Limitations and Appropriate Use

This page defines what the Veridon diagnostic score cannot do, what it should not be used for, and how it is most appropriately interpreted. Understanding these limitations is part of using the score responsibly.

What This Page Explains

This page explains four core limitations of the Veridon diagnostic score, the boundary on what inputs the score reflects, best-use guidance, and what the score should not be treated as.

What This Does NOT Represent

This score is not financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell, hold, or allocate any financial asset. It does not constitute guidance on any financial decision. If you need financial advice, consult a qualified financial adviser.

This score does not predict future performance, future returns, or future changes in your financial structure. It reflects a structural snapshot based on the inputs you provided at the time of the review. Past structural characteristics are not indicators of future outcomes.

No score value guarantees any financial outcome. A high score does not guarantee resilience against future financial stress. A low score does not guarantee that difficulties will occur. The score is a diagnostic signal, not a certainty.

The Veridon diagnostic is not a substitute for professional financial advice, legal advice, tax advice, or investment management. It is designed to help you see structure more clearly. It does not replace the judgement of a qualified professional who knows your complete circumstances.

The score reflects only the information you provided in the review. It does not draw on external data, market data, account information, or credit information. If your inputs were incomplete, imprecise, or based on estimates, the score reflects that quality of information.

Core Explanation Sections

Best-Use Guidance

The Veridon diagnostic score is most appropriately used as:

  • A structured starting point for thinking about your financial positioning, concentration, or exposure
  • A prompt to investigate specific dimensions of your financial structure in greater depth
  • A high-level diagnostic signal to discuss with a qualified financial adviser
  • A periodic self-assessment tool to track structural changes over time

What the Score Should Not Be Treated As

The Veridon diagnostic score should not be treated as:

  • A definitive assessment of your financial health
  • A complete financial analysis or financial plan
  • A basis for making significant financial decisions without additional professional input
  • An authoritative benchmark against which other financial tools should be measured
  • A predictor of investment outcomes or financial events

Definitions

Diagnostic signal

A diagnostic signal is a structured output computed from the inputs you provided. It reflects structural patterns in the data you entered. It is not a measurement of an objective external reality.

Structural snapshot

A structural snapshot is a point-in-time representation of the financial structure you described through your inputs. It does not account for changes that occurred before or after the review was completed.

Limitations / Boundaries

The score is bounded by the inputs you provided. It does not extend to any information not captured in the review questions.

The score reflects conditions at the time of the review. It does not update automatically if your financial structure changes.

The score is computed by a diagnostic model. It does not incorporate the judgement of a financial professional, and it does not constitute professional advice of any kind.

Contact and Support

If you have questions about the appropriate use of your diagnostic score, contact us at support@veridon.com.

Last updated: 20 March 2026