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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Internal Control Improvement

Welcome to “Compliance Tip of the Day,” the podcast that brings you daily insights and practical advice on navigating the ever-evolving landscape of compliance and regulatory requirements. Whether you’re a seasoned compliance professional or just starting your journey, our goal is to provide you with bite-sized, actionable tips to help you stay ahead in your compliance efforts. Join us as we explore the latest industry trends, share best practices, and demystify complex compliance issues to keep your organization on the right side of the law. Tune in daily for your dose of compliance wisdom, and let’s make compliance a little less daunting, one tip at a time.

Today, we look at internal control override. It’s not necessarily bad, but it may indicate that your controls need improvement.

For more information on this topic, refer to The Compliance Handbook: A Guide to Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, 6th edition, recently released by LexisNexis. It is available here.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: July 10, 2025, The Loyalty Oath Edition

Welcome to the Daily Compliance News. Each day, Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, brings you compliance-related stories to start your day. Sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen in to the Daily Compliance News. All, from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, we consider four stories from the business world, including compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest, relevant to the compliance professional.

Top compliance stories:

  • Fired officers accuse the NYC Mayor of all PD corruption. (NYT)
  • Goldman to demand loyalty oaths. (Bloomberg)
  • Linda Yaccarino leaving X. (CNN)
  • Measles is at its highest in the US since 1992. (FT)

You can donate to flood relief for victims of the Kerr County flooding by going to the Hill Country Flood Relief here.

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Trekking Through Compliance

Trekking Through Compliance: Episode 39 – Federation Fundamentals: What “Journey to Babel” Teaches Us About Global Compliance

In the ever-expanding universe of corporate compliance, the question of how to bridge cultural divides is as critical as it is complex. Navigating global operations, integrating diverse teams, and balancing conflicting interests. These challenges would be familiar to Captain Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise, particularly in the Star Trek: The Original Series classic “Journey to Babel.”

Today, we explore five essential cross-cultural compliance lessons, each grounded in a scene from “Journey to Babel.” These insights are not simply for the Starship Enterprise. Instead, they are vital for every compliance professional in today’s globalized business world.

Lesson 1: Cultural Awareness is the Foundation of Trust

Illustrated By: At a diplomatic reception. Ambassadors Sarek (Vulcan) and Gav (Andorian) nearly come to blows over the proposed admission of Coridan to the Federation.

Compliance Lesson: Cultural awareness is the bedrock of ethical business practice. As compliance professionals, we must recognize that every culture brings its perspectives, values, and sensitivities to the table.

Lesson 2: Personal Bias Must Never Trump Professional Duty

Illustrated By: Kirk discovers that Spock’s parents, Sarek and Amanda, are aboard.

Compliance Lesson: Compliance professionals must create policies and foster cultures that prioritize professional integrity above personal interest, even (or especially) when emotions run high.

Lesson 3: Open Communication is Critical in Preventing Escalation

Illustrated By: Tensions flare after Ambassador Gav’s murder.

Compliance Lesson: Silence or closed-door decisions breed mistrust and can quickly escalate a manageable issue into a full-blown crisis.

Lesson 4: Ethical Leadership Means Making the Hard Call

Illustrated By: Kirk, gravely wounded during an assassination attempt, insists on returning to the bridge rather than receiving treatment so that Spock can perform surgery on Sarek.

Compliance Lesson: Effective compliance leaders are those who lead by example, making tough decisions that may be unpopular or personally costly, but which uphold the organization’s mission and values.

Lesson 5: Unity Through Diversity Drives Mission Success

Illustrated By: Despite assassination attempts, sabotage, and political intrigue, the Enterprise ultimately succeeds in its mission.

Compliance Lesson: When managed ethically, cross-cultural teams produce better solutions, more robust risk assessments, and more effective compliance outcomes.

Final ComplianceLog Reflections

Journey to Babel” reminds us that successful missions, whether in interstellar diplomacy or global business, depend on more than technical expertise or strategic positioning. They require cultural competence, ethical leadership, and a willingness to prioritize the mission over personal interests.

For the compliance professional, the lessons are clear: invest in cultural awareness, build transparency, foster ethical leadership, and leverage diversity as a driver of success. In today’s interconnected world, the road to Babel is one we all travel. It is your job as a compliance professional to ensure we do so ethically, collaboratively, and boldly.

Resources:

Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein

MissionLogPodcast.com

Memory Alpha

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Blog

Boldly Going Together: Cross – Cultural Compliance Lessons from Star Trek’s “Journey to Babel”

In the ever-expanding universe of corporate compliance, the question of how to bridge cultural divides is as critical as it is complex. Navigating global operations, integrating diverse teams, and balancing conflicting interests. These challenges would be familiar to Captain Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise, particularly in the Star Trek: The Original Series classic “Journey to Babel.”

In this episode, the Enterprise is tasked with transporting 114 ambassadors from across the Federation to a pivotal diplomatic conference. The plot thickens as old enmities, conflicting interests, and even attempted murder threaten the mission’s success. At the heart of the episode lies a powerful message: cross-cultural competence is not just an HR catchphrase. It is a critical compliance and ethical imperative.

Today, we explore five essential cross-cultural compliance lessons, each grounded in a scene from “Journey to Babel.” These insights are not simply for the Starship Enterprise. Instead, they are vital for every compliance professional in today’s globalized business world.

Lesson 1: Cultural Awareness is the Foundation of Trust

Illustrated By: The Enterprise hosts a diplomatic reception. Ambassadors Sarek (Vulcan) and Gav (Andorian) nearly come to blows over the proposed admission of Coridan to the Federation.

The opening scenes aboard the Enterprise are a masterclass in cultural complexity. The ambassadors, each representing worlds with deep-seated histories and conflicting interests, demonstrate how easily cultural misunderstandings and political baggage can undermine trust.

Compliance Lesson: Cultural awareness is the bedrock of ethical business practice. As compliance professionals, we must recognize that every culture brings its perspectives, values, and sensitivities to the table. Failure to understand these nuances can breed suspicion and derail collaboration, just as the Vulcan and Andorian ambassadors struggle to find common ground.

Prioritize cultural training as part of compliance education. Ensure that codes of conduct are not only translated but also contextually adapted, and that your team is prepared to identify and address cultural gaps before they become compliance risks.

Lesson 2: Personal Bias Must Never Trump Professional Duty

Illustrated By: Kirk discovers that Spock’s parents, Sarek and Amanda, are aboard. Despite personal tensions—especially between Spock and his father—Spock insists on performing his duties during the crisis, even when Sarek’s life is at stake.

This episode famously reveals Spock’s human mother and Vulcan father, bringing family dynamics into the mix. Yet, when Sarek is gravely injured and a heart operation is required, Spock refuses to leave the bridge while the ship is in danger. His professional commitment outweighs personal emotion.

Compliance Lesson: In cross-cultural or high-pressure environments, personal biases and relationships can threaten objective decision-making. Compliance professionals must create policies and foster cultures that prioritize professional integrity above personal interest, even (or especially) when emotions run high.

Implement clear conflict-of-interest policies and foster an environment where recusal and transparency are not just encouraged but expected—train staff to recognize when personal loyalties or cultural allegiances might compromise objective action.

Lesson 3: Open Communication is Critical in Preventing Escalation

Illustrated By: Tensions flare after Ambassador Gav’s murder. Accusations fly, especially toward Sarek, who had argued publicly with Gav just before his death. The crew’s refusal to jump to conclusions, coupled with ongoing dialogue among all parties, helps keep the situation from spiraling.

The murder mystery at the heart of “Journey to Babel” is propelled by suspicion and lack of trust. Yet Kirk, Spock, and Dr. McCoy consistently push for fact-based investigation, communication, and transparency, resisting pressure to act on rumor or assumption.

Compliance Lesson: When dealing with culturally diverse teams or stakeholders, open and transparent communication is your most effective defense against misunderstanding, rumor, and escalation. Silence or closed-door decisions breed mistrust and can quickly escalate a manageable issue into a full-blown crisis.

Establish robust reporting, investigation, and escalation protocols that emphasize transparency and communication. Utilize regular cross-cultural dialogues and forums to identify concerns before they become compliance issues.

Lesson 4: Ethical Leadership Means Making the Hard Call

Illustrated By: Kirk, gravely wounded during an assassination attempt, insists on returning to the bridge rather than receiving treatment so that Spock can perform surgery on Sarek. Both men make personal sacrifices for the greater good and the safety of the mission.

At the height of the crisis, leadership is defined not by rank but by the ethical choices made. Kirk’s and Spock’s willingness to sacrifice for the mission —Kirk risking his life, Spock postponing surgery on his father —demonstrates that ethical leadership means prioritizing the welfare of the collective over personal comfort or interest.

Compliance Lesson: Effective compliance leaders are those who lead by example, making tough decisions that may be unpopular or personally costly, but which uphold the organization’s mission and values. This is especially true in global environments, where decisions often have cross-cultural ripple effects.

Cultivate leadership at all levels that models ethical decision-making. Recognize and reward those who act in the organization’s best interests, even when it is personally inconvenient. Build ethics into leadership development and performance evaluations.

Lesson 5: Unity Through Diversity Drives Mission Success

Illustrated By: Despite assassination attempts, sabotage, and political intrigue, the Enterprise ultimately succeeds in its mission. Thanks in large part to the combined talents and perspectives of its diverse crew and the ambassadors aboard.

In the final act, the ship faces a Romulan attack, and only through the unique expertise of its multicultural crew does the Enterprise survive. The message is clear: unity does not require uniformity. Diversity of culture, thought, and background can be a superpower when harnessed ethically and collaboratively.

Compliance Lesson: In global organizations, diversity is not a problem to be managed, but an asset to be leveraged. Cross-cultural teams, when managed ethically, produce better solutions, more robust risk assessments, and more effective compliance outcomes. But this only works if compliance programs move beyond lip service to real inclusion and empowerment.

Ensure your compliance program explicitly values diversity, not just demographically, but also in terms of ideas and problem-solving approaches. Involve diverse voices in policy creation, risk assessments, and investigations. Use cultural differences as a resource, not a barrier.

Final ComplianceLog Reflections

Journey to Babel” reminds us that successful missions, whether in interstellar diplomacy or global business, depend on more than technical expertise or strategic positioning. They require cultural competence, ethical leadership, and a willingness to prioritize the mission over personal interests.

For the compliance professional, the lessons are clear: invest in cultural awareness, build transparency, foster ethical leadership, and leverage diversity as a driver of success. In today’s interconnected world, the road to Babel is one we all travel. It is your job as a compliance professional to ensure we do so ethically, collaboratively, and boldly.

Resources:

Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein

MissionLogPodcast.com

Memory Alpha

Categories
Blog

COSO’s Corporate Governance Framework: Component 5 – Communication

We continue our exploration of the recently released COSO  Corporate Governance Framework (the Framework) as a Public Exposure Draft.  Today, we begin a deep dive into the six individual components with a discussion of Component 5—Communication. Suppose culture is the heart of an organization, and people are its muscle. In that case, communication is the circulatory system, carrying oxygen (information), nutrients (values), and antibodies (escalations and feedback) to every part of the governance body.

Most assuredly, it is not a side note. Communication is a core governance function, equally as critical as oversight, strategy, and culture. This component affirms something that compliance professionals have long known: poor communication creates risk, while effective communication fosters trust, resilience, and accountability. The Framework lays out a comprehensive roadmap for governing the quality, flow, and purpose of information both inside and outside the enterprise. It addresses communication as both a technical capability and a leadership responsibility, making it a perfect area for compliance professionals to lead from the front.

Today, we examine what Component 5 encompasses and identify five actionable lessons for compliance professionals who are ready to champion the communication function in governance.

What Does the Communication Component Cover?

COSO organizes this component around four principles:

  1. Commit to Information Quality
  2. Engage Stakeholders Strategically
  3. Communicate Effectively with Internal Stakeholders
  4. Communicate Effectively with External Stakeholders

Taken together, these principles stress that communication is strategic, multidirectional, and accountable. It is not just about what is said; rather, it is about who says it, how it is said, where it flows, and whether the message enables ethical decision-making, risk awareness, and stakeholder engagement.

Why Communication Matters to Compliance

For compliance professionals, communication is both a tool and a test. How we communicate policies, processes, and expectations shapes how employees behave. How the board receives information determines the quality of its decisions. How stakeholders perceive our transparency defines our license to operate.

More than ever, regulators, investors, and employees demand not just disclosure but meaningful, timely, and values-driven communication. That means compliance must go beyond the whistleblower hotline and annual training; we must build communication systems that enable governance excellence.

Five Key Lessons for Compliance Professionals

Lesson 1: Information Quality Is a Governance Issue—Own the Integrity of the Message

Principle 17: Commit to Information Quality

Boards and management must ensure that all internal and external information is accurate, complete, timely, and relevant to the decisions being made. This includes maintaining systems and controls to validate data and eliminate ambiguity in terminology.

Compliance Tip: Perform a communication audit of compliance reporting. Are your dashboards jargon-heavy or decision-ready? Do your risk reports help the board prioritize issues or confuse the message? Work with IT, internal audit, and risk to deploy governance, risk, and compliance (GRC) platforms that centralize and standardize your reporting. Use these tools not just to track activities but to tell a governance story.

Lesson 2: Stakeholder Engagement Is Risk Management—Make Communication Strategic

Principle 18: Engage Stakeholders Strategically

Executive management must identify key internal and external stakeholders and ensure that appropriate channels exist to share information, solicit feedback, and address concerns. This includes employees, investors, regulators, customers, suppliers, and communities.

Compliance Tip: Map your stakeholder communication channels, including the messages sent to whom, when, and through which medium. Identify gaps where feedback isn’t captured or transparency is lacking. Lead a quarterly cross-functional stakeholder forum with representatives from legal, ESG, investor relations, operations, and compliance. Use it to review messaging consistency, flag potential disconnects, and align on communication strategy for high-impact governance topics.

Lesson 3: Internal Communication Must Flow in All Directions—Not Just Top-Down

Principle 19: Communicate Effectively with Internal Stakeholders

Effective communication within the entity must support timely, secure, and informed decision-making across all departments and levels. It must include not only top-down directives, but also cross-functional collaboration and bottom-up feedback.

Compliance Tip: Evaluate whether your policies and training materials are accessible and understandable to frontline employees. Simplify complex legal language. Reinforce messaging across multiple touchpoints, not just once a year. Establish a compliance “listening architecture.” This could include monthly manager check-ins, anonymous digital suggestion boxes, and cultural pulse surveys. Use the insights to adapt your messaging, identify unspoken risks, and refine your program in real-time.

Lesson 4: External Communication Requires Guardrails—Balance Transparency and Confidentiality

Principle 20: Communicate Effectively with External Stakeholders

Boards and executive management must govern external communications with care, thereby ensuring transparency while protecting sensitive information and aligning with legal, regulatory, and reputational considerations. This includes formal disclosures, media engagement, investor briefings, and even social media interactions.

Compliance Tip: Coordinate with legal, investor relations, and public affairs to ensure external compliance disclosures (e.g., investigations, regulatory actions, ESG updates) are accurate and strategically timed. Recommend creating or expanding the entity’s disclosure committee beyond financial reporting. Include ethics, cybersecurity, and ESG in its scope. This ensures consistent governance over all public-facing statements, not just 10-Ks and earnings calls.

Lesson 5: Escalation Protocols and Whistleblower Systems Are Core Communication Channels

COSO stresses that communication is not simply about planned messaging, but it is about creating pathways for critical issues to reach decision-makers quickly. That includes whistleblower programs, hotline escalation, and crisis protocols that support real-time visibility and accountability.

Compliance Tip: Review your escalation policy. Is it clear when, how, and to whom an issue must be reported? Is there redundancy if a leader is implicated? Does the board know what “red lines” exist? Include whistleblower trends and escalation effectiveness as standing items in your board or audit committee materials. Go beyond volume and share insights about culture, responsiveness, and process quality. That’s how you earn board confidence and budget support.

Building a Governance Communication Program

To operationalize COSO’s Communication Component, compliance leaders should help lead the development of an integrated governance communication program with the following features:

  • Message alignment across all internal and external platforms;
  • Defined roles for who speaks, who approves, and who responds;
  • Feedback mechanisms like surveys, listening sessions, and open-door policies;
  • Secure reporting systems that support anonymity and protect whistleblowers; and
  • Crisis playbooks that define escalation paths, communications teams, and messaging protocols.

The goal? To ensure that communication is not just noise, but a narrative that guides behavior, enables decisions, and builds trust with all stakeholders.

What Boards Need to Hear from Compliance

Here’s what to communicate to your board:

  • The quality of governance depends on the quality of information.
  • Misaligned or confusing communication creates regulatory and reputational risk.
  • Stakeholders expect timely, truthful, and values-aligned information, not just compliance.
  • Compliance has a unique view into cross-functional communication gaps and whistleblower data.
  • The board should actively monitor communication systems and protocols, just as it does financial reporting.

When the board understands that communication is a control, not just a convenience, they will begin to ask better questions and set higher expectations.

Final Thoughts: Communication Is Governance in Motion

To determine whether your governance program is effective, listen to what people say and, equally importantly, what they do not. COSO’s Communication Component reminds us that in governance, silence is a risk, confusion is a vulnerability, and transparency is a strength.

As compliance professionals, we are communicators by necessity, but COSO invites us to become communicators by design. That means building systems that convey messages, address concerns, and connect people to their purpose. Governance is not just about structure; in many ways, it is about story. Make sure yours is told well.

To read or comment on the full CGF Public Exposure Draft, click here. The comment period closes July 11, 2025.

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Hill Country Authors

Hill Country Authors – Exploring Texas History and Writing with Jack Woodville London

Welcome to a new season of the award-winning Hill Country Authors Podcast, sponsored by Stoney Creek Publishing. In this podcast, Hill Country resident Tom Fox visits with authors who live in and write about the Texas Hill Country. In this episode, Tom visits author Jack Woodville London, discussing his intriguing career and novels focused on Texas history.

London, a seasoned courtroom lawyer with a background in aviation accidents, delves into his journey from practicing law to writing creatively. They explore his experiences at Oxford University and his fascination with historical research. London shares insights into his books, particularly the ‘French Letters Series’ and ‘Dangerous Latitudes,’ highlighting lesser-known events in Texas history. The discussion also touches on public education, historical figures, and the Mexico-Texas conflicts, providing a rich tapestry of historical and literary insights.

Key highlights:

  • Jack’s Professional Background
  • Oxford Experience and Writing Journey
  • Books and Writing Process
  • Texas History and Dangerous Latitudes
  • Lamar and Texas Politics
  • Research and Publishing

Resources:

Dangerous Latitudes on Stone Creek Publishing

Dangerous Latitudes on Texas A&M University Press

Stoney Creek Publishing Website

Jack Woodville London Website

Podcast Cover Art

Nancy Huffman Fine Art

Tom Fox

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