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Microsoft Purview vs. VerbaPulse: What’s the Difference in Communication Compliance?

June 16, 2026 · 4 min read

A compliance lead at a mid-size firm already pays for Microsoft 365 E5. Purview is right there in the admin center. So the question comes up in every evaluation we run: if we have Purview, why would we need anything else?

It is a fair question. The honest answer is that the two tools are built for different jobs, and most teams need both because they mean different things.

What Microsoft Purview is built for

Purview is a broad data governance and compliance platform. Its strengths are real, and for the problems it was designed around, few tools match it.

  • Data Loss Prevention (DLP): rule-based policies that detect structured sensitive data such as credit card numbers, national ID formats, and files carrying sensitivity labels. DLP can show policy tips in Outlook as someone writes, and it can block a send outright.
  • Communication Compliance: after-the-fact review of a sampled stream of messages, flagging conduct and regulatory matches like harassment or insider trading language.
  • eDiscovery and Information Protection: classification, retention, and legal hold at enterprise scale.

⚠️ Note what these have in common: they are tuned for categories of data (a card number, a labeled document, a banned keyword) or for review after the fact. That is exactly what a governance platform should do.

🔬 Microsoft positions Purview Communication Compliance around detecting policy matches across communications for later review by a designated reviewer, not around correcting language in the moment for the writer.

Source: Microsoft Learn, Purview Communication Compliance documentation, 2025

Where the language itself falls through

The gap is not data. It is meaning.

A DLP rule can catch a credit card number. It cannot reliably catch a sales rep promising a “guaranteed return,” a manager writing something that reads as a contractual commitment, or a confidential term sheet sitting six replies down in a forwarded thread to someone who never signed an NDA. None of those trip a keyword. All of them create real exposure.

This is contextual, semantic risk, and it lives in how a sentence is written, not in a pattern it matches.

Where VerbaPulse fits

VerbaPulse is not a governance platform and does not try to be. It does one thing: it reads the language as your team writes it, in real time, and flags risk in the moment.

  • Recipient-aware NDA checking. Your signers and their agreements live in the admin panel. When a draft carries confidential content, the recipient list is checked against those agreements while the message is still open.
  • Contextual language risk. Tone, unintended commitments, policy phrasing, and confidential disclosure, judged by meaning rather than keyword lists.
  • Your own rules. Upload your NDAs and policy documents, and VerbaPulse flags language that breaks your lines, not generic ones.
  • No E5 requirement, no IT project. It works inside Gmail, Outlook, and LinkedIn. Setup takes about 5 minutes.

⚠️ It also stays on the writer’s side. The warning appears on their screen and nowhere else. Admins see department-level patterns, never individual emails.

So which one do you need?

If your problem is classifying data, retaining records, and proving governance to regulators at enterprise scale, that is Purview’s job and it does it well.

If your problem is the language your team sends every day, the commitments, the tone, the confidential information headed to the wrong recipient, that is a different control, and it has to arrive before the message goes out. Reviewing a sent message is reviewing history.

Most teams we talk to are not choosing one over the other. They keep Purview for governance and add VerbaPulse for the moment of writing.


Next in this series: why most HR teams still do not measure communication risk, and what they miss by waiting for incidents instead of watching patterns.

See how VerbaPulse flags risk before an email is sent, right inside Gmail and Outlook.

See VerbaPulse in action →
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