Three-tier broadcast content approval
Every program template, voice segment and ad pod passes three independent review tiers before it reaches the air — initial → mid-level → final. Fully traceable to the user, the timestamp and the decision. Engineered to meet broadcasting regulator requirements without burying producers in spreadsheets.
How the three tiers work
Each tier focuses on a different failure mode.
Tier 1 — Initial review
Content author / producer self-checks against policy. Catches obvious mismatches before sending up the chain.
Tier 2 — Mid-level review
Independent reviewer (not the author) verifies content against editorial standards and regulator rules.
Tier 3 — Final approval
Senior editor / on-call manager signs off for air. This sign-off is the regulator-facing record of decision.
Role-based access
Authors cannot sign off on their own content. Mid-level cannot self-promote. Permissions enforced at the database, not the UI.
Audit trail
Every decision (approve / reject / revise) tied to user + timestamp + diff. Searchable by content, by reviewer, by daypart.
Regulator mapping
National Radio & TV Administration rules baked in. Internationally adaptable to Ofcom / FCC / ACMA via configuration profile.
Why three tiers, not one
A single-step review tempts approvers to wave content through under deadline pressure. Three tiers force three separate checkpoints with three separate sign-offs — and three separate auditable records. When a regulator asks who approved a contested segment, KAVANA can answer down to the second, with no after-the-fact reconstruction.
Related
Make your audit binder a config file
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