Categories
Jamming with Jason

JwJ Encore: The $2 Million Career Mistake

Most people make some of the same career mistakes. Are you guilty of making them?

And, they probably don’t seem like mistakes since they are often what you are told to do. They seem to like what you are supposed to do. You know, keep your head down, do good work, stay in the same safe job, work for the same company most of your career, etc… is what you’ve been told to be successful. But what if those lies are meant to keep you handcuffed to your job and hurt you?

Whether or not you believe these mistakes can cost you money over your career. And I mean A LOT OF MONEY… $2 million or more. Don’t believe me. Make your own decision after you listen.

In this #jammingwithjason #podcast episode, we discuss 4 of the most common mistakes and what you can do to avoid them. Since I’m sure you don’t want to miss out on $2 million or more in compensation over your career, do you?

Are you going to take control of your career or let your organization manage your career?

FOR FULL SHOW NOTES AND LINKS, VISIT:

E284 The $2 Million Career Mistake

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Categories
The Hill Country Podcast

Kenneth O’Neal On Executive and Personal Coaching

Welcome to the award-winning The Hill Country Podcast. The Texas Hill Country is one of the most beautiful places on earth. In this podcast, Hill Country resident Tom Fox visits the people and organizations that make these the most unique areas of Texas. Join Tom as he explores the people, places, and activities of the Texas Hill Country. In this episode, I visit Kenneth O’Neal, a Zig Ziglar Legacy Certified Coach and Trainer, Public Speaker, Mentor, Mediator, Business Executive, and Personal Coach. Highlights include:

·      Professional background.

·      Who was Zig Ziglar, and why is he still so important today?

·      His life in Kerrville.

·      What is a Zig Ziglar Legacy Certified Coach and Trainer?

·      Why should you consider a personal coach?

Resources

Kenneth O’Neal on LinkedIn

Kenneth O’Neal website

For a copy of Kenneth O’Neal’s book Road Trip, purchase it here.

Categories
Great Women in Compliance

Megan Zwiebel – Data, Behavioral Science and the Compliance Function

Welcome to the Great Women in Compliance Podcast, co-hosted by Lisa Fine and Mary Shirley.

In this episode of Great Women in Compliance, Lisa speaks with Megan Zwiebel, who is Director of Operations & Delivery at R&G Insights Lab, which is an analytics and behavioral science practice, affiliated with the law firm Ropes & Gray. Megan started her career at a large law firm at a litigator, and used her natural curiosity and skill set to move into journalism, and now into her current role, where she and the team are helping to build innovative and practical solutions for organizations and legal practices in using data and science.

In this discussion, Megan talks about how the R&G Insights Lab compliments traditional law firm work, and how it is different, with respect to supporting E&C programs. She talks about the importance of “telling the story,” and how we can best use these tools to build our programs and to work cross-functionally.

Like Lisa, Megan started her career at a large law firm, and they discuss some of their similar and different experiences in those first jobs, and how that impacted their work and career trajectories. She shares some of the law firm evolution she has seen, and how women in leadership is inspiring and impacts law firm culture.

The Great Women in Compliance Podcast is on the Compliance Podcast Network with a selection of other Compliance related offerings to listen in to.  If you are enjoying this episode, please rate it on your preferred podcast player to help other likeminded Ethics and Compliance professionals find it.  If you have a moment to leave a review at the same time, Mary and Lisa would be so grateful.

You can also find the GWIC podcast on Corporate Compliance Insights where Lisa and Mary have a landing page with additional information about them and the story of the podcast.  Corporate Compliance Insights is a much-appreciated sponsor and supporter of GWIC, including affiliate organization CCI Press publishing the related book; “Sending the Elevator Back Down, What We’ve Learned from Great Women in Compliance” (CCI Press, 2020). If you enjoyed the book, the GWIC team would be very grateful if you would consider rating it on Goodreads and Amazon and leaving a short review.

You can subscribe to the Great Women in Compliance podcast on any podcast player by searching for it and we welcome new subscribers to our podcast.

Join the Great Women in Compliance community on LinkedIn here.

Categories
Compliance Into the Weeds

Cyber Security Failures Alleged in Mudge Whistleblower Compliant

Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast that takes a deep dive into a compliance-related topic, literally going into the weeds to more fully explore a subject. In this episode, we mine the whistleblower allegations by Peiter Zatko, AKA “Mudge,” made against Twitter for lessons for the cyber-security professional and wide compliance discipline. Highlights and questions posed include:

·      The allegations made by Mudge.

·      Why does an organization need a CISO (or CCO or CECO)?

·      How did Twitter get hacked, its employees duped, and its controls bypassed?

·      What is pedestrian yet telling in this saga?

·      Why is data mapping mandatory if not critical?

·      Where were the external auditors?

·      Is there a Caremark claim here?

Resources

Matt in Radical Compliance

Categories
Daily Compliance News

September 7, 2022 the On the Lam Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Swiss prosecutors demand jail time for Steinmetz. (TimesOfIsrael)
  • Who are your stakeholders? (Reuters)
  • Fat Leonard goes on the lam. (Declan Herald)
  • Trump SPAC is in danger of collapse. (NYT)
Categories
Blog

Impact of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines at 30

The Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizations (FSGO) by the US Sentencing Commission (USSC) turn 30 this year. For compliance officers, this was perhaps the most significant government release. It did not create the compliance profession, but it certainly put compliance professionals in the forefront of the design, creation and implementation of corporate compliance programs. The FSGO also laid out for the first time, the government’s expectations of what a well-designed compliance program should look like in practice. This led to a dramatic increase in compliance professionals. Earnie Broughton, writing in the ECI blog, said, “In many ways the promulgation of the guidelines was a defining moment in our collective journey in understanding and realizing the benefits of good corporate character.”

In 2021, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 291,000 compliance officers in the US. But more than driving the compliance profession and a concomitant increase in compliance professionals the FSGO has in many ways shaped the structure of the 21st century corporation and dramatically improved corporate governance. In these ways, it laid the environmental, social and governance (ESG) foundations. Last month the US Sentencing Commission (USSC) released a summary of the FSGO and how it helped drives these changes, “The Organizational Sentencing Guidelines: Thirty Years of Innovation(the History).

Regarding the FSGO themselves, they take a “carrot and stick” approach to the sentencing scheme that bases the fine range on the culpability of the organization. The guidelines instruct courts to determine culpability by considering six factors. The four aggravating factors, “that increase the ultimate punishment of an organization are: (i) the involvement in or tolerance of criminal activity; (ii) the prior history of the organization; (iii) the violation of an order; and (iv) the obstruction of justice.” The two mitigating factors are: “(i) the existence of an effective compliance and ethics program; and (ii) self-reporting, cooperation, or acceptance of responsibility.” Rather amazingly, the History reported that only 1.5% overall of all organizations sentenced “received the five-point culpability score reduction for disclosing the offense to appropriate authorities prior to a government investigation in addition to their  full cooperation and acceptance of responsibility.” Obviously, there is still room for improvement.

Rather unsurprisingly, the Department of Justice (DOJ) drew heavily on the FSGO for two key documents which laid out the foundations of an effective compliance program. The first was the 2012 FCPA Resource Guide (developed and released jointly with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)) and its update, the 2021 FCPA Resource Guide, 2nd edition. The second was the Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs, initially released in 2019, and the 2020 Update to the Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs. The History noted that the Evaluation and its update, “was first developed in 2017 under the leadership of the DOJ’s first “corporate compliance expert”” and “provides greater clarity on some key issues prosecutors consider when assessing the adequacy of corporate compliance programs during charging and settlement decisions, by laying out “fundamental questions” that prosecutors should ask about compliance programs:

  • Is the corporation’s compliance program well designed. There were three key questions for consideration:
  • Is the program being applied earnestly and in good faith?
  • In other words, is the program being implemented effectively?
  • Does the corporation’s compliance program work in practice?

The Evaluation and its Update then proceed to describe “in detail the topics that prosecutors should consider when answering those questions.”Demonstrating its influence far beyond the DOJ, SEC and other government agencies, the Delaware court decision in Caremark demonstrates a key effect in the transformation of compliance programs, policies and procedures in the corporate world. The Caremark decision was a departure from prior Delaware case law which said that a board did not have to look for wrongdoing but only had to investigate if informed about it. That was from an old 1963 decision and the Court relied on the 1992 US Sentencing Guidelines to note how such views were no longer accepted. Board obligations had changed by 1996 with the following, “obligation to be reasonably informed concerning the corporation, without assuring themselves that information and reporting systems exist in the organization that are reasonably designed to provide to senior management and to the board itself timely, accurate information sufficient to allow management and the board, each within its scope, to reach informed judgments concerning both the corporation’s compliance with law and its business performance.”

Caremark considered the proposed settlement of a derivative suit seeking to impose personal liability on members of the board of directors. The History noted, “the court considered whether director liability could stem from unconsidered action by the board. After observing that “[t]he Guidelines offer powerful incentives for corporations today to have in place compliance programs to detect violations of law, promptly to report violations to appropriate public officials when discovered, and to take prompt, voluntary remedial efforts,” the court concluded that “[a]ny rational person attempting in good faith to meet an organizational governance responsibility would be bound to take into account [the organizational guidelines].”

This meant that a director has a good faith duty to see that the organization establishes adequate information and reporting systems. i.e., a compliance program. No doubt due to the significance of the Delaware courts, “following the Caremark decision, federal and state courts recognized the importance of compliance programs in the context of shareholder derivative suits.” Caremark  and its progeny are now the law of the land regarding corporate governance and compliance across most states in the US.

All of these changes and much more point to the far- and wide-ranging impact of the FSGO.  “What began as an “experiment” to encourage legal compliance and foster more ethical business practices is now widely accepted as a success.” Moreover, “evidence suggests that compliance and ethics programs implemented using the guideline criteria produce positive effects on an organization’s behavior” and that the FSGO has had a significant impact on public and private sector actors.” Finally, the History concludes that the influence of FSGO “is now spreading around the globe, suggesting that the hallmarks of an effective compliance and ethics program have universal appeal.”