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Upping Your Compliance Game, Part 1 – The Business Case for Compliance: How Ethics and Compliance Drive Profitability

The Trump Administration has suspended FCPA enforcement for the foreseeable future. What does that mean for compliance professionals? Hui Chen has suggested this should be seen as an opportunity for compliance, but to do so, “It’s time to up your game . . . Instead of selling insurance for FCPA enforcement, become leaders that help your organizations perform.” Based on this challenge by the most imminent compliance commentator, I will devote this week’s blog posts to ways compliance professionals can up their collective game. Today, I demonstrate that effective compliance equates to more efficient business processes and great Return on Investment (ROI).

We are now at a point where sufficient data, academic research, and real-world case studies make one thing abundantly clear: a strong ethics and compliance program is not just good for business; it can now be seen as a driver of profitability. While compliance has long been seen as a necessary cost of doing business, organizations that take compliance seriously have discovered a competitive advantage hidden in plain sight.

The Ethics Premium: Data-Driven Proof of Compliance ROI

For the past 15 years, Ethisphere has collected data on its World’s Most Ethical Companies awards, and the results are telling. Companies that earn this designation consistently outperform their peers in stock market performance. Ethisphere refers to this as the “Ethics Premium.” Ethisphere Executive Vice President Erica Salmon Byrne has stated, “In tracking how the stock prices of publicly traded honorees compare to the U.S. Large Cap Index, we found that listed World’s Most Ethical Companies outperformed the large cap sector.”

In 2010, that performance gap was 4.5%. By 2020, the number had surged to 13.5%. Ethical businesses are not only surviving but thriving in competitive markets. The message is simple: investors, customers, and stakeholders place greater value on companies with strong ethical foundations, and the market rewards those companies accordingly.

Academic Research Supports Compliance as a Profit Driver

Beyond market trends, academic research backs up the claim that compliance is a value generator. George Serafeim and Paul M. Healy, in their paper An Analysis of Firms’ Self-Reported Anti-Corruption Efforts, found that companies with robust compliance programs perform better financially in high-risk, corruption-prone countries than those with weaker programs.

One of their key findings was that companies without strong compliance frameworks, despite high sales in these markets, experienced a negative Return on Equity (ROE) of between 24% and 30%. In contrast, companies that invested in compliance infrastructure were better equipped to navigate challenging business environments, sustain long-term growth, and protect shareholder value.

This research reinforces that compliance isn’t just about avoiding fines or regulatory scrutiny—it’s about building a business model that can weather uncertainty and thrive in complex global markets.

Real-World Example: How Compliance Data Drove Profitability

Numbers and research are compelling, but nothing drives the point home like real-world success stories. One such example comes from a company operating in a high-risk FCPA jurisdiction. As part of its compliance initiatives, the company conducted a fraud risk analysis on business development spending related to gifts and entertainment to identify patterns of improper spending and mitigate corruption risks.

Unexpected Findings and a New Compliance Strategy

Without prior approval, the company had a strict $75.00 cap on gifts and entertainment spending. The analysis examined traditional fraud indicators, such as:

  • Split receipts are designed to circumvent the spending limit.
  • Transactions clustered just below the approval threshold.
  • Aggregate spending on individual government officials by multiple salespeople.

However, the results yielded an unexpected insight: spending patterns revealed two distinct thresholds:

  • Data Point A: The minimum spend required to close a deal successfully.
  • Data Point Z: A limit beyond which no additional spending would influence a sale.

Armed with this insight, the company implemented a new policy. Sales teams were required to meet the threshold of Data Point A but were prohibited from exceeding Data Point Z. This simple compliance-driven adjustment had a massive impact:

  1. Immediate Cost Savings: Sales teams stopped wasting money on futile attempts to win business past a certain spending level.
  2. Operational Efficiency Gains: By recognizing when a sale was unlikely to close, sales professionals could pivot more quickly, reducing the overall sales cycle time and improving productivity.

The result? The company eliminated unnecessary expenses and increased overall business unit profitability—all thanks to insights derived from a compliance analysis.

Compliance as a Business Efficiency Tool

This case study is the perfect example of how compliance, when approached strategically, can improve efficiency and profitability. The same principles can be applied across other business functions:

  • Quote-to-Cash (QTC) Sales Cycle: Compliance insights can optimize contract approvals and improve revenue recognition.
  • Procure-to-Pay (P2P) Procurement Cycle: Compliance controls can prevent fraud and enhance supplier negotiation strategies.
  • Third-Party Risk Management: Effective compliance due diligence can reduce supply chain disruptions and improve vendor relationships.

When compliance is embedded within key business processes, it ceases to be a regulatory checkbox and instead becomes a powerful tool for operational excellence.

Reframing the Compliance Conversation: From Cost Center to Profit Generator

Compliance has been considered an overhead expense for years—necessary but not necessarily value-generating. The data, research, and case studies tell a different story. Compliance is not just about avoiding legal trouble; it’s about making smarter business decisions that enhance long-term sustainability.

To reframe the conversation, compliance professionals should:

  1. Leverage Data: Use metrics and research to quantify the financial benefits of ethical business practices.
  2. Tell Compelling Stories: Highlight real-world examples of how compliance has improved profitability and efficiency.
  3. Engage Business Leaders: Collaborate with finance, operations, and sales teams to position compliance as a business enabler rather than a regulatory burden.

The Bottom Line

Ethical companies perform better. Research proves it, and real-world success stories validate it. Businesses that invest in compliance don’t just protect themselves from regulatory risk—they position themselves for sustained profitability and competitive advantage.

It is time for compliance leaders to own this narrative. Compliance is not simply about avoiding penalties; it’s a strategic asset that drives business success. The next time you’re asked to justify your compliance budget, do not just talk about risk; talk about ROI. In today’s world, ethics and profitability go hand in hand.