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PodFest Expo 2026 Speaker Series Preview

Podfest Expo 2026 Speaker Preview Series: Dr. Yolanda Nollie on Building High Revenue Podcasts

In this episode of the Podfest Expo 2026 Speaker Preview Podcasts series, Tom Fox visits with Dr. Yolanda Nollie, who studies and writes on podcasting from an academic perspective and is the host & producer of the Radio & TV Entertainment AM/FM Podcast Show. They discuss her presentation at Podfest Expo 2026 titled “Building High-Revenue Podcasts.” Some of the highlights in this podcast are:

  • Dr. Nollie’s role in the world of podcasting.
  • Her presentations at PodFest Expo.
  • What she hopes to get out of PodFest Expo 2026 and why you should attend.

I hope you can join us at Podfest Expo 2026, hosted by Podfest Global. This year’s event will be the 12th anniversary and will be held January 15-18, at the RENAISSANCE ORLANDO AT SEAWORLD® in Orlando, Florida. The lineup of this year’s event is simply first-rate, with some of the top names in podcasting.

Podfest Expo is a community of people interested in and passionate about sharing their voices and messages with the world through powerful audio and video mediums. We’re proud to unite as many people as possible to learn, get inspired, and grow better together.

Podfest Expo is so much more than just a conference. While we pride ourselves on featuring the most engaging speakers, exciting topics, and in-depth content, what sets the Podfest Expo event apart from all others is the tight-knit community we’ve been building since 2013. You don’t just attend a Podfest event—you become part of the Podfest family.

Whether you’re new to podcasting or a veteran podcaster looking to innovate and improve your podcast, our easy-to-understand Conference Topics allow you to customize a daily agenda based on what you’re most interested in learning. No matter your skill level or experience, Podfest Expo 2026 has plenty to offer!

Please join us at the event. For information on the event, click here. As an extra benefit for listeners of this podcast, Podfest Expo is offering 10% off any ticket level. Enter the discount code Fox2026 or visit this link.

Podfest Expo 2026 is a production of Podfest Global, which is the sponsor of this podcast series.

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PodFest Expo 2026 Speaker Series Preview

Podfest Expo 2026 Speaker Preview Series: Sean Douglas on Getting Podcasters to Lead

In this episode of the Podfest Expo 2026 Speaker Preview Podcasts series, Tom Fox visits with Sean Douglas, a podcast growth specialist and host of the From No Worth To Self-Worth Podcast, and discusses his presentation at Podfest Expo 2026 on Creating A Category of 1. Some of the highlights in this podcast are:

  • Sean’s role in the world of podcasting.
  • His presentations at PodFest Expo.
  • What he hopes to get out of PodFest Expo 2026 and why you should attend.

I hope you can join us at Podfest Expo 2026, hosted by Podfest Global. This year’s event will be the 12th anniversary and will be held January 15-18, at the RENAISSANCE ORLANDO AT SEAWORLD® in Orlando, Florida. The lineup of this year’s event is simply first-rate, with some of the top names in podcasting.

Podfest Expo is a community of people interested in and passionate about sharing their voices and messages with the world through powerful audio and video mediums. We’re proud to unite as many people as possible to learn, get inspired, and grow better together.

Podfest Expo is so much more than just a conference. While we pride ourselves on featuring the most engaging speakers, exciting topics, and in-depth content, what sets the Podfest Expo event apart from all others is the tight-knit community we’ve been building since 2013. You don’t just attend a Podfest event—you become part of the Podfest family.

Whether you’re new to podcasting or a veteran podcaster looking to innovate and improve your podcast, our easy-to-understand Conference Topics allow you to customize a daily agenda based on what you’re most interested in learning. No matter your skill level or experience, Podfest Expo 2026 has plenty to offer!

Please join us at the event. For information on the event, click here. As an extra benefit for listeners of this podcast, Podfest Expo is offering 10% off any ticket level. Enter the discount code Fox2026 or visit this link.

Podfest Expo 2026 is a production of Podfest Global, which is the sponsor of this podcast series.

Categories
31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program: Day 9 – Continuous Monitoring and Continuous Improvement

Welcome to 31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program. Over this 31-day series in January 2026, Tom Fox will post a key component of a best-practice compliance program each day. By the end of January, you will have enough information to create, design, or enhance a compliance program. Each podcast will be short, at 6-8 minutes, with three key takeaways that you can implement at little or no cost to help update your compliance program. I hope you will join each day in January for this exploration of best practices in compliance. Today, Day 9, we discuss continuous monitoring and continuous improvement.

Key highlights:

  • Understanding Changes in Company Risks
  • Continuous Monitoring and Improvement
  • External Information Sources for Compliance

Resources:

Listeners to this podcast can receive a 20% discount on The Compliance Handbook, 6th edition, by clicking here.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: January 9, 2026, The Tell Me If You’ve Seen This Movie Before 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, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest for the compliance professional.

Top stories include:

  • Trump says the US could stay in Venezuela ‘for years.’ (NYT)
  • Cambodian scam tycoon extradited to China. (WSJ)
  • A Kazakh oligarch paid Prince Andrew millions. (BBC)
  • How a botched Bulgarian corruption investigation brought chaos to EPPO. (Follow The Money)
Categories
AI Today in 5 Innovation in Compliance

AI Today in 5: January 9, 2026, The Losing Control Over PII Edition

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest addition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI to 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 about AI.

Top AI stories include:

  1. AI carries specific risks for financial advice. (Investment News)
  2. Will EU AI push reduce control over PII? (CX Today)
  3. AI reg priorities for compliance in 2026. (FinTechGlobal)
  4. How native platforms are reshaping financial crime compliance. (FinTechGlobal)
  5. Crypto banking and AI. (Onesafe)

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

Will Trump Suspend FCPA Enforcement in Venezuela?

Now that I have your attention with this clickbait title, I want to explore today what the Venezuelan imbroglio may mean for compliance professionals and energy companies who are looking at either entering the Venezuelan market or, in many cases, re-entering it after the not invasion (since it was not a military action authorized by Congress); not a police action (that the Korean War takes the moniker); but the capture of President Maduro and his wife to purloin Venezuela’s oil. As noted by New York Times (NYT) columnist Thomas Friedman today, “It is now clear that Trump’s priority in capturing President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela was not to make that country safe for the restoration of democracy but to make it safe for the restoration of American oil companies’ dominance over Venezuelan oil extraction.”

But there are multiple obstacles to the US getting to and removing Venezuelan oil. As the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) noted, “But getting foreign companies to flock back to Venezuela will be a massive challenge. Chevron is the only major U.S. oil company and the country’s largest foreign investor. Other oil executives will be forced to gauge the stability on the ground in a country where the industry has fallen into disarray after more than two decades of mismanagement and corruption.” Economically, it may make little to no sense.

Corruption and PDVSA

But from the compliance perspective, there is the issue of corruption. As I wrote back in 2017, “Of all the stench from corruption, not much is more odious than that from the Venezuelan state oil company Petróleos de Venezuela SA (PDVSA). Whether it is shaking down contractors for Rolex watches to schedule a meeting, requiring a bribe to get payments on outstanding invoices, or simply good old-fashioned cash to get on a bid list, PDVSA is perceived to be one of the most institutionally corrupt energy companies around.”

How President Trump plans to get the Venezuelan oil out of the country is not known at this point. But unless he orders US energy companies to put boots on the ground to rebuild PdVSA’s decrepit infrastructure, those same companies will have to deal with the same corrupt PdVSA officials.

In the context of Venezuela’s reopening to Western energy investment, President Trump’s decision to pause enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) reflected a broader strategic pivot toward what his administration calls economic competitiveness and national security. His Executive Order issued in early 2025 directed the Department of Justice (DOJ) to halt new FCPA investigations for at least 180 days while it reviewed enforcement priorities on the premise that strict anti-bribery enforcement, as it has traditionally been applied, “impedes U.S. foreign policy objectives” and disadvantages American companies relative to global competitors. The policy rationale was that, in markets perceived as corrupt or opaque, rigorous FCPA enforcement has historically dissuaded US firms from competing effectively, particularly against foreign rivals who do not face the same legal constraints. This argument, which resonated with a strand of populist economic nationalism, frames FCPA enforcement as a barrier to energy companies securing strategic resources, such as Venezuelan oil, rather than as a purely ethical safeguard.

From a compliance professional’s lens, this recalibration had two implications. On one hand, it might reduce the immediacy of DOJ scrutiny for conduct in jurisdictions like Venezuela, where corruption risk is endemic. On the other hand, the suspension does not abolish the law; FCPA remains on the books, and enforcement priorities can flip with the political winds or through congressional action. Moreover, the suspension could embolden local partners or intermediaries to push for irregular payments under the assumption that US enforcement is weak, creating significant red-flag risks for energy companies seeking to operationalize robust controls aligned with the DOJ’s Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (ECCP) standards. Even under a relaxed enforcement regime, a strong compliance program grounded in the ECCP’s emphasis on risk-based design, continuous monitoring, and senior-management accountability remains a critical commercial and legal hedge.

Compliance Going Forward

One of the most important takeaways for compliance professionals confronting Venezuela is the necessary shift from reflexive risk avoidance to disciplined risk management. Mike DeBernardis told me that the modern compliance mandate “is no longer to say ‘no’ when risk is high; it is to say ‘yes, if’ the risk can be identified, structured, and controlled.” This is not a philosophical shift. It is explicitly embedded in the ECCP, which does not reward companies for avoiding difficult markets but instead evaluates how effectively they manage risk in precisely those environments.

In the Venezuelan energy context, this means compliance must be deeply embedded in the business strategy from the outset. Compliance professionals must fully understand the proposed energy project, including its commercial objectives, operational footprint, and timelines. They must map every anticipated interaction with the Venezuelan state, particularly with state-owned enterprises, regulators, customs authorities, and security services.

From there, compliance professionals must identify where corruption pressure is most likely to arise, not in theory but in practice, based on how the business will actually operate. Only then can bespoke controls be designed to address those specific risks. The ECCP repeatedly emphasizes that effective compliance programs are well-designed, adequately resourced, and genuinely empowered. This is where compliance earns its seat at the strategy table. If compliance is engaged only after contracts are signed and capital committed, its ability to influence outcomes is sharply diminished, and the program is far more likely to fail under real-world pressure.

If initial program design is the foundation, continuous monitoring is the load-bearing structure. Energy operations in Venezuela will not tolerate static compliance approaches built around annual certifications or periodic check-the-box reviews. The ECCP explicitly asks whether companies test the effectiveness of their controls and whether they respond promptly and meaningfully to issues as they arise. In a high-risk jurisdiction like Venezuela, corruption risk will evolve rapidly as political conditions, counterparties, and regulatory expectations shift. Compliance programs must therefore be dynamic.

This requires live monitoring of payments, invoices, and reimbursements, particularly those involving third parties and state-linked entities. It requires regular compliance check-ins with project teams operating on the ground and under real-time pressure. It also requires targeted audits that focus narrowly on high-risk transactions rather than broad, generic reviews that miss the point. When red flags appear, swift remediation is essential, including the authority to pause transactions or relationships when necessary. Friction with the business is inevitable in this environment. Under the ECCP, however, that friction is not evidence of failure. It is evidence of independence, effectiveness, and seriousness of purpose.

For energy companies, Venezuela may well be worth the risk. The size of the opportunity, particularly in hydrocarbons, may make disengagement an increasingly unrealistic option. For compliance professionals, however, the mandate is clear and unforgiving. Programs must be designed with the assumption that pressure will occur, that shortcuts will be suggested, and that local counterparts may view compliance as negotiable.

Effective programs anticipate misconduct rather than react to it, and they are built to withstand scrutiny not only from local stakeholders but also from US enforcement authorities looking back months or years later. This requires compliance professionals to think and act as strategic risk managers, not policy custodians. They must insist on visibility into business decisions, demand resources commensurate with risk, and maintain the authority to intervene when necessary.

In the Venezuelan context, success will not be defined by the absence of issues but by how quickly and credibly the organization detects and addresses them. That approach is not merely about satisfying regulatory expectations. It is about protecting the company’s people, assets, and reputation in one of the most challenging operating environments in the world. That is not just compliance. That is strategic risk management at its purest and most demanding.