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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Compliance Lessons Uber

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.

This week, we begin a look at how companies are utilizing AI in their business operations and draw compliance lessons from this use for compliance professionals. Today, we start with lessons from Uber.

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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The Ethics Experts

Episode 231 – Norm Ashkenas

In this episode of The Ethics Experts, Nick welcomes Norm Ashkenas.

Norm Ashkenas is Chief Compliance Officer of Robinhood Markets, joining in 2020. He has been in the financial services industry for 30 years in a variety of legal and compliance roles, including as Chief Compliance Officer for large retail brokerage and investment advisory firms. Norm is a leader, committee member and frequent speaker for a number of industry and regulatory groups including SIFMA, FINRA, NSCP, FSDA and FMA. He holds a B.A. in European History & American Culture from Northwestern University, a J.D. from Fordham Law School, and FINRA Series 7, 14, 24, and 63 licenses.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: October 6, 2025, The Corny Capitalism 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 stories include:

  • Saudi mega-construction project under ABC investigation. (Semafor)
  • PE and the ethics of drug research. (NYT)
  • $100MM wine fraud in NYC. (Bloomberg)
  • Crony capitalism and corruption. (NPR)
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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report – Pat Poitevin on Transforming Corporate Compliance: Leveraging AI and Building Ethical Cultures

Join Tom Fox as he welcomes Pat Poitevin, a compliance veteran with extensive experience in enforcement, consulting, and academia. Pat shares his professional journey, beginning with his work at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and discusses the importance of establishing strong ethics and compliance cultures within organizations. He emphasizes the role of AI in transforming compliance functions and enhancing the effectiveness of risk management. Pat also touches on the future of compliance, talent acquisition, and the impact of technology on business ethics. The conversation offers valuable insights for compliance professionals looking to refine their programs and align them with business strategies for sustained growth.

Key highlights:

  • Current Projects and Focus Areas
  • Building a Strong Ethics and Compliance Culture
  • Leveraging AI in Compliance
  • Compliance Strategies for Geopolitical and Technological Changes
  • Balancing Policies and Human Behavior
  • Future of Compliance and Technology

Resources 

Pat Poitevin

🔸 LinkedIn: Pat Poitevin

🔸 Consulting Firm: Active Compliance and Ethics Group (ACEG)

Tom Fox

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For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: October 6, 2025, The DOE Edition

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest edition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI, so start your day, sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen in to the AI Today In 5, all from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, we consider four stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest related to AI.

Top AI stories include:

For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

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Blog

Courageous Leadership in an Era of Disruption: Compliance Lessons from Brené Brown

The New York Times (NYT) recently published an interview with Brené Brown, best known for her TEDx Talk on “The Power of Vulnerability.”  Her TEDx Talk focused on individuals. Brown is now using those concepts as a basis for work in the corporate world. Many of the concepts she discussed in this interview directly apply to a Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) and corporate compliance function. In this article, I will summarize the key themes of Brown’s discussion and draw out five critical lessons for compliance professionals navigating today’s turbulent environment.

The world of corporate compliance does not exist in a vacuum. Every day, compliance professionals work within organizations facing extraordinary pressures: disruptive technologies, geopolitical instability, shifting marketplaces, and evolving workforce expectations. Against this backdrop, Brené Brown, renowned researcher on shame, vulnerability, and courage, has turned her attention to leadership in corporate, nonprofit, and even military contexts. Her latest reflections provide timely insights not just for executives, but for compliance professionals tasked with guiding organizations through uncertainty.

Brown’s message is clear: in moments of disruption, the quality of leadership matters more than ever. She challenges us to think about courage, vulnerability, and clarity not as “soft skills,” but as the very foundation of sustainable organizational performance. For the compliance professional, her work resonates deeply. After all, compliance is fundamentally about behavior, how people act under pressure, how they respond to risk, and how organizations foster cultures of accountability and trust.

The Pace of Change and the Trap of Fear

Brown describes today’s business climate as a “supercycle” of unprecedented change. Artificial intelligence, geopolitical instability, and economic volatility create a sense of scarcity, a nagging feeling that organizations lack sufficient time, resources, or talent to keep up. For compliance leaders, this context should feel familiar. When regulations shift overnight or enforcement priorities change, fear and reactive decision-making often follow.

Brown cautions against “action over impact,” where leaders rush to act without pausing to assess whether their actions are aligned with strategy. For compliance, this is the difference between a carefully calibrated monitoring program and a scattershot set of controls that look good on paper but fail in practice. Strategic urgency, not blind urgency, must guide the compliance function.

Courage, Accountability, and Human Leadership

At the heart of Brown’s research is the idea that courage, not technical expertise alone, is the limiting factor in organizational performance. Across industries, she found leaders struggling to have hard conversations, to hold others accountable, and to resist blame and shame.

For compliance, this insight hits home. We have all seen organizations where misconduct festers because leaders fear confrontation, or where accountability is deflected onto “bad apples” instead of being addressed systemically. Brown reminds us that courage means leaning into discomfort, whether that’s delivering difficult feedback, shutting down toxic behavior, or confronting senior leaders when ethical lines are at risk of being crossed.

Communication as a Compliance Tool

Brown describes good communication as rooted in clarity, discipline, and accountability. It requires vulnerability, honesty, and a willingness to tolerate discomfort. In her words, “A brave life is basically 15 hard conversations a day.” Compliance professionals should take note. Too often, compliance messages are dulled by legal jargon or buried in training modules that merely check the box without creating a genuine understanding. Effective compliance communication is not about volume, but clarity — stating expectations plainly, reinforcing them consistently, and holding both leaders and employees accountable when those expectations are not met.

When compliance officers avoid difficult conversations, whether with business leaders, employees, or regulators, they fail in their role as stewards of integrity.

Generational Shifts and the “Why” Question

Another theme Brown highlights is the growing demand from younger generations to understand the “why” behind organizational decisions. Gen Z, in particular, tends to resist following orders blindly. They ask questions, challenge assumptions, and expect transparency.

For compliance, this is an opportunity, not a threat. When employees ask “why,” they create space for dialogue about risk, ethics, and accountability. If handled well, these conversations can strengthen the compliance culture. If dismissed or ignored, however, they can morph into conflict and disengagement. Compliance professionals must equip themselves and their organizations with the skills to turn task conflict into innovation, rather than emotional conflict that fractures teams.

The Decline of Fear-Based Leadership

Brown pushes back against the notion that fear-driven leadership, exemplified by mass layoffs or authoritarian management, produces sustainable performance. Fear may yield quick results, but its shelf life is short. To maintain fear as a motivator, leaders must repeatedly demonstrate cruelty, which corrodes trust and drives talent away.

Compliance programs grounded in fear face the same limitation. Employees may comply out of fear of punishment in the short term, but over time, they disengage, seek ways to evade controls, or leave the organization entirely. Sustainable compliance requires trust, fairness, and accountability, not periodic shows of cruelty.

Five Key Takeaways for the Compliance Professional

1. Strategic Urgency Over Panic

In times of disruption, resist “chicken with your head cut off” urgency. Compliance programs must prioritize thoughtful, strategic action over quick fixes that create the illusion of progress without real impact.

2. Courage as the Compliance Differentiator

Having hard conversations, holding people accountable, and confronting uncomfortable truths are the core of both leadership and compliance. Technical expertise matters, but courage drives results.

3. Communication Builds Trust

Effective compliance communication requires clarity, discipline, and accountability. Don’t hide behind jargon or check-the-box training. Say what needs to be said, even when it’s uncomfortable.

4. Harness the Power of ‘Why’

Younger employees demand transparency and reasoning. Use this as a lever to build stronger compliance cultures. Equip leaders to turn questions into opportunities for education, engagement, and innovation.

5. Reject Fear-Based Models

Fear is a short-term motivator with long-term costs. Compliance programs grounded in trust, fairness, and respect will outperform those that rely on punishment and intimidation.

Compliance Lessons in Courage

Brené Brown’s reflections on leadership are not abstract musings. They speak directly to the challenges compliance professionals face in guiding organizations through uncertainty, disruption, and cultural change. At its core, compliance is about shaping behavior and building cultures of integrity. That work requires courage, clarity, and compassion, which are precisely the traits Brown identifies as the hallmarks of effective leadership.

As we look ahead to the next wave of regulatory change, technological disruption, and workforce transformation, compliance officers must resist the temptation to react out of fear. Instead, we must embrace courageous leadership that aligns action with impact, values clarity over noise, and treats people with humanity even in moments of adversity.

Brown’s work reminds us that compliance is not just about preventing wrongdoing; it is also about promoting ethical behavior. It is about cultivating courage and clarity in organizations so that, when disruption hits, leaders and employees alike know how to “settle the ball,” take a breath, and make the right play.