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Sunday Book Review

January 15, 2023 – The Top Business Books to Read in 2023 Edition

In the Sunday Book Review, I consider books that interest the compliance professional, the business executive, or anyone curious. It could be books about business, compliance, history, leadership, current events, or anything else that might interest me. In today’s edition of the Sunday Book Review, we consider some of the top business books which every compliance professional should read in 2023:

·       How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie

·        Influence, New and Expanded: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini

·       The Compound Effect: Jumpstart Your Income, Your Life, Your Success by Darren Hardy

·        Tools of Titans: The Tactics, Routines, and Habits of Billionaires, Icons, and World-Class Performers by Tim Ferriss

Resource

The Best Business Books to Read in 2023 By Hal Kitzmiller

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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

Day 14 – Risk Assessments

One cannot say enough about risk assessments in the context of anti-corruption programs. This is because every corporate compliance program should be based upon a risk assessment to understand your organization’s business from the commercial perspective, how your organization has identified, assessed, and defined its risk profile, and, finally, the degree to which the program devotes appropriate scrutiny and resources to this range of risks. Yet the 2020 Update added a new emphasis that Risk Assessments should not be done not less than annually but, in reality, should be done each time your risk change. Over the past couple of years, every company’s risks changed from Work From Home to Return to the Office to Hybrid Work environments. Have you assessed these new paradigms for risks from the compliance perspective?

As far back as 1999, in the Metcalf & Eddy enforcement action, the DOJ has said that risk assessments that measure the likelihood and severity of possible FCPA violations should direct your resources to manage these risks. The 2012 FCPA Guidance succinctly stated, “Assessment of risk is fundamental to developing a strong compliance program and is another factor DOJ and SEC evaluate when assessing a company’s compliance program.
There are a number of ways you can slice and dice your basic inquiry. As with almost all FCPA compliance, your protocol must be well thought out. If you use one, some, or all of the above as your basic inquiries for your risk analysis, it should be acceptable for your starting point. 

Three key takeaways:

  1. Since at least 1999, the DOJ has pointed to risk assessment as the start of an effective compliance program.
  2. The DOJ will now consider your risk assessment methodology for identifying risks and gathering evidence.
  3. You should base your compliance program on your risk assessment.
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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

Day 13 – Podcasting for Compliance Training and Communication

If there is one truism from the practice of law which translates to the practice of compliance, you are only limited by your imagination. This holds in the 360-degree realm of communication in compliance, as communication comes in many forms. Many compliance practitioners will well remember the 2012 Morgan Stanley declination. In this first declination made public, the Department of Justice (DOJ) recognized Morgan Stanley for emailing out 35 compliance reminders to Garth Peterson over seven years. Think about the power of 360 degrees of communication in the context of compliance reminders. Now imagine the power of short ethics and compliance video training clips going out over the same time and the effect it would have on your employees and the regulators.

  1. Podcast Storytelling

Why not tell the story of compliance through a podcast? I call it podcast storytelling, and it can be a powerful tool. Each podcast series is 5-part series and constitutes one story arc. The podcasts are about 10-15 minutes in length. The podcast storytelling series can be a variety of interviews led by a noted podcast host such as the Voice of Compliance, yourself as the Chief Compliance Officer (CCO), or anyone from your organization. It can be an interview with one or more people, or it can be a solo podcast.

A series such as this allows your organization to tell a story more effectively and reach a much larger audience than in any other format; live, audio-video, or in-person. Yet there is another reason you should consider this approach for compliance training and communications. It will provide you with the equivalent of market research and feedback. The number of listeners and downloads will give you a reliable data source for other communications and training.

2. Compliance Department Branded Podcasts

Want another option? How about a fully produced branded podcast series for your internal compliance function? It could be two 25–30-minute episodes per month, with the guest selected by your compliance team. This format allows your corporate compliance function to tell the story of its greatest asset, its people, through interviews. Cannot get out of the country to travel? Still, working remotely? Your branded podcasts allow you to reach your employees as we struggle through the Covid-19 variants. You can use the branded podcast to tell the story of compliance successes in your organization; you can also include other departments to share their successes. As with the podcast storytelling series, it would be done collaboratively with your comms team.

3. Compliance News of the Day

Want to make some short and snappy compliance communications? How about ‘Compliance News of the Day’? Have a daily curated news show of 3-4 compliance stories with a summary of each story and how they relate to a compliance perspective of your organization. Make it fun, so your employees want to check in daily. When the DOJ comes knocking and asks how often you send compliance communications, you can point to your Compliance News of the Day as a great starting point.

As a compliance practitioner, you should strive to bring more storytelling into your compliance messaging, training, and communications. If you put the employee in the shoes of the person they’re watching, they will remember it because they will see how it applies to their lives. Training and communication experiences will last much longer than if you drone over a written policy or show a PowerPoint. Marc Havener has called this “expanding your classroom.” Ronnie Feldman calls this bringing memorable storytelling to your compliance communications and training.

Since your imagination only limits you in compliance, why not use some of that to be creative in your compliance training and communications?

 Three key takeaways:

1. Using podcast storytelling to tell longer, more involved stories about compliance.

2. You can use compliance department-branded podcasts to have ongoing communications about compliance.

3. A Daily Compliance News show will drive engagement.

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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

Day 12 – Financial Incentives for Compliance

One of the areas that many companies have not paid as much attention to in their compliance programs is compensation and incentives. However, the DOJ and SEC have long made clear that they view monetary structure for compensation, rewarding those employees who do business in compliance with their employer’s compliance program, as one of the ways to reinforce the compliance program and the message of compliance.

This was made clear again in the Monaco Memo, which stated, “Corporations can help deter criminal activity if they reward compliant behavior and penalize individuals who engage in misconduct. Compensation systems that clearly and effectively impose financial penalties for misconduct can incentivize compliant conduct, deter risky behavior, and instill a corporate culture in which employees follow the law and avoid legal “gray areas.”

Moreover, the Monaco Memo tied compensation to a company’s culture of compliance. It stated, “Similarly, corporations can promote an ethical corporate culture by rewarding those executives and employees who promote compliance within the organization. Prosecutors should also consider whether a corporation’s compensation systems provide affirmative incentives for compliance-promoting behavior. Affirmative incentives include, for example, the use of compliance metrics and benchmarks in compensation calculations and the use of performance reviews that measure and reward compliance-promoting behavior, both to the employee and any subordinates whom they supervise. When effectively implemented, such provisions incentivize executives and employees to engage in and promote compliant behavior and emphasize the corporation’s commitment to its compliance programs and culture.”

Yet compensation incentives have long been key to any best practices compliance program. As far back as 2004, then SEC Director of Enforcement Stephen M. Cutler noted that integrity, ethics, and compliance needed to be part of promotion, compensation, and evaluation processes: “At the end of the day, the most effective way to communicate that “doing the right thing” is a priority, is to reward it.”

The 2020 FCPA Guidance, 2nd edition, stated the “DOJ and SEC recognize that positive incentives can also drive compliant behavior. These incentives can take many forms, such as personnel evaluations and promotions, rewards for improving and developing a company’s compliance program, and rewards for ethics and compliance leadership.” The Monaco Memo takes it a step further by asking more broadly has your company, “incentivized employee behavior as part of its efforts to create a culture of ethics and compliance within its organization.”

Three key takeaways:

  1. The DOJ and SEC have long advocated compensation as a way to motivate employees into ethical and compliant behaviors
  2. Keep the compliance aspects of your compensation structure simple and easy for your employees to understand
  3. Have full transparency in the framework of your compensation structure
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Great Women in Compliance

New Year’s Resolutions: A Conversation with the Compliance Community

Welcome to the Great Women in Compliance Podcast, co-hosted by Lisa Fine and Mary Shirley and to the new GWIC year. Mary and Lisa are back, and looking forward to another season of interesting discussions with fabulous people where we can learn, talk and build our community.  We are always looking to continue these discussions, so please reach out to us, and don’t miss Mary’s monthly column on Corporate Compliance Insights called “Living Your Best Compliance Life.”

In this episode, Lisa and Mary kick off the year with a New Year’s Resolution themed-episode discussing what compliance officers should commit to, focus on and/or prioritize in 2023.   They discuss various substantive issues, such as the DOJ statements on ephemeral communications, what they understand and how much they are looking forward to the forthcoming guidance. Mary also discusses some of the recent cases and developments at the end of 2022, and Lisa includes her thoughts about the intersection of ESG and Compliance.  They also discuss the future of remote work in compliance, and how that is impacting the job market.

No Mary and Lisa discussion is not complete without some work/life comments and resolutions, so those will be shared as well.  As always, they include the hope that everyone is sending the elevator back down.

The Great Women in Compliance Podcast is on the Compliance Podcast Network with a selection of other Compliance related offerings to listen in to.  If you are enjoying this episode, please rate it on your preferred podcast player to help other likeminded Ethics and Compliance professionals find it.  If you have a moment to leave a review at the same time, Mary and Lisa would be so grateful.  You can also find the GWIC podcast on Corporate Compliance Insights where Lisa and Mary have a landing page with additional information about them and the story of the podcast.  Corporate Compliance Insights is a much-appreciated sponsor and supporter of GWIC, including affiliate organization CCI Press publishing the related book; “Sending the Elevator Back Down, What We’ve Learned from Great Women in Compliance” (CCI Press, 2020).

If you enjoyed the book, the GWIC team would be very grateful if you would consider rating it on Goodreads and Amazon and leaving a short review.  Don’t forget to send the elevator back down by passing on your copy to someone who you think might enjoy reading it when you’re done, or if you can’t bear parting with your copy, consider it as a holiday or appreciation gift for someone in Compliance who deserves a treat.

You can subscribe to the Great Women in Compliance podcast on any podcast player by searching for it and we welcome new subscribers to our podcast.

Join the Great Women in Compliance community on LinkedIn here.

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Compliance Into the Weeds

DFS Fines Coinbase

The award-winning, Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast that takes a deep dive into a compliance-related topic, literally going into the weeds to explore a subject more. In this episode, Matt and I take a look at the recent NY state Department of Financial Services sanction involving the crypto trading platform Coinbase, which just agreed to pay $50 million to the DFS and to spend another $50 million over the next two years to improve its compliance program.

Some of the highlights include:

·      What was the fine and associated spending for?

·      What did the Coinbase compliance program fail on?

·      How did Coinbase’s explosive growth fuel a culture of non-compliance?

·      How did Coinbase fall further and further behind?

·      Why and how did the Coinbase solution worsen the problem?

·      Why does a company need to start with a solid foundation of clearly defined procedures?

·      What is the role of effective and efficient technology?

·      What are the lessons learned?

 Resources

Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance

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Blog

Incentives in Compliance: Part 1 – Financial Incentives

One of the areas that many companies have not paid as much attention to in their compliance programs is compensation and incentives. However, the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) have long made clear that they view monetary structure for compensation, rewarding those employees who do business in compliance with their employer’s compliance program, as one of the ways to reinforce the compliance program and the message of compliance.

This was made clear once again in the Monaco Memo which stated, “Corporations can help to deter criminal activity if they reward compliant behavior and penalize individuals who engage in misconduct. Compensation systems that clearly and effectively impose financial penalties for misconduct can incentivize compliant conduct, deter risky behavior, and instill a corporate culture in which employees follow the law and avoid legal “gray areas.””

Moreover, the Monaco Memo tied compensation to a company’s culture of compliance. It stated, “Similarly, corporations can promote an ethical corporate culture by rewarding those executives and employees who promote compliance within the organization. Prosecutors should therefore also consider whether a corporation’s compensation systems provide affirmative incentives for compliance-promoting behavior. Affirmative incentives include, for example, the use of compliance metrics and benchmarks in compensation calculations and the use of performance reviews that measure and reward compliance-promoting behavior, both as to the employee and any subordinates whom they supervise. When effectively implemented, such provisions incentivize executives and employees to engage in and promote compliant behavior and emphasize the corporation’s commitment to its compliance programs and its culture.”

Yet compensation incentives have long been seen as a key element of any best practices compliance program. As far back as 2004, then SEC Director of Enforcement Stephen M. Cutler noted that integrity, ethics and compliance needed to be part of promotion, compensation and evaluation processes: “At the end of the day, the most effective way to communicate that “doing the right thing” is a priority, is to reward it.”

The 2020 FCPA Guidance, 2nd edition, stated the “DOJ and SEC recognize that positive incentives can also drive compliant behavior. These incentives can take many forms such as personnel evaluations and promotions, rewards for improving and developing a company’s compliance program, and rewards for ethics and compliance leadership.” The Monaco Memo takes it a step further by asking more broadly has your company, “incentivized employee behavior as part of its efforts to create a culture of ethics and compliance within its organization.”

The 2020 Update, in the section entitled “Incentives and Disciplinary Measures”, provided some key questions for a company to ask about its incentive system:

Incentive System—Has the company considered the implications of its incentives and rewards on compliance? How does the company incentivize compliance and ethical behavior? Have there been specific examples of actions taken (e.g., promotions or awards denied) as a result of compliance and ethics considerations? Who determines the compensation, including bonuses, as well as discipline and promotion of compliance personnel?

The first question posed in the 2020 Update requires you to start with the basic question of what does your employee compensation consist of? Is it a straight salary? Is it variable? If so, what does the variable component consist of? Is it a discretionary bonus based upon the overall success of the entire business enterprise or some small subset, such as a business unit or geographic region? Is it solely personal? Or is it some combination of all of the above?

Under the second question, you need to demonstrate that you have thought through this issue. The DOJ does not mandate one solution or formula, only that it be well considered. And, of course, the approach you come up with must be documented. A good starting place is Marc Roberge’s 2015 Harvard Business Review (HBR) article, entitled “The Right Way to Use Compensation, that discusses the design and redesign of an employee’s compensation system to help drive certain behaviors. The article’s subtitle, “To shift strategy, change how you pay your team”, echoed Cutler’s message from 2004. The article lays out a framework for a Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) or compliance practitioner to operationalize compensation as a mechanism in a best practices compliance program.

As your compliance program matures and your strategy shifts, “it’s critical that the employees who bring in the revenue—the sales force—understand and behave in ways that support the new strategy. The sales compensation system can help ventures achieve that compliance.” The prescription for you as the compliance practitioner is to revise the incentive system to focus employees on the goals of your compliance program. This may mean that you need to change the incentives as the compliance programs matures; from installing the building blocks of compliance to integrating anti-corruption compliance within the DNA of your company.

There are three key questions you should ask yourself in modifying your compensation structure. First, is the change simple? Second, is the changed aligned with your company values? Third, is the effect on behavior immediate due to the change?

Simplicity. Keep the compensation plan simple when designing your program. The simplest way to incentivize employees is to create metrics that they readily understand and are achievable in the context of the compliance program.

Alignment. You need to state the most important compliance goal your entity needs to achieve. From there you should determine how your compensation program can be aligned with that goal. The beauty of this alignment is that it works with your sales force throughout the entire sales cycle, whether employee-based or through third parties such as agents, representatives, channel ops partners or distributors.

Immediacy. It is important that such structures be put in place “immediately” but in a way that incentivizes employees. As a part of immediacy, there must be sufficient communication with your employees. In the world of employee compensation incentives, there should be transparency as to the expectations.

Under the third question from the 2020 Update, you need to have documented examples where additional compensation or promotions were made to employees who did business ethically and in alignment with the corporate compliance program. The fourth question goes in a different direction by asking who in the organization is evaluating and then setting the compensation of the CCO and compliance personnel?

Obviously, the power of a compensation plan is to motivate employees to not only sell more but to act in ways that support your company’s business model and overall culture and values. For the compliance practitioner, one of the biggest reasons is to first change a company’s culture to make compliance more important, and then integrate it into the DNA of your organization. But you must be able to evolve in your thinking and professionalism to recognize the opportunities to change and then adapt your incentive program to make the doing of compliance part of your company’s everyday business process. The Monaco Memo makes it clear that the bottom line is the “use of financial incentives to align the interests of the C-suite with the interests of the compliance department can greatly amplify a corporation’s overall level of compliance.”

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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

Day 9 – 360 Degrees of Compliance Communications

A 360-degree view of compliance is an effort to incorporate your compliance identity into a holistic approach so that compliance is in touch with and visible to your employees at all times. It is about creating a distinctive brand philosophy of compliance centered on your consumers. In other words, it helps a compliance practitioner to anticipate all the aspects of your employee’s needs around compliance.

This is especially true when compliance is perceived as something that comes out of the home office or as the “Land of No.” A 360-degree view of compliance allows you to build a new brand image for your compliance program. This is important as the 2020 Update mandates that for a compliance program to be effective, it must be understood by various stakeholders.

Communication is often thought of as a two-way street, upward and downward, inbound and outbound, or side-to-side. However, it is better to think of it as a 360-degree effort. You can no longer effectively communicate in just two ways. You now communicate in a more holistic manner and multiple ways. If you are thinking about communications in the classic form, you are missing something happening around you.

360 degrees of compliance communication is not just a classic form of communication but communication in every interaction, whether planned or accidental. It is all a form of communication.

This is particularly true if you are a compliance professional, practitioner, or CCO. The things you do, the way you act, and the way people see you, you are always communicating. It is not simply communicating one-to-one as often you may be communicating to a group across siloed boundaries, to the constituencies you had not even planned to communicate with initially. It also allows you to see and hear new ideas, concepts, or ways to create a more effective compliance regime for your front-line BD folks and your first line of defense.

Three key takeaways:
1. Remember the definition of 360 degrees of communication. It is an effort that moves the compliance identity into a holistic approach, so compliance is in touch and visible to your employees at all times
2. What is your objective? What are you trying to do with your 360 degrees of communications, and how are you using that mechanism to deliver the objectives of your compliance program?
3. Evaluate. You need to evaluate three factors: 1) has the message been delivered, 2) has it been heard, and 3) is it being implemented?

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The ESG Report

Jared Connors Looks Into 2023

In this episode of the ESG Report, Tom Fox discusses the regulatory movement towards mandatory climate disclosure requirements. Guest Jared Connors explains why product liability, previously viewed as a negative for sustainability, is now viewed as a positive.

Jared Connors is on the regulatory team at Assent. In his role, he supports and analyzes the market, engages standards and framework makers and regulatory agencies to help understand what companies will face and how they can comply.

 

  • Jared says that product compliance depends on how certain jurisdictions approach sustainability. 
  • Consumers make an impact on upstream corporation supply and demand, and that impact is shown via downstream companies who produce the products.
  • Companies have to do a better job at being proactive about knowing their supply chain and the stance of the suppliers that they work with.
  • Organizations need to be able to show that their suppliers have no connection to modern day slavery. 
  • Jared stresses the point of transparency as opposed to sustainability. When companies, suppliers and stakeholders are transparent, business becomes more ethical. 

 

Resources

Jared Connors on LinkedIn

Assent

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FCPA Compliance Report

Tom Fox and Mike Volkov with the 2022 Year in Review for the FCPA, Part 1

Welcome to the award-winning FCPA Compliance Report, the longest running podcast in compliance. In this special episode, I am joined by Mike Volkov, founder of the Volkov Law Group. We begin a two-part podcast on looking back on the year 2022 in FCPA and Compliance. We consider the Monaco Memo, the key cases and some of the important issues which arose in 2022 and how they might impact compliance in 2023.

In this episode we consider:

·      The Monaco Memo

·      The Stericycle FCPA enforcement action

·      The KT FCPA enforcement action

·      The upcoming trial of Cognizant executives and internal investigations

·      Key individual prosecuted

Resources

Mike Volkov on LinkedIn

The Volkov Law Group