Categories
Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Rethinking Corporate AI Governance Through Design Intelligence

Welcome to “Compliance Tip of the Day,” the podcast where we bring 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 aim is to provide you with bite-sized, actionable tips to help you stay on top of your compliance game. 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 consider how enterprises must rethink their compliance strategies to survive and thrive in the new world of AI-rich operations.

For more on this topic, check out The Compliance Handbook, a Guide to Operationalizing your Compliance Program, 6th edition which was recently released by LexisNexis. It is available here.

Categories
Trekking Through Compliance

Trekking Trough Compliance: Episode 51 – Breaking Barriers: Five Compliance Communication Strategies from ‘By Any Other Name’

There may be no better pop culture exploration of compliance communication under pressure than Star Trek’s “By Any Other Name.” This episode, from Star Trek: The Original Series, places the crew of the Enterprise under the control of the Kelvans, alien beings with immense power, cold logic, and a total misunderstanding of what it means to be human. To survive, Kirk and his crew must out-communicate and outwit their captors, relying on every tool in their communication toolkit.

For the compliance professional, “By Any Other Name” offers a master class in the nuances of compliance communications, what works, what fails, and why the human element can never be discounted. Today, we explore five compliance communication lessons from this Star Trek classic.

Lesson 1: Know Your Audience—Tailor Your Message

Illustrated By: The Kelvans initially communicate only through blunt, logical directives. Their attempts at control falter because they don’t understand human motivation.

Compliance Lesson: Compliance messages cannot be one-size-fits-all. The Kelvans’ failure to adapt to their audience is a mistake compliance professionals should avoid.

Lesson 2: Use Storytelling and Emotion—Facts Alone Don’t Move People

Illustrated By: Kirk and his crew realize the Kelvans, now in human form, are struggling with unfamiliar emotions and senses.

Compliance Lesson: Compliance is not just about rules and policies; it is rather about influencing behavior.

Lesson 3: Active Listening and Feedback Loops—It’s Not Just About Talking

Illustrated By: While under Kelvan control, the Enterprise crew quietly listens, observes, and learns. They pay attention to subtle cues, the Kelvans’ confusion, discomfort, and shifting attitudes.

Compliance Takeaway:

Too often, compliance communication is a one-way street: policies are announced, emails are sent, training is assigned. But honest communication is two-way. Kirk’s ability to adapt is rooted in active listening, a skill compliance teams must master.

Lesson 4: Adapt Communication Styles Under Pressure—Agility Matters

Illustrated By: Kirk and company adapt rapidly, sometimes using humor, occasionally confrontation, sometimes empathy, to keep lines of communication open and exploit cracks in Kelvan unity.

Compliance Lesson: The best compliance communicators are agile: they adjust tone, content, and delivery to fit the moment.

Lesson 5: Build Trust and Relationships—Compliance is Ultimately Human

Illustrated By: In the end, the crew’s success comes not from outgunning or outwitting the Kelvans through brute force, but from forging relationships.

Compliance Takeaway:

All the policies and training in the world are ineffective without trust.

Final ComplianceLog Reflections

By Any Other Name” is a Star Trek episode about boundaries—between worlds, cultures, and even species. For the compliance professional, it’s a reminder that communication is our own Universal Translator: it connects people, overcomes obstacles, and paves the way for shared understanding.

Resources:

Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein

MissionLogPodcast.com

Memory Alpha

Categories
Blog

Universal Translators: Compliance Communication Lessons from ‘By Any Other Name’

If you have been around the compliance world long enough, you have heard the refrain: “It all comes down to communication.” Whether you are launching a new code of conduct, rolling out an anti-bribery initiative, or navigating the choppy waters of a compliance investigation, your message, how it is crafted, delivered, and received, often determines your success.

There may be no better pop culture exploration of communication under pressure than Star Trek’s “By Any Other Name.” This episode, from Star Trek: The Original Series, places the crew of the Enterprise under the control of the Kelvans, alien beings with immense power, cold logic, and a total misunderstanding of what it means to be human. To survive, Kirk and his crew must out-communicate and outwit their captors, relying on every tool in their communication toolkit.

For the compliance professional, “By Any Other Name” offers a master class in the nuances of compliance communications, what works, what fails, and why the human element can never be discounted. Today, we explore five compliance communication lessons from this Star Trek classic.

Lesson 1: Know Your Audience—Tailor Your Message

Illustrated By: The Kelvans, led by Rojan, initially communicate only through blunt, logical directives. They expect total obedience from the Enterprise crew, failing to appreciate the crew’s emotional and cultural complexity. Their attempts at control falter because they don’t understand (or even attempt to understand) human motivation.

Compliance Lesson: Compliance messages cannot be one-size-fits-all. The Kelvans’ failure to adapt to their audience is a mistake compliance professionals should avoid. Employees come from diverse backgrounds, cultures, and generations; each absorbs messages differently. What motivates a finance executive in London may not resonate with a front-line worker in Houston or a vendor in Mumbai.

Effective compliance communication requires deep knowledge of your audience, their roles, their pressures, and their “language.” Avoid legalese and boilerplate. Instead, translate compliance requirements into practical, relevant, and relatable guidance. Segment your compliance communications. Use examples, languages, and platforms tailored for different employee groups and geographies. Regularly solicit feedback to ensure your message is landing as intended.

Lesson 2: Use Storytelling and Emotion—Facts Alone Don’t Move People

Illustrated By: Kirk and his crew realize the Kelvans, now in human form, are struggling with unfamiliar emotions and senses. Scotty, McCoy, and Kirk use humor, stories, and emotional appeals—not just facts—to disrupt the Kelvans’ cold logic. Scotty, famously, distracts one by sharing stories over drinks; McCoy pushes another to experience irritability and frustration.

Compliance Lesson: Compliance isn’t just about rules and policies; it’s about influencing behavior. Facts and regulations are essential, but they rarely inspire change on their own. Human beings respond to stories, emotions, and narratives. Scotty doesn’t just explain; he engages. Kirk doesn’t just threaten; he empathizes.

For compliance professionals, this means using storytelling, scenarios, and case studies in your communications. Connect compliance to employees’ values, experiences, and aspirations.

Incorporate real-world examples, ethical dilemmas, and stories, successes, and failures into your training and communications. Show how compliance makes a positive impact, not just what rules to follow.

Lesson 3: Active Listening and Feedback Loops—It’s Not Just About Talking

Illustrated By: While under Kelvan control, the Enterprise crew quietly listens, observes, and learns. They pay attention to subtle cues—the Kelvans’ confusion, discomfort, and shifting attitudes. Kirk’s plan only succeeds because he listens actively and adapts his approach based on feedback and changes in the Kelvans’ behavior.

Compliance Lesson: Too often, compliance communication is a one-way street, where policies are announced, emails are sent, and training is assigned without follow-up. But honest communication is two-way. Kirk’s ability to adapt is rooted in active listening, a skill compliance teams must master.

Effective compliance programs create channels for feedback and respond to what they learn. This can be achieved through hotlines, surveys, focus groups, or informal conversations when employees see that their input leads to change, they become more engaged and are more likely to trust the compliance function. Establishing feedback loops for every major compliance communication is also crucial. Track participation, collect questions, and respond publicly to common concerns. Use what you learn to refine your message and program continually.

Lesson 4: Adapt Communication Styles Under Pressure—Agility Matters

Illustrated By: Throughout the episode, the crew is under intense stress. Their regular routines are disrupted, and the stakes are existential. Yet Kirk and company adapt rapidly, sometimes using humor, occasionally confrontation, sometimes empathy, to keep lines of communication open and exploit cracks in Kelvan unity.

Compliance Lesson: In crises, such as investigations, enforcement actions, or cyber incidents, your standard communications playbook may not be practical. Employees will be anxious, distracted, or fearful. The best compliance communicators are agile: they adjust tone, content, and delivery to fit the moment.

This may involve more frequent updates, simpler language, or a more empathetic tone. It may also require new channels such as video messages from leadership, town halls, or direct conversations with affected teams. Develop a crisis communication plan as part of your compliance program. Practice scenario planning: How will you communicate if the unexpected happens? Build templates and train your team in flexible, adaptive messaging.

Lesson 5: Build Trust and Relationships—Compliance is Ultimately Human

Illustrated By: In the end, the crew’s success comes not from outgunning or outwitting the Kelvans through brute force, but from forging relationships. They appeal to the Kelvans’ newly awakened humanity, earning trust, and ultimately persuading Rojan to abandon conquest in favor of collaboration.

Compliance Takeaway:

All the policies and training in the world are ineffective without trust. Compliance communication is not just about transmitting information; it’s about building relationships, credibility, and psychological safety. Employees must believe that compliance is there to help them succeed, not to police or punish.

Trust is built over time, through transparency, consistency, and authenticity. It is maintained by owning up to mistakes, sharing “the why” behind decisions, and treating employees as partners in compliance. Empower compliance champions in every business unit. Provide them with the tools and support they need to model ethical behavior, answer questions, and cultivate a culture of trust. Regularly spotlight these champions and celebrate examples of “doing the right thing.”

Final ComplianceLog Reflections

By Any Other Name” is a Star Trek episode that explores boundaries between worlds, cultures, and even species. For the compliance professional, it’s a reminder that communication is our own Universal Translator: it connects people, overcomes obstacles, and paves the way for shared understanding.

In our world, the stakes are just as high. The “aliens” we face may not come from Andromeda, but from new markets, new regulations, or emerging technologies. To navigate these challenges, compliance professionals must master the art and science of communication.

So, as you chart your course through your organization’s next compliance initiative, remember that it is not just what you say, but also how you say it, who you say it to, and how you listen, that makes all the difference.

Resources:

Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein

MissionLogPodcast.com

Memory Alpha

Categories
Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: July 22, 2025, The I-9 Hell Edition

Welcome to the Daily Compliance News. Each day, Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, brings to 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 stories include:

  • What is the cost of culture of silence at NASA? (WSJ)
  • Corruption tainting Milan skyline. (Bloomberg)
  • Companies stuck in ‘I-9 hell’ of paperwork. (FT)
  • Credit Suisse flagged Sanjeev Gupta for corruption, but the bank ignored it. (Bloomberg)

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

Categories
Word of the Week

Word of the Week with Kenneth O’Neal – The Power of Ambition: Lessons from Historical and Modern Leaders

Each week, Kenneth O’Neal discusses a word which describes a principle or value of the Qualities of Success. We suggest that you use the Word of the Week in your thoughts, deeds, and actions. You might currently possess the quality and desire to develop it to a higher level.  You could replace a bad habit with a good habit. Write an action step and use it daily to develop the Quality in your life. In this episode, Kenneth discusses the word – Ambition.

In this episode, Rick and Kenneth explore the theme of ambition, highlighting its significance and how it drives personal growth, vision, and innovation. They look at figures such as Alexander the Great, Abraham Lincoln, Steve Jobs, and Elon Musk. The discussion also explores the role of integrity in guiding ambition to create a positive legacy. Abraham Lincoln’s life and leadership exemplify the blend of ambition, purpose, and integrity. The speaker encourages listeners to align their ambition with their deepest values and to serve a greater cause, highlighting that true ambition involves serving others. The episode concludes with a call to action to rise with purpose, embrace integrity, and lead with humility.

Key highlights:

  • Word of the Week: Ambition
  • Abraham Lincoln’s Legacy
  • Questions for Self-Reflection
  • Call to Action: Serve with Integrity

Resources:

KRONEAL Consulting

Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Innovation in Compliance – The Power of Accountability and Team Culture with Gina Cotner

Innovation comes in many areas, and compliance professionals need to be ready for it and embrace it. Join Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, as he visits with top innovative minds, thinkers, and creators in the award-winning Innovation in Compliance podcast. In this engaging episode, Tom Fox sits down with Gina Cotner, the founder and CEO & Founder of Athena Executive Services, to explore the importance of team culture and accountability in corporate settings.

Cotner delves into her professional background and the organic development of a strong team culture at Athena. She emphasizes the critical role of accountability as a cultural standard and provides actionable insights for leaders on how to instill this within their organizations. Key takeaways include the significance of consistency, the balance between compassion and accountability, and the role of follow-up as a leadership tool. With real-world examples and practical advice, Cotner provides a comprehensive guide to building and maintaining a high-performing, accountable team.

Key highlights:

  • Gina Cotner’s Professional Background
  • The Importance of Team Culture
  • Accountability in High-Performing Teams
  • Misunderstandings About Accountability
  • Building a Culture of Accountability
  • Consistency and Psychological Safety
  • Follow-Up as a Leadership Tool
  • Compassion in Leadership

Resources:

Follow Athena Executive Services on:

Company’s Website

LinkedIn

Instagram

Tom Fox

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

Categories
Red Flags Rising

Red Flags Rising: S01 E20 – China, AI, and Export Controls – Facing a Moment of Truth

Mike and Brent follow-up on Episode 19’s discussion of “stack sweeps” with a discussion of the current “moment of truth” facing trade compliance teams dealing with high-probability, catch-all enforcement risks as explained in their recent WorldECR (Issue No. 141, July/August 2025) and Dow Jones Risk Journal article, “Anticipating the moment of truth: how to prepare for ‘high probability’ catch-all enforcement.” Specifically, they discuss the recent decision by the U.S. to allow (licensed) sales of certain advanced integrated circuits to China (00:42), their WorldECR/DJRJ article and how the Bureau of Industry & Security (BIS) guidance of May 13, 2025, which emphasized the “high probability” standard and catch-all provisions of the U.S. Export Administration Regulations (EAR), inspired the article (or at least inspired Tom Blass of WorldECR to ask us for an article) (07:10), how the underlying catch-all provisions are not “new” as of May 13, 2025 (10:26), how compliance teams can’t “zero-risk” export controls risk and need to adopt risk-based approaches (12:17), the relevance of the “inchoate” offenses under the EAR, i.e., aiding, abetting, conspiracy, evasion, acting with knowledge, and misrepresentations (13:21), the limitations of end-use and end-user certificates under the May 13, 2025 policy and guidance documents (14:47), their thoughts on the reportedly pending “50% rule” for the Entity List (18:32), the impact of the ability of malign actors, political parties, and military-intelligence actors to exercise influence even without shareholdings (19:25), why the most risky counterparties are those not on the Entity List (20:49), and the three key takeaways in their WorldECR/DJRJ article (24:09). They conclude with another installment of Brent Carlson’s “Managing Up” segment (30:28).

Resources:

WorldECR

Brent LinkedIn

Mike LinkedIn

Mike & Brent’s “Fresh Looks” Series

Categories
SBR - Authors' Podcast

SBR-Authors Podcast: Finding True Happiness Through Acts of Kindness: A Conversation with Karen Olson

Welcome to the SBR-Authors Podcast! In this podcast series, host Tom Fox visits with authors in the compliance arena and beyond. In this episode, Tom Fox interviews Karen Olson, the founder and CEO Emeritus of Family Promise and the author of ‘Meant for More.’

Olson shares her journey from aspiring nurse to being an influential advocate for homeless families. She elaborates on the importance of acts of kindness in achieving genuine happiness. She describes how the Family Promise organization supports families experiencing homelessness through various programs, including prevention, sheltering, and volunteer services. Olson discusses changes in the homelessness landscape since the 1980s and shares personal stories of volunteers making a difference. She also talks about the inspiration behind her book and the critical role of community involvement in addressing homelessness.

Key highlights:

  • The Story Behind ‘Meant for More’
  • Karen’s Journey
  • The Birth of Family Promise
  • The Current State of Homelessness
  • Inspiring Volunteer Stories
  • Family Promise Initiatives
  • Acts of Kindness and Inspiration

Resources:

Meant for More: Following Your Heart and Finding Your Purpose on Amazon

Visit Family Promise Website

Karen Olson Website

PR by the Book Website

Follow Karen Olson at

PR by the Book

Facebook

Instagram

LinkedIn

Tom Fox

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

Categories
Blog

The Compliance Guide to Designed Intelligence: Part 1 – Rethinking Governance for the Age of AI

If there is one constant in the world of compliance, it is the reality of change. However, in 2025, change takes on a new vector: artificial intelligence, not just as a tool, but as a force reshaping how organizations think, decide, and act. In their article “What Is a Designed Intelligence Environment?” authors Michael Schrage and David Kiron examined how enterprises must rethink their intelligence and compliance strategies to survive and thrive in the new world of AI-rich operations. I found their insights for compliance professionals both practical and transformative. Today, I begin a short two-part blog post series on Designed Intelligence. Today, in Part 1, we consider what is meant by Designed Intelligence. Tomorrow, we take a deeper dive into what it means for compliance.

From Managing Compliance to Orchestrating Intelligence

Traditional compliance frameworks have always focused on managing risk, enforcing controls, and responding to regulatory shifts. But what happens when decision-making itself is no longer exclusively human? In a designed intelligence environment, humans and machines learn, reason, adapt, and improve together. This is not simply the automation of existing workflows; it’s the emergence of a new kind of enterprise, where “epistemic engineering”—the design of how knowledge is generated, shared, and executed—becomes the bedrock of effective compliance.

The first insight for compliance professionals is that we can no longer assume governance is solely about drawing lines around human behavior. Our job is to architect environments in which both human and machine intelligences operate responsibly and transparently, ensuring that knowledge, decisions, and accountability flow where they are needed most.

Computational Irreducibility: The End of Predictive Planning

Stephen Wolfram’s principle of computational irreducibility may sound academic, but its implications are anything but theoretical for compliance leaders. In a nutshell, this principle holds that in highly complex systems, such as those created when humans and AI interact, the future cannot be predicted without running the system in real-time. In other words, the classic compliance cycle of “predict, plan, execute, and measure” is mathematically impossible in many AI-rich contexts.

For compliance professionals, this means shifting from static policy planning to dynamic, real-time oversight. Consider an example from pharmaceutical R&D. A global company faced paralysis in prioritizing compounds for its oncology pipeline. Instead of relying on fixed rankings or endless meetings, leadership created a computational observatory: multiple agentic models simultaneously analyzed each compound from different perspectives (biological plausibility, market readiness, synthetic feasibility)—cross-model consensus and visualization, rather than managerial heuristics, guided decisions, surfacing previously hidden breakthroughs.

Compliance Lesson: Build for Observability, Not Just Control

In today’s world, compliance cannot rely solely on auditing after the fact. The future lies in building observability into the core of decision environments: real-time monitoring, feedback loops, and experimental frameworks that enable compliance to identify emergent risks as they arise, not just when it’s too late. This is the heart of “runtime intelligence.”

Semantic Formalization: Making Compliance Computable

Most compliance programs are based on documentation, training, and knowledge management. But semantic formalization, another key concept, goes much further. It requires organizations to define core business concepts (like “customer value,” “operational risk,” or “conflict of interest”) so precisely that both humans and AI agents can “compute” with them. This is not a matter of semantics for its own sake; it is about ensuring that rules, policies, and standards are unambiguously actionable by both people and machines.

For example, a multinational retailer’s use of large language models (LLMs) for customer support faced breakdowns because definitions of customer experience (CX) varied by region and role. By creating a semantic kernel, which is an enterprise ontology that maps complaints, resolution pathways, sentiment clusters, and CX metrics, the company trained its models (and its people) to reason with consistent, computable definitions. This enabled root-cause analysis and adaptive, system-wide learning that wasn’t possible in the old script-driven model.

Compliance Lesson: Define, Don’t Just Describe

Compliance teams must become architects of semantic infrastructure. That means working cross-functionally to formally define compliance concepts, risks, and obligations so that every AI, dashboard, and human team member speaks the same language, in the same way, everywhere. This is how you build “reasoning standardization” and reduce the friction, ambiguity, and risk that come with AI-driven scale.

Rulial Space: Translating Between Multiple Realities

Perhaps the most disruptive insight for compliance comes from the concept of rule-based space: the recognition that different “intelligences”—whether human teams, AI systems, or even other departments—operate under distinct rule sets, generating unique realities. Finance assesses risk through Monte Carlo simulations, operations analyze it through failure mode analysis, and AI identifies it through statistical correlations. Traditional efforts to force alignment through training or incentives may be fundamentally flawed. What is needed is translation, not assimilation.

In aerospace manufacturing, for example, friction between design engineers and LLMs led to productivity-killing standoffs. Instead of forcing one side to conform to the other, leadership installed an honest mediator: an explicit layer for mapping, negotiating, and reconciling the assumptions, rules, and heuristics of both human and AI systems. This moved the organization from “compliance by enforcement” to “compliance by comprehension,” a far more powerful and sustainable model for managing both risk and innovation.

Compliance Lesson: Become a Translator, Not Just an Enforcer

The future of compliance is not just about enforcing standards but about building systems and processes that can explicitly map and translate between different rule sets: human, machine, and hybrid. This requires cognitive compilers: protocols and infrastructure for negotiating meaning, resolving conflicts, and arbitrating outputs across diverse intelligences. The result is intelligent orchestration of more innovative, safer, and more adaptive enterprises.

Why Smarter Tools Aren’t Enough: Compliance by Design, Not Just Technology

It’s tempting to think that more innovative tools or more sophisticated AI models will solve all compliance challenges. But as the article warns, deploying intelligence as automation—without rethinking the architecture of decision environments—will leave most enterprises stuck with mediocre results. Intelligence, whether human or machine, must be designed into the very infrastructure of the organization: how decisions are made, how meaning is generated, and how value and risk are understood.

For compliance professionals, this means a dramatic expansion of your remit. You must help design the runtime environment for intelligence where learning, adaptation, and ethical execution are embedded, not bolted on. This requires technical fluency, cross-disciplinary collaboration, and a willingness to challenge the old boundaries of policy, training, and audit.

Conclusion: The Compliance Opportunity in Designed Intelligence

The transition to designed intelligence environments represents both a challenge and a once-in-a-generation opportunity for compliance leaders. Those who lean in, who help architect real-time observability, semantic formalization, and rule-based mediation, will become essential strategic partners in their organizations’ transformation. Those who don’t risk being left behind by systems they can neither see, steer, nor secure.

The era of “predict and control” is coming to an end. The age of “orchestrate and observe” is here. As compliance professionals, our calling is clear: to lead the design, governance, and stewardship of intelligence environments that are fit for the complexity and promise of AI. Only then can we ensure that innovation and integrity go hand in hand in the enterprises of tomorrow.

Join us tomorrow for Part 2, where we delve deeper into the compliance considerations.