If your company has more than one license, someone needs to keep track of your license expiration dates so that you do not let any license lapse. A very few states have licenses that never expire so you only have to keep track of other compliance issues such as annual reports.
If you are in a large mortgage company, you probably have a compliance department and it is their job to keep track of all expiration dates. But if you don't have a compliance department, you need a compliance person. In a very small company, that person might be the owner. Or it might be an administrative assistant. You might even outsource the function to a law firm or company that provides compliance services. I have several clients that just send me all of the compliance paperwork that they receive from the various banking departments and secretaries of state.
I have a calendar marked with all my clients' license expiration dates and also marked about 2-1/2 months before each license expiration date. At 2-1/2 months before each expiration date, I send emails to my clients reminding them that they should be receiving renewal materials from the banking department and that they should forward them to me as soon as they receive them. I start the renewal process as soon as the state permits so that I can get any additional information that is required from the client. For example, in states that require continuing education, the license renewal application asks for details about what courses were taken and who the education provider was.
If you are keeping track of your own license expiration dates, you need to set up your own system so that you get the renewal process completed before the expiration date. In some states, going past the deadline means you pay a late fee. In other states, you might need to start all over with the application process and that can take several weeks, time that you cannot take in any new applications in that state.And who can afford that?
No comments:
Post a Comment