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Innovation in Compliance

Innovation in Compliance-Part 5: The Supply Chain Efficiency Premium

Today we conclude our five-part podcast series on an innovative approach to managing third party risk we consider how to use this information going forward. I have been joined by James H. Gellert, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Rapid Ratings International Inc. (RapidRatings), the sponsor of this special series. Our conversation has been on helping companies manage their third-party supply chains through financial health. The RapidRatings approach is incredibly innovative, with a series of products and services that should be considered by the compliance practitioner. In our final episode, we discuss the supply chain efficiency premium.

I began by asking Gellert the following: What is the ability of the compliance procurement, credit professional and other cross functional areas to have seamless communication of their data analytics and findings? Obviously, this is vitally important with a hindrance of siloed information across those different business units. He stated, “what we are finding is the most evolved and sophisticated risk management programs are making sure that each one of those areas that may touch on risk is in some form or another connected with the others on findings, so there’s efficiency in that process”; from the Chief Information Officer (CIO) to the Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) to the Chief Financial Officer (CFO).
This means that data and analytics should be shared across business units to benefit from the supply chain. Continuous monitoring and understanding that when a company is deteriorating its financial health could be an indicator of problems. Further, fraud, and even corruption, is more likely to occur when the company is weak and under extreme financial duress and pressure. This is why having a leading indicator like the Financial Health Rating (FHR) is critical because it can communicate to a compliance professional when a company is weakening  and enables a risk management to be focused on those suppliers who require a more focused risk management solution.
Gellert related that another “big part of it is making sure that everyone in your organization is speaking from a common language and that the analysis and the findings are shared. This means developing workflow efficiency and also creating a return on the investment for an overall risk management program.” It also allows companies to help their suppliers. Finally, it allows your organization to have a dialogue with suppliers. “It comes from transparency around financials and other risk areas and being able to perform the appropriate risk analysis that can be fostered through a dialogue. The more a company understands the problems that its supplier may have, the more it can do things to help that supplier through those problems.”
The bottom line is that companies want to continue to work with their suppliers. It is not good or even efficient business to engage in looking for ways to stop working with them. The more a business can work with a supplier in a collaborative way to help them through times of difficulty benefits everyone and allows a company that is engaged in risk management and invested in a risk management process to be able to demonstrate the return on investment to the finance side of an organization.
With this process in place, you can develop a well mapped out workflow for handling problems when they arise so that if one comes up, it allows your organization to repurpose and reuse the workflow. Gellert said it “allows for maximum leverage, maximum workflow efficiency.” Once the “tools necessary to put these systems and process are in place, they can be replicated.” Lastly, “When that occurs, the business efficiency and the gain that can come from this kind of an analysis on financial health and other risk areas really does pay dividends in the companies that do it, I think are benefiting significantly across all the different business units that it touches.”
Gellert concluded, “It’s about creating ecosystem that can grow with your business. When your business is doing well, the last thing you want to do is have the opportunity to expand, but then all of a sudden there is a problem in your supply chain that you could have avoided, but you were not being proactive enough to do so. It is very much about creating the most resilient supply chain where you are reducing risks, but you’re also expanding the opportunities to grow over time.” This is the real supply chain efficiency premium.
This podcast series is sponsored by Rapid Ratings International, Inc. For more information, check out their website at www.rapidratings.com.

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Modern Medium

Welcome Modern Medium to the Compliance Podcast Network

I am pleased to welcome to the Modern Medium Podcast to the Compliance Podcast Network! In this new podcast Paris Fox leads a discussion on about the tools, strategies, tactics, and possibilities in modern medium design. In our first episode, we’re exploring ideas: how they form, how they change, and how we might incorporate those ideas into graphic design. Every compliance practitioner should listen to this podcast to help improve their messaging with a sharp millennial point of view.
Episode 1-Introduction
The creative process and coming up with ideas
When you’re stuck in a creative rut, it’s difficult to know where to begin with an idea. Even when you dohave an idea, it’s easy to get caught up in what you think something is supposed to be or what it’s supposed to look like. So it’s an important part of the process to learn how to let go. Ideas can come from anywhere. You can think of anything as a base point and go from there with it. Think about what you knew before, think about what you know now, and think about how things have changed. This doesn’t have to go anywhere tangible; you can use this as a brainstorming exercise or mind map and take off from it.

Episode 2-Incorporating Time into Art

Thinking about time
Pick a sense, and spend 24 hours being fully aware of it. For example, what are the sounds that you experience when you go to class? As you go home? Or commute to work? Just begin to acknowledge the way you’re moving through time, because it’s easy not to think about. Documentation is also critical: it’s easy to experience and acknowledge these things, but how are you going to see how they’ve changed over time if you don’t document it?
Episode 3-Making Art a Sensory Experience
On this episode of the Modern Medium Podcast, we’re exploring our senses: while it’s common for art to have visual and aural components, we don’t normally think about art in terms of smell, taste, or touch. But art is supposed to imitate life, and within life, we experience these all at once. How then can we make art a sensory experience?
Episode 4-Are You Creating Barriers to Your Art
Barriers
On this episode of the Modern Medium Podcast, we are exploring barriers: might artists inadvertently create these barriers to their art? And how does this affect its experience? Barriers can be anything: a blind person who can’t see the art, or someone with a learning disability who might not understand the art in the way that it was intended. But they can still experience art in other ways that you might not expect, and so in this way, art can be accessible to anybody. It’s just a matter of creating that space.
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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 5, 2019-the I feel very much loved edition

APRIL 5, 2019 BY TOM FOX


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News: