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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – AI and 3rd Party Risk Management

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, we aim 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 you can bring predictive analytics into your program to make it proactive rather than reactive.

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

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Trekking Through Compliance

Trekking Through Compliance: Episode 59 – Unmasking Compliance Blind Spots: Training and Communication Lessons from ‘Is There in Truth No Beauty?’

No TOS episode is more apt for compliance professionals seeking to elevate their training and communications program than the third season gem, “Is There in Truth No Beauty?”

As compliance professionals, we can mine “Is There in Truth No Beauty?” for powerful lessons on how to build a culture of effective training and communications that prepares our teams for the uncharted territory of tomorrow’s risks. Today, we set our phasers to “inspire” and explore five key compliance training and communications lessons from this classic Trek tale.

1. Embrace the Limits of Human Perception

Illustrated By: The crew’s first briefing about the Medusan ambassador is laden with warnings: “No one may look upon a Medusan with the naked eye.”

Compliance Lesson. Every organization has its own “Medusans” risks, regulations, and even people whose perspectives are so different they can seem incomprehensible. Too often, compliance training assumes everyone shares the same baseline understanding and comfort level. That is a dangerous assumption.

2. Communicate Expectations—Don’t Assume Understanding

Illustrated By: Early in the episode, Captain Kirk assembles his crew for a detailed briefing. Spock and Dr. Jones reinforce the message, and the procedures for safe interaction are laid out.

Compliance Lesson. How many compliance failures begin with, “Well, I thought I understood what was required…”? In Star Trek, lives depend on explicit, repeated communication of expectations. In your organization, regulatory and reputational survival depends on it as well.

3. Build Trust and Psychological Safety Before the Crisis

Illustrated By: The relationship between Dr. Jones and the crew is initially fraught. She is a telepath, guarded and secretive. Her sense of isolation is palpable. Yet as the episode progresses, Kirk and Spock earn her trust by inviting her into their confidence and acknowledging her unique expertise. This trust proves critical when disaster strikes.

Compliance Lesson. Effective communication is built on trust and psychological safety. If employees feel isolated, mistrusted, or afraid to speak up, no amount of “mandatory training” will make your compliance program effective.

4. Prepare for the Unexpected—And Practice the Protocols

Illustrated By: When Kollos’s container is accidentally opened, crew member Larry Marvick is exposed to the Medusan and descends into madness, nearly destroying the Enterprise.

Compliance Lesson. Crises never unfold according to plan, but they reveal the effectiveness of your training and protocols. Star Trek demonstrates that it’s not enough to have a policy in the binder; you must train, rehearse, and test those protocols until they are second nature.

5. Embrace Diversity—and the Value of the Outsider’s View

Illustrated By: The Medusan, Kollos, is physically incomprehensible to humans, yet he is also a being of great intelligence and empathy.

Compliance Lesson:

Homogeneity is a hidden compliance risk. Diverse teams bring broader perspectives, challenge assumptions, and spot blind spots that a monoculture would miss. In Star Trek, survival depends on learning from the outsider; in compliance, innovation, and vigilance depend on the same principle.

Final ComplianceLog Reflections

Is There in Truth No Beauty?” is a meditation on the limits of perception, the power of communication, and the necessity of embracing difference. For compliance professionals, it offers a road map for building training and communications programs that are clear, inclusive, practical, and resilient.

The universe of compliance is ever-expanding. Let’s train and communicate so our teams are ready to boldly go where no one has gone before.

Resources:

⁠⁠Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein⁠⁠

⁠⁠MissionLogPodcast.com⁠⁠

⁠⁠Memory Alpha

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Blog

Right-Sizing Your Fraud Defense: Building Proportionate Prevention Procedures

We continue our deep dive into the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023, which has elevated the expectations for senior leadership and boards across large organizations. Fortunately, the UK government has put out a document entitled “Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023: Guidance to organisations on the offence of failure to prevent fraud.” (The Guidance). Section 3.3 of the official guidance, titled “Proportionate risk-based fraud prevention procedures,” should be required reading for every compliance professional seeking to build a credible, defensible, and sustainable anti-fraud culture.

Central to this preparation is the concept of proportionate, risk-based fraud prevention procedures. The keyword here is “proportionate,” that is, the measures your organization takes should directly correspond to the level and types of fraud risks identified. These procedures must be clear, practical, accessible, effectively implemented, and robustly enforced. Today, we take a deep dive into what a top-level commitment is.

Understanding Proportionality

The cornerstone of effective fraud prevention lies in creating procedures proportionate to the identified risks. Simply put, the greater the potential risk and impact of fraud, the more stringent and comprehensive your procedures must be. Conversely, lower-risk scenarios justify lighter-touch measures. It is imperative that your organization documents decisions around fraud prevention measures, especially when opting not to implement specific controls due to limited risk. Such documentation must include the rationale, the authorizing individual’s identity and role, and regular review cycles.

Leveraging Existing Controls and Procedures

Organizations subject to a variety of regulatory requirements, from financial reporting to environmental and health and safety, often already have robust compliance measures. It is prudent to evaluate whether these existing controls sufficiently address fraud risks highlighted in your fraud risk assessment. However, relying solely on regulatory compliance to satisfy the FTPF offense requirements is not sufficient. Organizations must actively validate and, if necessary, augment these controls to target fraud prevention specifically.

Proactive Reduction of Fraud Opportunities

Fraud prevention procedures should aim primarily at minimizing opportunities for fraud. This can include thorough pre-employment vetting, ongoing background checks for high-risk roles, and consistent anti-fraud training. Regularly evaluate the effectiveness of such training through monitoring and feedback loops. Systematically assessing emerging risks, conducting fraud impact assessments for new services or business partners, and ensuring robust fraud management throughout the P2P procurement cycle (in addition to the QuoteToCash cycle) are also critical steps.

Moreover, consider best practices such as segregation of duties, stringent account reconciliations, suitable approval arrangements, rigorous conflict-of-interest policies, and robust data security measures to minimize potential opportunities for fraud.

Addressing Motivations and Rationalizations

Understanding and managing the human elements of motive and rationalization behind fraudulent actions are crucial. Motive can often stem from incentive structures such as aggressive bonus schemes or time-sensitive pressures encouraging shortcuts. Evaluate and adjust these incentives to discourage fraudulent behaviors.

Rationalization, the mental justification individuals employ to legitimize unethical behavior, can erode even the most robust control environments. Combat this through proactive ethics training, reinforcing the adverse impacts of fraud on both the organization and broader society, and embedding strong ethical reminders within performance evaluations.

Establishing Clear Consequences

Effective fraud prevention strategies must communicate the internal disciplinary procedures for fraud. Organizations should transparently share the outcomes of fraud investigations with employees and other associated parties, reinforcing a zero-tolerance stance. Visible and consistent consequences serve as powerful deterrents, underpinning organizational integrity and commitment to ethical practices.

Preparing for Emergency Scenarios

Crises and emergency scenarios inherently elevate fraud risks. Whether facing economic downturns, natural disasters, or other unforeseen events, your organization must proactively embed emergency scenario planning within your fraud prevention strategy. Prepare detailed contingency measures and ensure rapid transition back to normal operational controls post-crisis, meticulously documenting all measures implemented and actions taken.

Ongoing Monitoring and Continuous Improvement

Your fraud prevention strategy should never be static—ongoing monitoring and validation of your prevention measures through independent internal reviews or external audits. Using external resources such as the Fraud Advisory Panel, Cifas, or specific industry insights can enrich your approach and ensure comprehensive risk coverage. Publicly available cases of fraud prosecutions or Deferred Prosecution Agreements (DPAs) can further inform and improve your prevention strategies.

Five Key Lessons Learned for Compliance Professionals:

  1. Proportionality is Essential: Always tailor your fraud prevention procedures directly to the level of identified risk. Document any decisions about reduced measures clearly and comprehensively.
  2. Do Not Rely Solely on Existing Compliance Mechanisms: Existing regulatory compliance processes may help prevent fraud, but are not automatically sufficient to meet FTPF obligations. Active validation and enhancement are necessary.
  3. Proactive Risk Mitigation is Crucial: Take active steps to mitigate fraud opportunities through regular vetting, comprehensive training, and robust management of procurement processes and sensitive information.
  4. Understand and Address the Human Element: Reduce motivations and rationalizations by managing incentives, fostering a strong ethical culture, and ensuring transparent and communicated consequences for fraudulent actions.
  5. Prepare and Continuously Test Emergency Measures: Integrate emergency scenarios into your fraud prevention plans and consistently test these strategies through independent assessments, ensuring your organization remains prepared and resilient.

As we approach the FTPF offense’s implementation, compliance professionals must reinforce their strategic roles, embedding robust, proportionate fraud prevention measures. This comprehensive approach not only safeguards organisations from fraud but also positions compliance as a proactive, essential pillar of organizational integrity and resilience. By continuously reviewing, refining, and reinforcing these measures, compliance teams will effectively mitigate potential fraud risks, uphold organizational values, and maintain stakeholder trust. Proportionate fraud prevention is not merely regulatory compliance; rather, it is a strategic imperative vital to your organization’s long-term success and sustainability.

Join us tomorrow as we consider due diligence, training, ongoing monitoring, and continuous improvement.

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Blog

Guiding Integrity: Ethics Lessons from Star Trek’s ‘And The Children Shall Lead’

My winner for the worst of Star Trek: The Original Series is the episode, “And the Children Shall Lead”. Yet there are clear ethics lessons as the episode itself stands out for its disturbing exploration of power, manipulation, and ethical responsibility. Compliance professionals tasked with safeguarding their organizations from ethical lapses can draw powerful insights from this intriguing narrative. Today, we explore five key ethical lessons every compliance leader should internalize from this episode.

Lesson 1: Influence and Ethical Leadership

Illustrated By: The children aboard the Enterprise, manipulated by an alien entity known as Gorgan, exercise dangerous control over the crew, compelling them to abandon rational judgment.

Compliance Lesson: Leadership wields tremendous influence. Ethical leaders must recognize their power and consciously deploy it to uphold ethical standards, not undermine them. A misuse of influence can erode trust and corrupt organizational culture. Ethical leadership requires self-awareness and a steadfast commitment to organizational values. Leaders who misuse their influence often set negative precedents, creating an environment where unethical behavior becomes normalized. Conversely, leaders who consistently demonstrate ethical decision-making inspire similar behavior in their teams, fostering a culture of integrity.

What can you do now? Ensure your leaders understand the impact of their actions. Implement regular leadership training that focuses on ethical decision-making and raises awareness of how leaders’ actions impact company behavior and culture.

Lesson 2: Recognizing and Addressing Manipulation

Illustrated By: Kirk and Spock realize that the children’s unnatural behavior stems from external manipulation by Gorgan, who exploits their innocence and vulnerability for his gain.

Compliance Lesson: Organizations must be vigilant against manipulative practices. Ethical compliance involves recognizing manipulation, whether internal or external, and actively counteracting it to protect the organization’s integrity. Manipulation can manifest subtly through coercion, exploitation of vulnerabilities, or abuse of power dynamics. Compliance leaders must educate employees on the nuances of manipulation and how it undermines ethical practices, ultimately compromising organizational integrity. Early detection and proactive intervention are key to safeguarding the organization.

What can you do now? Develop training programs designed to empower employees to recognize and report manipulative behavior. Establish clear communication channels for raising ethical concerns safely and anonymously.

Lesson 3: Ethical Courage in Speaking Truth to Power

Illustrated By: Nurse Chapel and Captain Kirk courageously confront the children with the harsh truths about their manipulated behavior and its devastating consequences.

Compliance Lesson: Speaking truth to power, especially in ethical matters, requires considerable courage. Compliance leaders must foster environments where employees feel empowered to speak openly, even against popular opinion or powerful interests. It is crucial to establish a corporate culture that not only permits but actively encourages transparency and honesty. Compliance officers play a pivotal role in creating platforms where ethical concerns can be voiced without fear of retaliation. The ability to challenge unethical practices openly is essential for maintaining organizational integrity.

What can you do now? Create a robust whistleblower program, emphasizing protection and support for those who courageously voice ethical concerns. Celebrate instances where employees have demonstrated bravery in upholding ethical standards.

Lesson 4: Awareness of Ethical Blind Spots

Illustrated By: Initially, the Enterprise crew underestimates the threat posed by the children, blinded by assumptions of innocence and vulnerability.

Compliance Lesson: Ethical blind spots often emerge from assumptions and biases. Organizations must cultivate awareness and self-reflection, understanding that ethical risks can arise unexpectedly from overlooked or underestimated sources. Blind spots can be particularly dangerous because they often remain invisible until significant damage occurs. Compliance teams must foster an environment of continual vigilance, where assumptions are routinely challenged, and biases openly discussed and addressed. Training programs should incorporate scenario-based exercises to reveal hidden ethical vulnerabilities.

What can you do now? Conduct regular ethics risk assessments to uncover hidden vulnerabilities. Encourage ongoing discussions and training sessions about implicit biases, assumptions, and overlooked ethical threats within the organization.

Lesson 5: Responsibility and Accountability in Ethics

Illustrated By: After breaking Gorgan’s hold, Kirk ensures that the children confront and understand the severity of their actions, instilling a crucial sense of accountability.

Compliance Lesson: Ethical accountability must permeate all organizational levels. Leaders and employees alike should clearly understand their responsibilities and the consequences of unethical behavior. Accountability ensures that ethical standards are upheld consistently and that violations are addressed promptly and appropriately. Leaders must communicate clearly that ethical breaches will have real and proportionate consequences, reinforcing the importance of personal and organizational integrity. Accountability measures help maintain trust within and outside the organization.

What can you do now? Establish transparent accountability systems, reinforcing individual and collective responsibility for ethical behavior. Regularly communicate the importance of ethical accountability and the organizational commitment to enforce ethical standards uniformly.

You Must Lead With Ethics

And The Children Shall Lead” reminds compliance professionals that ethical vigilance and leadership are essential for organizational health. Through ethical influence, courageous confrontation of manipulation, awareness of blind spots, and unwavering accountability, organizations can protect their integrity and thrive.

Compliance professionals must continuously embody these lessons, creating robust ethical cultures resilient against manipulation, corruption, and ethical lapses. Let the lessons of the Enterprise crew guide us, fostering environments where integrity leads and compliance thrives.

Resources:

⁠⁠Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein⁠⁠

⁠⁠MissionLogPodcast.com⁠⁠

⁠⁠Memory Alpha

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Trekking Through Compliance

Trekking Through Compliance: Episode 58 – Child’s Play and Serious Ethics: Lessons from “And The Children Shall Lead”

Universally panned as perhaps the worst episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, “And the Children Shall Lead”; it nevertheless stands out for its disturbing exploration of power, manipulation, and ethical responsibility. Compliance professionals tasked with safeguarding their organizations from ethical lapses can draw powerful insights from this intriguing narrative. Today, we explore five key ethical lessons every compliance leader should internalize from this episode.

Lesson 1: Influence and Ethical Leadership

Illustrated By: The children aboard the Enterprise, manipulated by an alien entity known as Gorgan, exercise dangerous control over the crew, compelling them to abandon rational judgment.

Compliance Lesson: Leadership wields tremendous influence. Ethical leaders must recognize their power and consciously deploy it to uphold ethical standards, not undermine them. A misuse of influence can erode trust and corrupt organizational culture.

Lesson 2: Recognizing and Addressing Manipulation

Illustrated By: Kirk and Spock realize that the children’s unnatural behavior stems from external manipulation by Gorgan, who exploits their innocence and vulnerability for his gain.

Compliance Lesson: Organizations must be vigilant against manipulative practices. Ethical compliance involves recognizing manipulation, whether internal or external, and actively counteracting it to protect the organization’s integrity.

Lesson 3: Ethical Courage in Speaking Truth to Power

Illustrated By: Nurse Chapel and Captain Kirk courageously confront the children with the harsh truths about their manipulated behavior and its devastating consequences.

Compliance Lesson: Speaking truth to power, especially in ethical matters, requires considerable courage. Compliance leaders must foster environments where employees feel empowered to speak openly, even against popular opinion or powerful interests.

Lesson 4: Awareness of Ethical Blind Spots

Illustrated By: Initially, the Enterprise crew underestimates the threat posed by the children, blinded by assumptions of innocence and vulnerability.

Compliance Lesson: Ethical blind spots often emerge from assumptions and biases. Organizations must cultivate awareness and self-reflection, understanding that ethical risks can arise unexpectedly from overlooked or underestimated sources.

Lesson 5: Responsibility and Accountability in Ethics

Illustrated By: After breaking Gorgan’s hold, Kirk ensures that the children confront and understand the severity of their actions, instilling a crucial sense of accountability.

Compliance Lesson: Ethical accountability must permeate all organizational levels. Leaders and employees alike should clearly understand their responsibilities and the consequences of unethical behavior.

Final ComplianceLog Reflections

And The Children Shall Lead” reminds compliance professionals that ethical vigilance and leadership are essential for organizational health. Through ethical influence, courageous confrontation of manipulation, awareness of blind spots, and unwavering accountability, organizations can protect their integrity and thrive. Compliance professionals must continuously embody these lessons, creating robust ethical cultures resilient against manipulation, corruption, and ethical lapses. Let the lessons of the Enterprise crew guide us, fostering environments where integrity leads and compliance thrives.

Resources:

⁠⁠Excruciatingly Detailed Plot Summary by Eric W. Weisstein⁠⁠

⁠⁠MissionLogPodcast.com⁠⁠

⁠⁠Memory Alpha

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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Bringing Predictive Analytics into Your Compliance Regime

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, we aim 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 you can bring predictive analytics into your program to make it proactive rather than reactive.

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

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: July 29, 2025, The Is CEO Conduct Ever Personal 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:

  • US states are leading the charge to break up big pharma. (FT)
  • What image does it have for profits: UnitedHealth. (NYT)
  • Does any CEO have Personal Conduct? (Bloomberg)
  • Corruption and battlefield failures. (NYT)

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

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Everything Compliance - Shout Outs and Rants

Shout Outs and Rants: Episode 158, No To Ukraine Corruption

Welcome to this Edition of award-winning Everything Compliance. In this episode, we have the quartet of Matt Kelly, Jonathan Marks,  and Jonathan Armstrong, with Tom Fox, the Compliance Evangelist, sitting in as both host and a guest this week.

  1. Matt Kelly shouts out to the people of Ukraine for fighting against corruption and rants about the DOJ cover-up of the Epstein files.
  2. Jonathan Marks shouts out to Alexsys Thompson and her book, The Power of a Graceful Leader.
  3. Jonathan Armstrong shouts out to the city of Berlin and the people of Germany, and how they have taken ownership of their role in WWII.
  4. Tom Fox shouts out to the Lincoln Center Starbucks in NYC for supporting the Texas Hill Country and making him a part of its 5:30 AM family.

The members of Everything Compliance are:

The host, producer, and sometime panelist of Everything Compliance is Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance. He can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com.  The award-winning Everything Compliance is a part of the Compliance Podcast Network.

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Innovation in Compliance

Innovation in Compliance: Scaling Compliance Programs: Insights from a Navy Veteran and Compliance Leader

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. This series is introduced by Tom Fox and hosted by Roxeanne Petraeus. Ethena sponsors this special five-part series on Innovation in Compliance.

In this engaging episode, Roxeanne Petraeus sits down with LaSalle Vaughn, a seasoned compliance leader and Navy veteran. They delve into Vaughn’s extensive experience in scaling compliance programs for both large and small companies, emphasizing the importance of top leadership buy-in, cross-functional collaboration, and creative compliance training solutions. Vaughn shares his journey to becoming a board member, the significance of network relationships, and how his military background informs his approach to building a strong compliance culture. The discussion also highlights the unique qualities of the Ethena compliance platform and the necessity of effective customer support. Listeners gain valuable insights on effective compliance strategies and career development in the compliance field.

Key highlights:

  • LaSalle Vaughn’s Background and Experience
  • Scaling Compliance Programs
  • Getting C-Suite Buy-In for Compliance
  • Cross-Functional Collaboration in Compliance
  • Path to Board Service
  • Military Influence on Compliance and Culture

Resources:

LaSalle Vaughn on LinkedIn

Ethena Website

Roxanne Petraeus on LinkedIn

Ethena on LinkedIn

Tom Fox

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

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Word of the Week

Word of the Week with Kenneth O’Neal – Understanding Reciprocity: The Power of Mutual Giving and Receiving

Each week, Kenneth O’Neal discusses a word that describes a principle or value of the Qualities of Success. We suggest you use the Word of the Week in your thoughts, deeds, and actions. You may currently possess the qualities and desire to develop them 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 – Reciprocity.

In this episode, Rick and Kenneth dive into the concept of ‘reciprocity,’ highlighting its significance as a foundational principle in human relationships and social behavior. Kenneth explains how reciprocity involves a mutual exchange of privileges, actions, or favors and emphasizes its positive impact on building trust, respect, and strong community connections. They also discuss the moral obligation to return kindness and the potential negative aspects of reciprocity when used for manipulation. The conversation is enriched with historical references, ethical teachings, and reflective questions aimed at encouraging listeners to embrace generosity with sincerity. The show wraps up with insights on the importance of giving without expecting anything in return and the broader implications of sowing and reaping in personal and social contexts.

Key highlights:

  • Word of the Week: Reciprocity
  • Historical Examples of Reciprocity
  • Modern Understanding of Reciprocity
  • Reflective Questions on Generosity

Resources:

KRONEAL Consulting