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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

Day 10 | The Use of Social Media in Compliance


What is the message of compliance inside of a corporation and how it is distributed? In a compliance program, the largest portion of your consumers/customers are your employees. Social media presents some excellent mechanisms to communicate the message of compliance going forward. Many of the applications that we use in our personal communications are free or available at very low cost. Why not take advantage of them and use those same communication tools in your internal compliance marketing efforts going forward?
Louis Sapirman, Vice President and Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer for Panasonic Corporation of North America – Panasonic USA, often talks about the integration of social media into compliance. You should start with the tech-savvy nature of the today’s workforce. It is not simply about having a younger workforce but a workforce whose primary tool for communication is social media. If your company is in the services business, it probably means your employee base is using technological tools to deliver business solutions. Finally, consider the data-driven nature of business today so using technological tools to deliver products and solutions is something your company most probably does now.
Finally, never forget the social part of social media. Social media is a more holistic, multiple-sided communication. Not only are you setting out expectations but also these tools allow you to receive back communications from your employees. The D&B experience around the name change for its Code of Conduct is but one example. You can also see that if you have several concerns expressed it could alert you earlier to begin some detection and move towards prevention in your compliance program.
Three key takeaways:

  1. Incorporation of social media into your compliance communications can pay big dividends
  2. Focus on the ‘social’ part of social media
  3. Use internal corporate social media to facilitate a 360-degree conversation
Categories
Sunday Book Review

January 10, 2021, the Nordic Noir edition


In today’s edition of Sunday Book Review:

  • To Cook a Bear by Mikael Niemi
  • The Night of the Fire by Kjell Eriksson
  • Snowdrift by Helene Tursten
  • Victim 2117 (A Department Q Novel) by Jussi Adler-Olsen
Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Nick Gallo and the 100 Book Challenge: Introduction


 
Special guest Nick Gallo joins Tom Fox for a six-part podcast series about books. In this introductory episode, they talk about Nick’s 100 Book Challenge for 2020, where his goal was to read or listen to a selection of 100 books. Nick shares how he curated his reading list, his methods for completing the challenge, and the insights he learned from the experience. One such insight is that learning is like flexing a muscle, and just like the other muscles of the human body, you must stretch it often to keep your mind healthy. 
 

 
“This was one of the biggest accomplishments of my life,” Nick claims. Part of the motivation to complete the challenge was his desire for his company to be a learning organization, he adds. “If we’re constantly in an improvement mode, there’s a lot of magic to be unlocked.”
In this special series, Tom and Nick share the five books Nick read – here’s what’s coming up: 

  1. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius 
  2. Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini
  3. The Culture Map by Erin Meyer
  4. The Fearless Organization by Amy Edmondson
  5. The Infinite Game by Simon Sinek

Listeners can read Nick’s notes on each book at his LinkedIn page.
Resources
Tom Fox on LinkedIn | Twitter
CompliancePodcastNetwork.net
 
Nick Gallo on LinkedIn
ComplianceLine.com