Categories
Compliance Kitchen

New Nicaragua Sanctions


US adds sanctions on Nicaragua following recent sham elections.

Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Gold in the Compliance Hills: Part 4, Finance and Investing Models for Compliance


Welcome to a special five-part podcast series on how to unlock the gold in your program, hosted by Tom Fox with guests Gio and Nick Gallo from ComplianceLine. One of the ongoing issues in compliance is to demonstrate the Return on Investment (ROI) in your compliance program. One way to do so is by demonstrating the extended value of compliance literally across your entire company. When overlaid with an ESG component, you can begin to see the gold in your compliance hills. In addition to showing how you can unlock the gold in your own compliance hills, Gio and Nick walk you through how demonstrate ROI for your internal budgeting process which can provide to you the financial resource to strengthen and improve your compliance program.
Join us for the full 5 episodes and learn to see your compliance program in an entirely new light. In this Part 4, we consider finance and investment models for the corporate compliance function.
Some of the highlights of this episode include:

  • How does the Black Swan model of risk relate to the corporate compliance function?
  • When is a possible event simply a risk and when is it a Black Swan event?
  • Why is business continuity so critical?
  • What are Private Equity and Venture Capital models of funding and how to they relate to the corporate compliance function?
  • How to think about the payout of an investment in compliance.

Resources
Gio Gallo on LinkedIn
Nick Gallo on LinkedIn
ComplianceLine

Categories
Content Coalition

The Content Coalition Episode 011: Why You Need to Treat Your Podcast Like Its Own Business For Optimal Growth

 

In this episode of The Content Coalition, we interview Mark Asquith, CEO and Co-founder of Rebel Base Media.
Rebel Base Media is a podcast tech and strategy company that owns Captivate.fm, Productivity, Podcast Websites, Podcast Success Academy & Rebel Base Studios. The company creates technology and solutions that helps podcasters to find, amplify and build influence around their unique voice.
Tune in as Mark talks more about his current venture Podcast Websites, the benefits of having a website for would-be podcast hosts, why podcasting is like a journey toward personal development, and more.

Get more great The Content Coalition episodes over on Repurpose House, or watch the interview on YouTube!

What You’ll Learn

  • [01:32] Learn how Podcast Websites started and Mark’s backstory
  • [02:36] How the agency grew into a successful software and digital service business
  • [04:48] A little tease of their upcoming projects that are very beneficial to would-be podcast hosts
  • [06:24] Why having a website is important for a podcast
  • [09:00] Learn how a website a must for monetization, lead capturing, and even risk management
  • [13:09] Discover the other features of Podcast Websites both front and back-end
  • [16:18] Mark’s top recommended podcasts to listen to
  • [18:08] 1 actionable thing to implement in the next 24 hours

Connect with Mark

Categories
Hidden Traffic Podcast

How Import and Export Compliance Is Fighting Forced Labor with Mollie Sitkowski


 
Mollie Sitkowski is Trade Compliance Counsel at Faegre Drinker, where she handles import and export control and compliance work on behalf of the firm’s clients. She has assisted numerous clients in developing and implementing import and export compliance programs, and offers continued training to the business areas that touch on import and export compliance. She discusses how import and export compliance intersects with human trafficking.
 

 
Customs has the authority to issue a WRO (withhold-release-order) if they have information that reasonably indicates that goods were made, either in part or in full, with forced labor. The goods are detained until you can prove otherwise. The vast majority of forced labor detentions are done under WROs, Mollie says. You have to provide two things required by the regulations within 90 days or you can choose to export. However, customs has escalated so much that it is difficult to acquire all the necessary data within 90 days, unless you already have a good compliance program and good auditing in place.
 
“To require you to have mapped out your entire trade flow and be able to provide that kind of detail all the way through the chain; I think that’s something that hopefully will really be an impediment to trafficking over the long run,” Gwen shares.
 
Resources
Mollie Sitkowski on LinkedIn | Twitter
 

Categories
Life with GDPR

Potpourri Edition


Jonathan Armstrong returns from assignment to take on a potpourri of issues with co-host Tom Fox. We use the recent speech by Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco as a jumping off point to discuss how this change in DOJ enforcement policy and focus will be impacted by GDPR, the new EU Whistleblower Directive and how increased international cooperation around international anti-corruption compliance may play out. Some of the issues we consider include:

  1. Data protection issues under the new DOJ FCPA enforcement policy?
  2. Monitorships outside the US.
  3. Data privacy and investigations.
  4. Class actions in the UK going forward.
  5. Increased cooperation between the DOJ/SEC and the UK Serious Fraud Office.

Resources
Check out the Cordery Compliance, client alert on this topic, click here. For more information on Cordery Compliance, go their website here. Also check out the GDPR Navigator, one of the top resources for GDPR Compliance by clicking here.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

December 2, 2021 the Verifiable Proof Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • EU wants ‘verifiable proof’ Peng is safe. (com)
  • Corruption preventing Texas from fixing its broken power grid. (MSNBC)
  • Elizabeth Holmes admits ‘mistakes were made’ even by her. (NYT)
  • Myanmar lays out new corruption charges. (CNN)
Categories
Blog

Mining the Gold in the Compliance Hills: Part 4 – Finance and Investing Models for Compliance

Welcome to a special five-part blog post series on how to unlock the gold in your program. I visit with Gio Gallo and Nick Gallo, Co-CEO’s of ComplianceLine, LLC, the sponsor of this series.
One of the ongoing issues in compliance is to demonstrate the Return on Investment (ROI) in your compliance program. One way to do so is by demonstrating the extended value of compliance literally across your entire company. When overlaid with an ESG component, you can begin to see the gold in your compliance hills. In addition to showing how you can unlock the gold in your own compliance hills, Gio and Nick discussed demonstrating ROI for your internal budgeting process which can provide to you the financial resource to strengthen and improve your compliance program. Today, in Part 4, we consider finance and investment models for the corporate compliance function.
If there is one topic that every compliance professional understands it is risk analysis, but this is not the same type of risk analysis that a financial professional would look at. Gio noted that a finance professional would have a different focus in their risk lens. It would focus on such questions as “what is the risk of your investment? What is the risk in your model and your assumptions?” It is almost as if you need a translator to get into the room.
To Illustrate, he pointed to the example of a Black Swan event. With a Black Swan event you could have a wide distribution of different outcomes. A Black Swan event is very rare and it may be so small that it almost does not show up on your radar. However, “if you land on that number, right, if the roulette wheel spins around and lands at that number, it could be a total disaster. It can be an 80% chance everything will be fine and there’s a 90% chance we’ll be 10% bigger next year. And there’s a 70% chance that we’ll be 20% smaller or more difficult next year or whatever. Well, there might be a 0.0003% chance that this bad thing happens.” Yet the outcome is just so catastrophic, similar to the once in a 1,000-year flood, you cannot simply plan for it.”
Yet the Texas Gulf Coast had a 1,000-year flooding event in 2017 (and two 500-year flooding events withing 18 months). While you might not typically plan for the 1,000-year flood, it is a known possibility and I have lived through one and indeed and several 500-year floods. This means you must take the Black Swan concept and continuously re-evaluate it to move from something that could well happen because if it does, the result could be very bad and the circumstances have changed. This means you need to change your basic risk assumptions about calling it a Black Swan event. Gio had an interesting response to this and it was basically to think about storytelling. He listed several events such as the levees breaking causing the flooding of the city of New Orleans or the Fukishima Nuclear Plant flooding. These were both events which seemed very low probability yet were certainly within the realm of the possible. Perhaps even a known unknown.
This series of events illustrate that in the financial realm, you must be ready to move quickly.  As Gio noted, “simply because you do not have the whole script and talk track put together and know that something terrible might happen. This can create a damaging dynamic between a CCO and someone in the finance function or in the executive level. Their response may well be ‘what do you want me to do about that?’ What are we going to do this month as there’s budget for it? So, if you can bridge that to, hey, we all know that this terrible stuff might happen and it’s not going to take a thousand years for a 1,000 year flood to happen.”
In response to this scenario, Nick said, “I suggest you take a little bit different tack than ignoring this Black Swan event.” Start by using the power of compounding interest to demonstrate your organization does not need to completely defend against this type of event in the next two months. You can use the power of your investment in compliance to essentially “build the levees a few feet higher so that when the next biggest flood occurs, we defend against it and talk about that in the realm of this is going to take another 2% of the compliance team’s budget to get a little bit better on this.” Even at this stage the compounding of the investment can create some very robust compliance practices for your organization. The bottom line is that if you we invest this 2% each year over the next five years, your compliance program will be five times better at defending against this 500 or 1,000-year flood.
Check out the full podcast series this blog post series is based upon.
Episode 1
Episode 2
Episode 3
Episode 4