Categories
AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: January 27, 2026, The Ensembling AI 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 five stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest about AI.

Top AI stories include:

  1. Ensembling AI to improve compliance. (WSJ)
  2. Zero Trust data governance is key to preventing AI slop. (CIO)
  3. Doctors are seeing more positives from AI. (ABC News)
  4. Humans are more important in the age of AI. (FT)
  5. The major AI trends impacting KYC compliance. (FinTech Global)

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.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: January 27, 2026, The Geodata 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:

  • Santander fined for AML oversights. (Bloomberg)
  • TikTok to collect precise user geo-data. (BBC)
  • DOT cancels Booz Allen contract over tax information leaks. (FT)
  • Why people matter more in the age of AI. (FT)
Categories
31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program: Day 27 – The Compliance Function in an Organization

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. In today’s Day 27 episode, we explore the growing importance and responsibilities of the compliance function within corporations, emphasizing the need for adequate staffing, resources, and independence.

Key highlights:

  • DOJ’s Expectations for Compliance Programs
  • Funding and Resources for Compliance
  • Compliance Program Structure and Authority

Resources:

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

Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Innovation in Compliance – The Strategic Advantage of Personal Branding with Sheila Anderson

Innovation occurs across many areas, and compliance professionals need not only to be ready for it but also to 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 episode, host Tom Fox welcomes Sheila Anderson, founder of Image Power Play, to discuss the significance of personal branding and its impact on professional success.

With over 30 years of experience in corporate branding and image consulting, Sheila shares insights on how visibility and presence can enhance trust and credibility in the business world. The discussion covers why first impressions are essential business assets, the role of visual aesthetics in professional settings, and the strategic benefits of being the CEO of one’s personal brand. Sheila also emphasizes the importance of updating personal photos and continuously evolving one’s brand to ensure it aligns with personal and professional goals. The episode offers practical advice for both men and women in various professional environments, highlighting personal branding as a critical business strategy.

Key highlights:

  • The Importance of First Impressions
  • Gender and Professional Presence
  • The Dichotomy of In-Person vs. Online Presence
  • The Impact of Casual Dress in Professional Settings
  • Taking Ownership of Your Personal Brand
  • Measuring Success in Personal Branding
  • Sheila Anderson’s Book: ICU

Resources:

Sheila Anderson on LinkedIn

Image Power Play website

I.C.U. – The Comprehensive Guide to Breathing Life Back into Your Personal Brand on amazon.com 

Innovation in Compliance was recently ranked 4th among Risk Management podcasts by 1,000,000 Podcasts.

Categories
Blog

How Compliance Should Show Up Before the Crisis

Recently, my colleague Matt Kelly wrote a blog post about retaliation against Chief Compliance Officers (CCOs). Matt and I explored it in an episode of the podcast Compliance into the Weeds. Matt’s post and our discussion crystallized one of the frustrations of the CCO role: compliance is often experienced solely by senior management as a late-arriving messenger of bad news. When compliance walks into the room, something has already gone wrong. The tone changes. Defenses go up. Trust narrows.

Yet the most consequential moments for a CCO are precisely those situations where the stakes are highest. A potential regulatory disclosure. A decision about whether to notify a government agency. A moment where delay, missteps, or poor coordination can turn a manageable issue into an enterprise-level crisis. If compliance is only visible in those moments, the relationship with the CEO and executive leadership team is already at a disadvantage.

Interestingly, in our podcast, we explored a technique which might be termed “coaching management ahead of time”. Matt picked up the strategy of using a training borrowed from the cyber world of incident training for a cyber-attack. I see this as a very powerful way not only to communicate compliance but also to train on the specific issues senior management will face if a reportable compliance incident occurs. You could train on such hypotheticals by walking the executive leadership team through them so they understand the process, while also providing training on the specific issues.

I think this approach offers practical, repeatable ways to build trust with senior management before a crisis, so that when compliance raises a serious issue, the function is seen as a stabilizing force, not a source of panic.

The Core Problem: Compliance as the Bearer of Bad News

Many compliance officers do excellent technical work but still struggle to earn executive trust. The reason is not competence. It is timing and framing. Senior leaders often experience compliance in three narrow contexts:

  • An investigation has begun.
  • A whistleblower allegation has escalated; and/or
  • A regulator may need to be notified.

In those moments, compliance is necessarily directive. The CCO must slow decisions down, insist on process, and sometimes recommend outcomes executives would prefer to avoid. Without a foundation of trust, those recommendations can feel punitive or overly conservative. The solution is not softer messaging during crises. The solution is familiarity with the compliance process long before the crisis arrives.

Process Transparency as a Trust-Building Strategy

Trust is built through predictability. Senior executives are far more comfortable with difficult outcomes when they understand the process that leads there. This is where scenario-based training becomes one of the most underused tools in the compliance arsenal. Instead of waiting for a live issue, the CCO can walk the executive leadership team through realistic hypotheticals:

  • A fact pattern that suggests regulatory notification may be required
  • How compliance evaluates credibility and materiality
  • Who is involved at each stage and why
  • What decisions will management be asked to make
  • What actions help, and what actions make things worse

These sessions are not about assigning blame or rehearsing fear. They are about demystifying how compliance operates when the stakes are high.

Why Scenario-Based Training Works With Executives

Scenario-based discussions resonate with executive teams for several reasons. First, they are practical. Executives do not need another policy overview. They want to know what actually happens when something goes wrong. Second, they are respectful of executive time and intelligence. A well-designed hypothetical treats leadership as decision-makers, not students. Third, they normalize compliance involvement.

When executives have already walked through a compliance-led process in a low-pressure setting, that process feels familiar rather than threatening during a real event. Most importantly, scenario-based training reframes compliance from a reactive function to a preparedness function.

The Strategic Role of Informal Engagement

These conversations do not need to occur only in formal training sessions. In fact, some of the most effective trust-building happens outside structured settings.

  • A short walkthrough during an executive offsite.
  • A tabletop discussion over lunch.
  • A casual conversation that begins with, “Let me show you how we would handle this if it ever happened.”

These informal touchpoints matter because they remove fear from the equation. They allow executives to ask questions they might not ask during a live issue. They also allow compliance to show judgment, nuance, and business awareness. This is not a charm offensive. It is a deliberate relationship strategy.

Training on What Not to Do

One of the most valuable elements of scenario-based transparency is the ability to explain mistakes before they occur. Executives often want to help in a crisis. That instinct, while well-intentioned, can create problems. Premature document reviews. Side conversations. Incomplete recollections. Overconfident assurances.

Scenario training allows the CCO to say, in advance, “Here is what helps us protect the company,” and just as importantly, “Here is what can unintentionally make things worse.” When executives understand these boundaries ahead of time, compliance interventions during a real issue feel protective rather than restrictive.

From Messenger of Doom to Stabilizing Force

When compliance has invested in transparency and education, something important shifts. When the CCO later says, “We believe this may require regulatory notification,” that recommendation is no longer heard in isolation. It is understood as part of a known, previously discussed process.

Executives may not like the conclusion, but they trust the path that led there. That trust allows compliance to do its job effectively. It reduces friction. It shortens response time. It improves decision quality. Most importantly, it positions compliance as an advisor whose presence brings structure and clarity to uncertainty.

What Compliance Officers Should Take Away

For compliance officers, the lesson is not about presentation skills or tone management. It is about timing and familiarity. If senior management only experiences compliance during moments of stress, compliance will always feel adversarial. If senior management understands the compliance process before the stress arrives, compliance becomes a stabilizing influence.

Scenario-based training, informal engagement, and process transparency are not “nice to have” activities. They are strategic tools for relationship-building at the highest levels of the organization. The most trusted CCOs are not those who avoid bringing bad news. They are the ones who ensure that when bad news arrives, it is delivered within a framework everyone already understands. That is how compliance earns trust before the crisis and credibility during it.