Back

What is a correction docket?

A correction docket is the official record used to correct inaccurate, outdated, incomplete, misleading, or unsafe information. 

Corrections may apply to profiles, titles, employer affiliations, institutional representation, subscription status, Council status, role nominations, room eligibility, public claims, finance-readiness language, insurance-readiness language, project status, SPV-readiness records, sponsor records, Nexus Universe preparation status, or public-facing listings. 

The correction docket should record what was wrong, who reported it, what evidence supports the correction, what correction was made, when it was made, who approved it, and whether any public clarification is needed. 

Correction does not mean failure. In a serious institutional system, correction is part of trust. It prevents outdated or inaccurate records from becoming misleading claims. 

A correction docket is especially important when the error could imply investment interest, insurance interest, public authority support, institutional endorsement, procurement approval, certification, leadership, or Nexus Universe selection. 

A corrected record is stronger than an uncorrected mistake. 

Have questions?