GCs don't ask for your compliance documents when it's convenient. They ask when it's urgent. A CMA file means you're ready before they call.
It's not a formal accounting term. It's not in any textbook. But every sub who's been in the field long enough has a version of it, whether it's a manila folder in the truck, a drawer in the office, or a zip file on a laptop that hasn't been updated since last renewal season.
A CMA file is the collection of compliance documents you keep organized and current so that when a GC, a project owner, or an insurance auditor asks for proof of anything, you hand it over in minutes, not days. The name says it all. You're covering yourself.
Every GC has slightly different requirements, but the core set is the same across the industry. If you have these organized and current, you can respond to 90% of compliance requests same-day.
Your COI is the most requested document in construction. It proves you carry general liability, auto, and umbrella coverage. GCs need to be listed as additional insured on your policy. Every GC. Every job.
Tax ID form. The GC's accounting department needs it before they can issue your first payment. One form, rarely changes, but if you don't have it ready, you're waiting an extra pay cycle.
Proof that your company is legally registered and that you hold the specific trade license for the work (plumbing, electrical, HVAC, fire protection). Some states require both a state and local license.
Proves your employees are covered if they get hurt on the job. GCs are liable if an uninsured sub's worker is injured on their site. No workers' comp certificate, no work.
Beyond those four, GCs may also ask for OSHA 10/30 cards, EMR (experience modification rate) letters, bond documentation, drug-free workplace policies, vehicle insurance for on-site trucks, and signed safety acknowledgment forms. The more GCs you work with, the wider the set gets.
The most common CMA failure isn't missing a document. It's having one that expired without you noticing. Your COI renewed in March, but you sent the old certificate to a GC in April. Their system flagged it. Now your draw is on hold until you send the updated version, and their AP team processes holds on a weekly cycle. That's a week of cash flow gone because of a piece of paper you already had.
Multiply that across three or four GCs who each have a copy of your insurance on file, and a single renewal becomes a chase. Did you send the updated COI to Turner? To Brasfield and Gorrie? To the local GC running the strip mall? If you can't answer that in 10 seconds, your CMA system is broken.
Not a truck glove box. Not three different email threads. One location where every compliance document for every GC relationship is accessible, organized, and searchable. When a GC calls, you open one screen, not five folders.
Your COI expires every 12 months. Your trade license renews every 2 years. Your OSHA cards have their own cycle. You should not be the one remembering these dates. The system watches them and tells you 30 days before something lapses, with enough time to renew and distribute.
When you renew a document, you need to know every GC who has the old version so you can send the update proactively. Not reactively, after they flag it. Proactively, before their compliance system even checks. That's the difference between a sub who's organized and a sub who's scrambling.
Nobody got into plumbing or electrical work because they love filing insurance certificates. But the subs who stay busy, who keep getting called back by GCs, who never have a payment held for paperwork issues, are the ones whose compliance is airtight. The GC doesn't have to chase them. The documents are current. The COI lists the right additional insured. The W-9 is already on file.
That's what STUDD was built to handle. Upload your documents once. Set the expiration dates. STUDD tracks every GC who has a copy, alerts you before anything expires, and connects your compliance status to your invoicing so you can see if a payment hold is coming before it hits.
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