Categories
The ESG Report

Hughes Hubbard & Reed’s New ESG Resource Guide, Part 2

 

Tom Fox welcomes Alexandra Poe, Andrew Fowler, and Bryan Sillaman of Hughes Hubbard & Reed (HHR) to part two of this series of the ESG Report. Hughes Hubbard & Reed released their newest ESG guide with practical guidance about the most common issues in establishing an ESG program. It also gives companies resources to help them comply with the evolving ESG expectations of regulators and investors.

 

 

Key ESG Topics In the Resource Guide

Tom asks Andrew and Alexandra to highlight the key ESG topics seen in the corporate sector that are covered in the resource guide. Alexandra says that before companies tackle any technical compliance concerns they must first understand that “[technical compliance] is a topic that involves governance strategy and mission and culture questions”. This chapter of the resource guide urges corporations to focus on the current trends. 

 

Andrew explains that there are many evolving ESG topics in this new social and political climate, so it may be difficult to choose umbrella topics for the corporate sector. However, he explains that most topics can fall into the category of risk assessment. Stakeholders and investors always need to ensure they’re investing in a safe business, so risk and mitigation planning is always a main issue. 

 

The Regulatory Environment

Tom asks Bryan how he assesses the regulatory landscape. Bryan says that the regulatory environment is constantly and rapidly evolving and it varies from region to region. The EU is more advanced than the US when it comes to regulatory efforts: they have several laws in place to limit greenwashing and identify environmentally friendly activities and sustainable economic activities. However, with the SEC rules in the final stages of being implemented, the US is on pace to become an ESG-friendly landscape. 

 

ESG From An Investor’s Perspective

Tom asks Alexandra to discuss how ESG is viewed by funds and investment advisors. Alexandra explains that ESG is viewed as an expensive commodity within the US. ESG regulations are better implemented by the private sector. The private sector is more likely to urge itself and government-based companies to make better disclosures and examine their practices better. She points out that companies always follow through with the ESG regulatory efforts they implement because it boosts their public image and aligns with their mission statement. 

 

Resources

Alexandra Poe | LinkedIn 

Andrew F. Fowler | LinkedIn

Bryan Sillaman | LinkedIn 

Hughes Hubbard & Reed | How to ESG: A Resource Guide for Establishing an ESG Program for your Company

 

Categories
FCPA Compliance Report

Professor George Serafeim on Purpose + Profits

In this episode of the FCPA Compliance Report, I am joined by Harvard Business School Professor, author of the book Purpose + Profits, How Business Can Lift Up the World. Some of the highlights include:

1.     Why this book and why now?

2.     His personal journey to ‘purpose.’

3.     Is this book an extension of his earlier work around white-collar crime and anti-corruption compliance?

4.     What trends bring together both business goals and broader societal goals?

5.     How did technology and social media help this change?

6.     What is the role of Gen Xers and Millennials?

7.     How can or should a company data analytics into this change?

8.     What are the 6 archetypes of value creation?

9.     What is the Southwire “12 for Life” story?

10.  Why did your student’s attempt to replicate it fail, and what lessons did you draw from that failure?

Resources

George Serafeim at the Harvard School of Business

George Serafeim on Linkedin

Purpose + Profits on Amazon.com

Categories
The ESG Report

From Sustainability to ESG in Construction with Tommy Linstroth

 

Tommy Linstroth is the founder and CEO of Green Badger, a SaaS company providing easy-to-use, collaborative cloud-based solutions to streamline and automate sustainability in the green building construction market. Tommy is a leader and pioneer in the ESG space and in this week’s episode, he and Tom Fox explore ESG in the green construction market.

 

 

Green Construction Within ESG

Tom asks Tommy how green construction fits into an overall ESG conversation. Tommy acknowledges that ESG is becoming more popular at the organizational, corporate and portfolio levels. Green building is part and parcel of the general ESG framework; companies are increasingly considering sustainability in the process of construction instead of only when the building is complete. Tom comments that this idea could expand from just a building to a community or gated subdivision. Tommy agrees and explains that if a developer is looking at multi-family developments, they should look at the collective impact that those have on not just the environment but the social and governmental aspects, as well. 

 

The Origins of Green Badger

Green Badger was founded to solve the challenges Tommy faced managing green construction as a consultant. He would have to manage and track data from multiple projects, in different phases of construction. This was time-consuming, and he figured there had to be a way to automate the process to make it easier. With the extra time, they could make building projects greener, and finish them on time and within budget. Thus, the idea for Green Badger was born. 

 

Green Certification

Tom asks Tommy to explain what is green certification. For buildings, there’s the primary or gold standard called LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification, which is a third-party certification that is administered by the United States Green Building Control. It is used to verify the sustainability aspects of a building. About 95% of companies require it on their facilities moving forward and is used on almost everything that is publicly funded. 

 

ESG Metrics

Tom asks Tommy about common ESG metrics in the construction phase. Tommy says that the most common metric is energy consumption; for example, fuel used on-site for equipment. You have to take into account all the direct and indirect emissions being produced, such as the carbon emissions produced while traveling to and from the job site. Measuring construction waste and water consumption is also a standard ESG metric. These metrics tend to focus more on the environmental and social aspects of ESG, rather than the governance side, he points out. 

 

Looking Ahead

Tommy believes that there will be increased ESG requirements in new residential or commercial construction in 2025. He compares it to a running faucet: “Right now how we see the faucets on, and it’s just a trickle. Those financial owner-driven regulations – they’re slowly lifting that lever where the drop is going to turn into a trickle, and then it’s going to turn into a blast.” In the 80s and 90s safety regulations were not that prevalent, but these days they are ingrained into the culture of every work site. “ESG will become baked in as a standard operating procedure”. 

 

Resources

Tommy Linstroth | LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram  

Green Badger | Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

 

Categories
Blog

The CCO and Board Refreshment

Boards of Directors are coming under increased legal and regulatory scrutiny. Courts in Delaware, from the Delaware Court of Chancery to the Delaware Supreme Court, have continued to refine and expand the Caremark Doctrine. Boards are on notice they must actively engage in compliance and risk management oversight. One of the continuing challenges for boards in this era of increasing responsibility is getting the right persons on boards. I was therefore interested in a recent MIT Sloan Management Review article, entitled Meet the New Board — Same as the Old Board, where authors Cynthia E. Clark and Jill A. Brown posit that many companies are just going through the motions of recruiting more diverse board members. Moreover, they advocate the time is now to get serious about board refreshment.

In addition to these new legal requirements, other stakeholders are pushing for public companies to refresh their boards to achieve greater diversity. Shareholders have been leading the way at least a dozen public company boards since mid-2020, “accusing them of failing to broaden out with greater diversity.” Institutional investors and investment managers such as BlackRock, Inc. have voted “against more than 1,800 directors at close to 1,000 companies for insufficient action to increase board diversity.” The proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. “now recommends withholding votes from, or voting against, directors with nominating or governance roles on boards that don’t have at least one non-White director and at least one woman.” Finally, the Nasdaq Exchange, with the approval of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), “will soon require listed companies to have at least two demographically diverse directors (or explain why they don’t).”

Yet board refreshment and diversity is not simply something driven by regulators or changes in the law. The authors believe, “diverse boards representing a broader range of experience may be better able to quickly navigate volatile business environments and unexpected disruptions, such as a global pandemic.” They cite to “recent data from BoardReady, a nonprofit group that promotes corporate diversity, found a positive correlation between the diversity of S&P 500 boards and revenue growth during the pandemic.” So, if the law, regulators, stakeholders and the market all believe in board refreshment, why is not this effort moving forward with greater speed and urgency?

The authors found two key reasons why many companies still struggle to appoint directors who are women, people of color, or members of other underrepresented groups. (1) They found “that corporations go through the motions of refreshment but ultimately accomplish little, replacing an outgoing director with someone similar rather than with a person who has a different professional background, identity, or perspective.” (2) Perhaps not too surprisingly, they also “found that the independence of the board’s nominating committee is often compromised by substantial CEO influence over the process, perpetuating a tendency to select directors who reflect the opinions, and often the identity, of senior management.” When these factors converge, board independence and effectiveness in overseeing management of the company is compromised, which can negatively impact corporate performance.

The authors developed four actions which they believe can allow a company to turn around these areas in board refreshment. How can boards avoid these pitfalls and achieve meaningful refreshment? Leaders who want to change the culture of the board should take the following actions.

Diversity of identity and thought

Obviously, there are certain easily verifiable and achievable standard boards can articulate around diversity, including gender, race, and other such attributes. They can then evaluate nominees against that definition and for diversity of through as well. As the Compliance Evangelist, it would surprise you that I believe more former Chief Compliance Officers (CCOs) and compliance professionals should be nominated to boards. The same is true in other areas of risk management, cyber, export controls and trade sanction and even supply chain. The authors state, “Boards should also encourage nominees to talk about what type of diversity they believe they would bring to the board.” Documenting these actions will serve companies well, as multiple stakeholders are increasingly demanding public disclosure of this documented  information.

Refresh frequently

It is clear that a long-standing board is not the best system to have in place as members gradually lose effectiveness and long “tenures tend to compromise the true nature of director independence.” This leads the authors to suggest boards “set earlier mandatory retirements and shorter term limits.” Some investors oppose the re-election of directors who have served on a board for more than nine years, while others may limit service to seven years. Interestingly, the authors note, “in industries where business models and operational contexts change fast, tenures might need to be even shorter.” Rotation of members and a staggered hiring tenure can also be used.

Limit CEO involvement

Given the negative impact of a Chief Executive Officer (CEO) in the process of selection, it is not too surprising the authors posit “the CEO should not have a vote in the hiring decision, implied or otherwise.” To enhance this position, they also write, “We think boards could normalize the use of executive sessions and reduce any stigma associated with them by holding them more frequently, including when evaluating director candidates.” They noted the “New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) requires executive sessions once a year and Nasdaq at least twice a year, although neither specifies that the sessions be used in the nominee search and hiring process.”

Changing culture

Every CCO and compliance professional who has dealt with a board understands refreshment and corporate culture are tied together. The very act of refreshing an old, stagnant board with new people and ideas changes the culture of a board. That change permeates down into an organization. It is almost axiomatic that “A group of directors with similar experiences, opinions, skills, and identities will naturally tend toward consensus much too often.”

A CCO should work to get directors “to think about and freely discuss the existing board culture, including their own behavior and whether it needs to change.” You could also encourage a board to hire “a consultant to help diagnose and possibly change your board culture.” Finally, work to  “Encourage board members to voice their opinions, especially when they challenge the consensus.” As with most things in life, if you do what you did, you get what you got. The same is true for boards. If you replace one old white guy who was an executive in your industry with another old white guy who also is from the same industry, you have not refreshed your board member, you have simply replaced one for another. In this time of near constant change, boards need to be able to respond quickly and nimbly. That is going to take new blood into your Board of Directors.

And do not forget the ‘G’ in ESG.

Categories
FCPA Compliance Report

Ty Francis on Assessing Corporate Culture: A Practical Guide to Improving Board Oversight

In this episode of the FCPA Compliance Report, I am joined by Ty Francis, Chief Advisory Officer at LRN. We dive deeply into a recently released LNR/Tapestry Networks Report on Assessing Corporate Culture: A Practical Guide to Improving Board Oversight. Some of the highlights include:

  1. The genesis of this report.
  2. How does the Report serve as a roadmap to a clearer picture of the company’s ethical culture?
  3. How can the Report help determine how to improve culture throughout the enterprise?
  4. Who should a Board collaborate with, and how?
  5. How does the work LRN conducts help organizations foster more effective collaborative cultures?
  6. How do you prioritize culture on the board agenda?
  7. What is the challenge to the board’s culture?
  8. How does a Board measure and monitor?
  9. How does a Board articulate the desired culture?
  10.  How can a Board establish clear communication?

Resources

Ty Francis on LinkedIn

LRN

Assessing Corporate Culture: A Practical Guide to Improving Board Oversight

Tapestry Networks

Categories
Daily Compliance News

August 12, 2022 the Boston Wants Data edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Robinhood must face the music. (Reuters)
  • City of Boston to require diversity data in private construction projects. (Bloomberg)
  • Food prices as a compliance risk. (WSJ)
  • China investigates chip manufacturers for corruption. (FT)
Categories
Great Women in Compliance

Shannon Walker – A Holistic Approach to Raising Concerns

Welcome to the Great Women in Compliance Podcast, co-hosted by Lisa Fine and Mary Shirley.

A critical topic for any ethics and compliance program is the ability for employees to raise concerns – from the initial speak-up process to the interview to the potential for retaliation: Shannon Walker, the founder, and CEO at WhistleBlower Security, Confidential Ethics Reporting & Case Management Solutions.

Shannon started in communications for large organizations in the US and Canada. She founded WhistleBlower Security with a vision to make the process easier and more comfortable for reporters while protecting organizations.  Lisa and Shannon have a wide-ranging conversation about the differences between telephone and online reporters, a provider’s responsibility to reporters and how that relates to their responsibilities to an organization and different ideas about how organizations can best “triage” in all parts of the investigation cycle.

Shannon has always been committed to diversity and ESG, and she also talks about how becoming a “B Corp” has been a great learning process and an excellent accomplishment.

Are you planning on heading to the SCCE CEI in Phoenix in October?  Check out Lisa and Mary’s speaking sessions on the agenda and sign up!  We invite you to say hello and introduce yourself during the conference – it’s going to be a great time.

The Great Women in Compliance Podcast is on the Compliance Podcast Network with a selection of other Compliance-related offerings to listen to.  If you enjoy this episode, please rate it on your preferred podcast player to help other like-minded Ethics and Compliance professionals find it.  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 podcast’s story.  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).

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.

Categories
The ESG Report

Increasing the Speed of ESG Risk Management with Todd Boehler

 

Todd Boehler has over 25 years experience in the governance risk and compliance software space. He is currently Senior Vice President of Strategy at ProcessUnity, where he oversees third-party risk management. ProcessUnity is a company that is making good governance, risk, and compliance (GRC) practices and tools available to organizations via cloud-based, third-party risk and cybersecurity program management tools. Tom Fox welcomes Todd to this week’s episode of the ESG Report to discuss the relationship between third-party risk management and ESG. 

 

 

The Biggest Risk 

“In my opinion, third-party risk management has been the biggest risk in anti-corruption compliance,” Tom says. It’s something everyone in the company – up to the board level – has to be more consistent with. Todd agrees; it’s becoming more complex as time goes on, he adds. More businesses are outsourcing in order to compete. This brings accelerated risk. “You have to know where the risk lies inside of those [third-party] companies, otherwise you’re going to be accountable for that to your customers and your regulators and your examiners,” Todd points out. Your company needs to understand and mitigate risk prior to doing business with prospective third-party vendors. 

 

Evolving Risk

Todd runs ProcessUnity’s Partners and Alliances program and its product teams. His role involves growing the company ecosystem and investing in technology to help their clients manage risk and solve their problems more efficiently. “ESG has been an evolving risk area,” Todd tells Tom. “We help companies monitor and manage their third-party [risk] specifically, across all different areas of risk [including ESG risk].” ESG is a social mandate nowadays, he continues; more companies and regulators are acknowledging its importance. “We integrate and connect ESG data providers into our customer’s risk programs so that they can cover and understand ESG risk against their third parties,” he points out.

 

Monitoring Third-Party Risk

Tom asks Todd whether potential clients fully understand the need to monitor ESG risk and how ProcessUnity allows them to manage that risk. It depends on the maturity of the company, Todd responds. “Smaller companies that are highly regulated may be more mature than larger companies that are not so highly regulated,” he points out. It also depends on the stage they are in their roadmap, as well as how much they prioritize ESG risk against other types of risk. ProcessUnity helps them figure this out and how to grow their ESG program over time based on their specific industry. Building a culture of ESG is vital, as are sustainable procurement practices. Sustainable procurement refers to how businesses can identify and reduce the environmental impact of their supply chains. This requires monitoring third parties and ensuring that procurement practices are aligned to the ESG framework. He and Tom discuss the evolving work landscape, accelerated by the pandemic, and the accompanying increase in cybersecurity risk. The Russian invasion of Ukraine also spurred an uptick in sanctions screening. All this impacts how organizations manage third-party risk, Tom and Todd agree. “It’s an evolving world,” Todd comments, “things are changing fast, and you have to manage to the speed of change.”

 

Financial Resiliency 

Tom comments on the importance of financial resiliency of your third-party partners. If a company is not doing well financially, they may be unable to supply your products. They are more vulnerable to cyber attack because they may not be able to invest in cybersecurity, and they may be more easily persuaded to engage in bribery and corruption. Financial resiliency is a must, Todd says. Your company needs it, and your suppliers must also have it. “If your critical suppliers are having problems financially, you need to have a backup plan to be able to switch them out in dire straits,” he tells listeners. You also need to have a system to monitor those companies. Financial tracking is a good strategy here, he points out. He describes how ProcessUnity helps clients build a financial profile of their suppliers.

 

The Rise of ESG

ProcessUnity recently released a white paper, The Rise of ESG in Third-Party Risk Management. Tom asks, “What do you see as some of the key factors contributing to the relevancy of ESG on a worldwide basis?” He and Todd talk about the global push towards ESG and the corporate world’s response. A cultural shift coupled with new regulation is bringing ESG to the fore. Proper documentation of our ESG program will help you make better business decisions as well, both men agree. Your business will become more efficient and robust as well.

 

Looking Ahead

Tom asks Todd where he sees third-party risk management in ESG in 2025 and beyond. Risk professionals are thinking about and prioritizing ESG risk more, they agree. Todd adds that ESG risk attention will increase because there will be more data and more regulations. Additionally, there will be more people taking over executive positions who wish to implement ESG cultures and regulations in businesses that require ESG risk management. 

 

Resources 

Todd Boehler | LinkedIn | ProcessUnity 

The Rise of ESG in Third-Party Risk Management

 

Categories
Daily Compliance News

August 4, 2022 the Bain Barred edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • What’s the cost of a data breach? (Third-Party Trust)
  • AG to investigate companies that evaluate ESG. (Reuters)
  • Bain was barred from working for the UK government. (FT)
  • Former Mexico President under investigation for money laundering. (France24)
Categories
Daily Compliance News

August 2, 2022 the We Are the Champions edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Does corruption increase depression? (Dovetail Press)
  • ESG and Insurance. (Reuters)
  • Deshaun Watson gave 6 game suspension. (com)
  • English women bring it home. (ESPN)