spektr launches spektrQ to embed AI compliance experts in client accounts
spektr launched spektrQ, a new team of compliance experts and AI practitioners built into every enterprise client relationship from day one. The move is meant to help financial institutions identify where AI can deliver the most value in compliance workflows and speed deployment of auditable automation.
Why it matters: - Financial institutions are under pressure to use AI without weakening compliance, auditability or regulatory defensibility. - spektrQ is designed to help clients move from AI interest to actual workflow change faster, with less consulting overhead and less trial and error. - The launch shows how spektr plans to use its recent $20 million Series A to expand beyond software into implementation support.
What happened: - spektr, an AI compliance platform for financial services, launched spektrQ on June 24, 2026. - spektrQ is a dedicated team of compliance experts and AI practitioners embedded into every client relationship from day one. - The team is meant to help compliance teams identify their highest-value AI opportunities and act on them. - spektr said spektrQ is already working with financial institutions today. - More information is available at the company's announcement.
The details: - spektr’s platform is focused on replacing manual compliance operations across KYC, KYB and AML with configurable agentic workflows and AI-powered automation. - spektrQ is not positioned as a support desk or a post-sale services add-on. - The team works with compliance and operations leaders to identify where AI can create tangible value, decide which workflows to address first, configure agents for the client environment and support deployment after go-live. - The initiative is led by Andreas Jørck, formerly of BCG. - Jørck specializes in compliance transformation and AI strategy. - Jørck will work directly with leaders to map workflows, stress-test assumptions and build the case for where to start. - spektr said banks and other enterprise financial institutions have often spent months and large consulting budgets mapping how new technology fits into legacy compliance stacks before implementation begins. - With spektrQ, compliance teams can target workflows including sanctions screening, false-positive reduction, KYB onboarding and ongoing due diligence. - Every workflow is built to be fully auditable, highly configurable and aligned with client risk policies and regulatory obligations. - spektr is headquartered in Copenhagen, with offices in London and Iași.
Between the lines: - The launch reflects a broader shift in enterprise AI: the hardest problem is often not the model, but the operating model around it. - Compliance is especially difficult because institutions must account for fragmented systems, personal accountability, risk calibration and records that may need to stand up to review years later. - By putting specialists inside the client relationship from the start, spektr is trying to sell implementation certainty, not just software. - CEO and Co-founder Mikkel Skarnager said the company maps workflows before a single agent ships and builds the roadmap with the client. - Skarnager also said the team has spent years deploying AI in production compliance environments and knows the difference between work that looks automatable and work that actually is.
What's next: - spektrQ will focus on identifying the first AI use cases that can deliver measurable value in a client’s compliance environment. - The team will continue helping clients configure workflows and support deployment long after go-live. - spektr will likely use the new offering to deepen enterprise relationships as it scales its platform following the Series A funding round.
The bottom line: - spektr is betting that the fastest path to AI adoption in compliance is not more software alone, but a built-in team that helps customers decide where to start and how to execute safely.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
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