI is not a method for delivering a policy to an insured person because the data is typically in a coded format (like AL3 or XML) that is not readable by a layperson. The RIBO Level 1 Blueprint requires brokers to understand the tools of their trade. While a broker uses EDI to process a policy change with the carrier, they must then use a traditional delivery method (like a secure email or physical mail) to provide the actual Certificate of Insurance to the client.
This technical distinction is important for Legal and Regulatory Compliance. A broker who "processes" an EDI transaction but fails to send the paper or PDF copy to the client has not fulfilled their duty of document delivery. Understanding how information flows through the insurance value chain ensures the broker maintains accurate Client Files and follows the provincial standards for consumer communication, as outlined in the RIBO Competency Profile.