CommunityOne security

Community trust starts with clear ownership and roles.

CommunityOne security is about more than login protection. Boards and residents need durable association records, clear role boundaries, recoverable administration, and payment workflows that stay traceable as volunteers change over time.

Trust path
A calmer control model for volunteer-led operations
1

Role-aware board/member/admin navigation

2

Association-owned records and durable workspace context

3

Dues and receipt visibility tied to community records

4

Document, meeting, request, and announcement continuity

5

Recovery posture guidance for admin redundancy

Association ownership

The community record belongs to the association

CommunityOne is designed around durable community/workspace ownership instead of leaving the operating record trapped under one setup user's personal account.

Review implementation posture
Role boundaries

Board, member, manager, and admin views stay separated

Access is shaped around community role and product context so members, boards, managers, and admins do not all see the same operational surface.

Read the roles guide
Payment path

Dues workflows keep payment clarity in scope

CommunityOne dues paths are positioned around payable balances, provider-confirmed checkout readiness, posted receipts, reminder preference records, and admin visibility without pretending to be a full accounting suite.

Compare payment scope
Security posture

Honest security content should match how associations actually operate.

CommunityOne should not overclaim certifications, enterprise controls, availability targets, or compliance guarantees before they exist. The security posture is practical: safer handoffs, clearer roles, traceable community records, and admin access that is easier to recover when boards change.

Rollout-safe by design

Communities can start with Essentials, Pro, or Complete while keeping the same association-owned context under the surface.

Current and specific

Security language stays grounded in current product behavior instead of making premature compliance claims.

Next move

Review security before inviting the whole community.

Confirm role boundaries, payment visibility, admin recovery, and current controls before inviting residents or choosing a larger rollout.

Next move

Start with the CommunityOne scope that fits first.

Use the same CommunityOne foundation whether the first rollout is Essentials, Pro, or Complete. Scoped starts are fit-guided; the CommunityOne trial remains a guided setup path, not a claim that every account already has an active workspace.