The account has, to date, posted 4 answers. Each linked to their product page (not the documentation), and did not disclose their affiliation. Unfortunately, theirs is not the first account to do this; there have been sporadic spam runs to astroturf the company for at least 2 years now. Some of those incidents were very blatantly trying to bypass spam detection, others just pose as developers with a half-way there solution that fails to address the question directly but only shows how their product could be used.
As such, this is not an isolated incident, the company has to work on regaining the trust of the community and train their developer advocates or support engineers to not only post to promote their product. So, what you might be missing here is the wider context.
Note that they have shown that they do know the rules of this site at some point in the past, as one of their dev advocate managed to disclose their affiliation in (most) of their posts. Another account, currently active, discloses their affiliation correctly, and has been doing this since 2015. However, there also have been a number of accounts that we either had to warn about their posting behaviour, or have outright removed as spam accounts.
We have contacted this account to let them know about how our site works.
As to what you can do as a reviewer: if you see any posts in the queue that link to a product, even in a related tag, it is worth your time to check for warning signs:
Is the answer referencing the question asked at all, or are they jumping straight into use product X?
If they do address the question, are they linking to their product page, or to relevant documentation?
A single post by an account that discloses their link in to the company in their profile may be okay, or there may be deleted posts.
The product could have a history of problematic astroturfing; you can check if the product name shows up on MetaSmoke, or you could ask in the Charcoal HQ chat room if there is a known history.
If I wasn't a moderator, if I came across a post like this I'd add a comment to the answer to inform the user of our our disclosure policy. Because this specific case is an audit, that'd reveal the post as deleted already.