Standards Dashboards and Site Home
The site-level Standards pages give site managers and compliance officers a single place to monitor adopted programmes, inspect requirement-level health, and review the operational evidence that underpins compliance. The main views are the Our Standards list, the Standard detail page, and the Linked Evidence page.
Our Standards list
The Our Standards page is the home for all standards adopted at a site. It shows a summary strip at the top, a filter and sort bar, and a card for each programme.
Summary strip
The summary strip displays three headline metrics for the site:
Adopted Standards β the number of programmes the site has adopted.
Compliant Requirements β the count of requirements that are currently compliant across all active standards.
Obligation Gaps β the count of requirements that are non-compliant and represent an outstanding obligation.
Filters and sorting
Below the summary strip you can filter the list by status:
All β every adopted or in-progress programme.
Active β programmes that are fully activated and being tracked for compliance.
Adopting β programmes still being configured before activation.
You can also sort the cards by health, name, or updated date.
Standard cards
Each card represents one adopted programme and shows:
A status badge that marks the programme as active or adopting.
The programme version or subtitle.
An optional Required by date.
A compliance or progress indicator.
An Open button to view the full detail page.
For active standards, the card displays a compliance percentage and a RAG health label: On Track, At Risk, or Critical. For adopting standards, the card shows adoption progress rather than a compliance score.
Standard detail page
Opening a standard from the list takes you to its detail page. The page is headed by the programme name and, when available, a description.
Header
The header contains a breadcrumb link back to Our Standards, followed by the programmeβs name and an optional description.
Progress summary
The progress summary card uses a ring visualization and a set of numeric metrics. The exact fields change depending on whether the standard is active or still being adopted.
For active standards the ring is labeled compliant and the metrics are:
Non Compliant β the count of non-compliant requirements. The sublabel reads 1 obligation, N obligations, or In scope depending on the gap count.
Remediating β the count of requirements flagged for remediation. The sublabel is Owner flagged.
Out of Scope β the count of requirements excluded from the programme. The sublabel is Excluded from %.
For adopting standards the ring is labeled ready and the metrics are:
Setup Gaps β requirements that still need attention. The sublabel is Need attention.
Not Started β requirements that have not been configured. The sublabel is Needs setup.
In Progress β requirements that are partially configured. The sublabel is Partially configured.
Ready β requirements that are fully configured. The sublabel is Configured.
Requirements tree
The Requirements card shows the full hierarchy of requirements for the programme. When the standard is active, the helper text reads Review compliance status for each in scope requirement. When the standard is still being adopted, it reads Configure each requirement before activating this programme.
The tree is nested and expandable. Section headers show the requirement code and title, and each trackable requirement row shows its code, title, and a cluster of status indicators. Requirements that are out of scope are visually de-emphasised with reduced opacity and a line-through title; their indicator shows Out of scope. If the programme has no requirements, the tree displays the empty-state message No requirements found for this standard.
Sidebar
The sidebar sits next to the main content and has two tabs: Details and Comments.
The Details tab shows metadata for the programme:
Standard Details
Adoption Parameters
Source
Adopted
Activated (shown only for active standards)
Version
Released
Required By
Grading Mode
Reference
The Comments tab holds discussion and notes attached to the programme.
Linked Evidence page
The Linked Evidence page consolidates all operational records that have been linked as evidence across the siteβs adopted standards. It is the place to review shared documents, schedules, and other records that support multiple requirements.
Summary metrics
When evidence exists, the page shows three summary figures:
Records β the total number of shared evidence records.
Reqs Covered β how many distinct requirements are supported by that evidence.
Need Attention β the number of records whose health is warning, failing, or broken.
The page description reads Operational records used as evidence across adopted standards.
Needs Attention and Healthy
Evidence is grouped into two sections:
Needs Attention β records whose health is warning, failing, or broken. This section is always expanded and uses alert styling.
Healthy β records that are not in a warning or failing state. This section is collapsible and uses success styling.
Each section shows a meta line in the form N record(s) Β· M requirement(s).
Evidence rows
Each row shows:
A title β the file name for uploaded files, or a display label for other record types.
A subtitle β the evidence type label, and for attention rows an appended health message such as Evidence type Β· health message.
A usage count on the right showing how many requirements the record is linked to.
An accent bar that reflects the recordβs health.
Expanding a row reveals a Used by ... panel that lists the linked requirements and offers a button to view the source record. If the record is not linked to any requirements yet, the panel shows This evidence is not linked to any requirements yet.
When the site has no linked evidence, the page shows the empty state No Linked Evidence Yet with a short description explaining that linked documents, schedules, and other operational records will appear there with health and usage counts.
For a focused guide on using the Linked Evidence page, see View site evidence and linked requirements.