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The Hill Country Podcast

Hill Country Podcast – MotivAction Partners with Schreiner’s Center for Talent and Workforce Development to Build Educator Resilience

Welcome to award-winning The Hill Country Podcast. The Texas Hill Country is one of the most beautiful places on earth. In this podcast, welcomes back Jen Hardy.

Jen is the COO of Academy of MotivAction, a neuroscience-based training and development company that equips high-stress professionals with resilience and communication tools to reduce burnout and maintain relationships. Hardy explains MotiveAction’s new partnership with Schreiner University’s Center for Talent and Workforce Development to deliver professional development for educators and education staff through workshops, retreats, keynotes, and on-campus courses. She describes a key training gap in education and coaching: managing difficult conversations, regulating one’s nervous system during stressful situations, and addressing increasingly dysregulated students. Hardy contrasts self-paced and live online offerings with the benefits of immersive in-person training. She notes partner Irina is focusing more on CEO responsibilities while new coach Sarah Talley helps lead courses. A summer 2026 on-campus course is scheduled for June 23.

Key Highlights

  • What Is MotivAction
  • Schreiner Partnership
  • Training Gap For Teachers
  • Coaching Lessons Applied
  • Team Roles And New Coach
  • How To Connect And Wrap Up

 

Resources

Jen Hardy on LinkedIn

MotivAction website

Schreiner University’s Center for Talent and Workforce Development

 

Other Hill Country Focused Podcasts

Hill Country Authors Podcast

Hill Country Artists Podcast

Texas Hill Country Podcast Network

Cover Art

Nancy Huffman

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Compliance Into the Weeds

Compliance into the Weeds: Ohio State and Improper Requests by a President

The award winning, Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast which takes a deep dive into a compliance related topic, literally going into the weeds to more fully explore a subject. Looking for some hard-hitting insights on compliance? Look no further than Compliance into the Weeds! In this episode of Compliance into the Weeds, Tom Fox and Matt Kelly discuss the recent departure of the President of  the Ohio State University.

Matt and Tom raise a compliance-focused question about how an employee should respond after receiving a request that may implicate an improper relationship between a company president and his girlfriend. They highlight whether an employee should question or report a potentially inappropriate relationship based on the request alone, or whether doing so goes too far without more substantive evidence. Their discussion emphasizes that addressing such concerns can be a delicate conversation for employees to navigate.

 

Resources

Matt on Radical Compliance

Tom

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A multi-award winning podcast, Compliance into the Weeds was most recently honored as one of a Top 25 Regulatory Compliance Podcast and a Top 10 Business Law Podcast, and a Top 12 Risk Management Podcast. Compliance into the Weeds has been conferred a Davey, Communicator and w3 Award, all for podcast excellence.

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: May 6, 2026 the Religious Objections to AI Edition

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

  1. Religious objections to AI coming. (HR Dive)
  2. AI healthcare frameworks will become as standard as HIPPA. (HealthCareITNews)
  3. AI coming to AML compliance. (FinTechGlobal)
  4. Roomba returns with AI. (AP)
  5. AI and shadow crypto markets. (Bloomberg)

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. To learn about the intersection of Sherlock Holmes and the modern compliance professional, check out my latest book, The Game is Afoot-What Sherlock Holmes Teaches About Risk, Ethics and Investigations on Amazon.com

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Great Women in Compliance

Great Women in Compliance: DOJ’s New Fraud Division: Practical Insights for Compliance Professionals

In this episode, Lisa and Ellen speak with Leigha Simonton and Jennifer Beidel, former prosecutors and now partners at Dykema Gossett. They discuss the changes in the U.S. Department of Justice, focusing on the National Fraud Enforcement Division and shifts in enforcement priorities.

They discuss the spotlight on fraud involving federal funds, especially in healthcare, PPP loans, and other government programs. They discuss the new structure of the criminal fraud division and how that may change the government’s approach to prosecuting cases. At the same time, they also note that many experienced prosecutors and agents have left the DOJ, creating a gap between stated priorities and capacity and expertise.

Leigha and Jennifer also provide practical guidance for ethics and compliance professionals. They confirm that a risk assessment is critical and that any company that received federal funds, such as PPP loans, should remain vigilant for possible exposure under the current enforcement trends.

Even with these changes, they reiterate that effective, well-tested compliance programs do matter if the U.S. government is considering (or engaging in) prosecution. A proactive program—not the tick-the-box type—demonstrates implementation and remediation, increasing the likelihood of a declination.

This is a great episode for those of us trying to understand the US DOJ’s current enforcement landscape amid uncertainty.

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Blog

The Warner Bros. Bidding War: Part 2 – Board Governance Under Pressure

When a superior proposal emerges, the Board is no longer evaluating strategy. It is proving governance. The Warner Bros. transaction shows how fiduciary duty, disclosure discipline, and control execution must function in real time. We are exploring the Warner Bros./Netflix/Paramount bidding and purchase for lessons for the compliance professional. In Part 1, we focused was on what happened. This post focuses on how the Board must respond when events accelerate.

The process moved from a negotiated transaction with Netflix to a contested situation with a rival bidder, Paramount. At that moment, the Board’s role shifted from approving a deal to managing an auction under fiduciary duty. This is the precise moment contemplated by Delaware fiduciary law and the Board oversight obligations often framed through the lens of Caremark duties. The question is no longer whether the Board can approve a transaction. The question becomes whether the Board can demonstrate that it acted on an informed basis, in good faith, and in the best interests of shareholders. That is not a conclusion. It is a record.

Waiver Discipline and the Fiduciary Record

In a live bidding environment, the Board will be asked to consider waivers of contractual provisions, including standstill agreements, exclusivity clauses, or information-sharing restrictions. The governance risk is not the waiver itself. The governance risk is undocumented decision-making. A Board must ensure that every waiver is:

  • Reduced to writing with defined scope and duration
  • Reviewed by counsel with a clear statement of fiduciary rationale
  • Reflected in contemporaneous Board minutes that explain why the waiver was necessary

Under the DOJ’s Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (ECCP) framework, this is a question of whether the company can demonstrate that its processes are working in practice. A waiver without documentation is indistinguishable from a control failure.

Termination Fees as Board-Level Risk

The WBD transaction turned the $2.8 billion termination fee into a live issue. When Paramount agreed to fund the fee, the Board had to evaluate more than price. It had to evaluate:

  • Who ultimately bears the economic and legal risk
  • Whether the funding mechanism introduces new contingencies
  • How the arrangement should be disclosed to shareholders

Termination fees are often treated as deal protections. In a contested process, they become risk allocation mechanisms. That places them squarely within Board oversight. A Board that does not interrogate the assumptions behind a termination fee, including third-party assumption, is not exercising informed judgment.

Real-Time Disclosure Controls

Disclosure obligations in a transaction are not periodic. They are continuous. Once a superior proposal is identified, the company must:

  • Update proxy materials where required
  • Ensure that all material information is disclosed without selective leakage
  • Align communications across legal, investor relations, and management

The governance challenge is that information moves faster than process. Emails, banker discussions, draft proposals, and internal analyses all become part of the evidentiary record. Boards must ask whether the company has a real-time disclosure protocol. This includes:

  • A defined disclosure committee process
  • A single point of accountability for filings such as Form 8-K
  • Controls over who can communicate with external stakeholders

This is where governance intersects directly with compliance. Disclosure failures are not merely technical. They can trigger enforcement exposure.

The 8-K and Proxy Playbook

In a fast-moving transaction, the company does not have the luxury of drafting disclosures from scratch. A Board should expect management to have a pre-defined playbook that includes:

  • Trigger thresholds for filing obligations
  • Pre-approved disclosure templates for common scenarios
  • A documented approval chain involving legal, finance, and executive leadership

The absence of such a playbook creates delay. Delay creates inconsistency. Inconsistency creates risk. From a COSO internal control perspective, this is a failure in control activities and information and communication. From a DOJ perspective, it is evidence that the program is not operationalized.

Regulatory Readiness and Remedy Planning

Both competing transactions carried regulatory risk. The difference was how that risk was allocated and mitigated. A Board must understand:

  • The regulatory approval pathways
  • The likelihood of challenge
  • The remedies available if regulators object

More importantly, the Board must ensure that management has pre-developed:

  • Divestiture scenarios
  • Behavioral remedies
  • Escrow or holdback mechanisms tied to regulatory outcomes

This is not theoretical planning. It is part of the decision to determine which proposal is superior. A Board that does not understand regulatory risk is not evaluating the full value of the transaction.

Post-Termination Control and Evidence Custody

When WBD terminated the agreement with Netflix, the transaction did not end. It transitioned into a new phase of risk. The company must:

  • Ensure proper handling of confidential information shared during the terminated process
  • Preserve all records relevant to the decision-making process
  • Maintain audit trails for potential litigation or regulatory review

This is where evidence discipline becomes critical. The record must be complete, organized, and defensible. In the absence of such controls, the company risks being unable to demonstrate how decisions were made.

Why This Matters for Boards

The WBD process illustrates that governance is tested when conditions change rapidly. A Board cannot build governance in the middle of a transaction. It must already exist. The DOJ and SEC will not evaluate the Board based on the outcome. They will evaluate the Board based on process, documentation, and control effectiveness. This is the essence of modern corporate governance. It is not about whether the Board chose Netflix or Paramount. It is about whether the Board can prove how and why it made that choice.

Practical Takeaways for Boards

  1. Ensure that superior proposal mechanics are understood at the Board level before a transaction is signed.
  2. Treat termination fees and regulatory protections as governance issues requiring full Board engagement.
  3. Demand real-time disclosure controls with clear ownership and escalation protocols.
  4. Require a pre-built 8-K and proxy playbook to manage disclosure risk under time pressure.
  5. Mandate regulatory scenario planning as part of transaction evaluation.

Questions for the Board

  1. Can the Board demonstrate, through contemporaneous documentation, how it evaluated a superior proposal?
  2. Does the company have a real-time disclosure control framework capable of supporting rapid filings and updates?
  3. Are termination fee structures and third-party funding arrangements fully understood and documented?
  4. Has the Board reviewed regulatory risk scenarios and approved a default remedy strategy?
  5. Who is accountable for evidence preservation and record integrity during and after the transaction?

Join us tomorrow where, in our final post, the focus will shift to the Chief Compliance Officer. The question will be direct. What must a CCO do, in operational terms, to ensure that the company can execute governance under pressure and prove it after the fact?