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The First Line of Defense: How Smarter Hiring Strengthens Compliance Programs

I have long advocated that your ethics and compliance program should be embedded directly into your hiring process. However, let me be even more succinct: compliance begins with the hiring process. A recent article in the Sloan Management Review, by William Reed, entitled “Ten Expert Tips for Smarter Hiring,” reviewed the hiring process and noted that “Each hiring decision shapes not only who joins your team but also how your company defines itself .” This means that every employee you bring on shapes not just the culture but also the risk profile of your organization. The flip side is that a single poor hiring choice can have a lasting impact on a business for years, while a strong hire can reinforce integrity and resilience.

For compliance professionals, the hiring process is more than a human resources function. It is a frontline defense against misconduct, reputational damage, and regulatory scrutiny. This makes the “Ten Expert Tips for Smarter Hiring” directly relevant for us. I have adapted this article through a compliance lens to determine lessons we can apply to building a workforce that supports ethics, integrity, and accountability.

1. Ask the Right Questions: Digging Past the Facade

Candidates often arrive at interviews with polished, even AI-generated, answers. The key is not just asking what they have done, but probing how and why they did it. Questions designed to elicit authentic responses, what Harris calls “bank-shot” questions, reveal traits like self-awareness, accountability, and judgment. In compliance-sensitive roles such as procurement, finance, or third-party management, probing questions can help determine whether a candidate dares to speak up, navigate ethical dilemmas, and handle pressure effectively. Hiring managers should coordinate with compliance to build integrity-related questions into interviews.

2. Probe for Substance, Not Scripts

It is not enough for candidates to recite processes. Follow-up questions should push them to explain reasoning, trade-offs, and lessons learned. This exposes whether the candidate has merely memorized best practices or internalized critical thinking. The DOJ consistently emphasizes the importance of judgment and decision-making. This is a key theme of the 2024 Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (2024 ECCP). Compliance officers can coach hiring teams to listen for signs of genuine ethical reasoning rather than canned responses.

3. Character Over Competence

Competence can be trained; character is more complex to teach. Research cited in the article emphasizes that while technical skills vary, core attributes such as honesty, resilience, and fairness are universal and should be given significant weight in hiring decisions. Compliance programs thrive in cultures of integrity. Hiring for character builds the foundation for a speak-up culture, ethical decision-making, and long-term trust. Compliance should partner with HR to design behavioral interview questions that test for integrity and moral alignment.

4. Highlight Meaningful Work

Top candidates want more than compensation; they want purpose. Cues from the recruiting process, as well as stories of meaningful work and culture, affect not just acceptance decisions but also long-term engagement. Compliance professionals can play a role in branding the organization as a place where doing the right thing is valued. When candidates see integrity celebrated, it strengthens your ethical brand and attracts talent that aligns with your compliance values.

5. Employer Branding as a Compliance Asset

Strong employer branding is not simply about market competitiveness. It communicates the company’s identity and priorities. A well-articulated employer brand can establish expectations for ethical conduct and compliance from the outset. Compliance messaging should be embedded in employer branding. For example, highlight your whistleblower program as a sign of transparency and fairness. Utilize recruitment materials to convey that ethical leadership is integral to the company’s culture.

6. Autonomy and Accountability

Flatter hierarchies and broader spans of control mean employees must self-manage more. The right employees thrive in autonomy, while others struggle to do so. With increased autonomy comes increased risk. Compliance should ensure that hiring processes screen for accountability and conscientiousness. Self-directed employees must be able to manage risks without constant oversight.

7. Don’t Overlook Internal Talent

Internal lateral moves can unlock untapped potential. They often produce better long-term outcomes because employees already understand the company’s values and systems. Promoting internal talent not only saves costs but also rewards employees who have demonstrated a commitment to compliance with company policies and culture. It signals that integrity and alignment with values are valued, thereby strengthening the culture.

8. Beware Over-Reliance on Vendor Tools

Pre-packaged talent management software may simplify hiring, but it risks overlooking the nuances of your organizational needs. Just as with third-party risk, outsourcing too much of hiring to generic tools can create blind spots. Compliance officers should advocate for custom criteria that reflect ethical considerations, industry-specific risks, and regulatory obligations.

9. Skills-Based Hiring Requires Culture Change

Skills-based hiring is valuable, but it is not a quick fix. It requires cultural change and consistency across hiring, promotion, and retention practices. The same applies to compliance. Hiring for skills like ethical reasoning, critical thinking, and cultural competence must be reinforced through training, promotion decisions, and leadership modeling. Otherwise, skills-based hiring risks being performative.

10. Deploy Your Best Interviewers

Data shows that some interviewers are consistently better at identifying strong hires. Yet few organizations systematically identify and deploy these interviewers. Compliance professionals should advocate for training interviewers to recognize the red flags of unethical behavior. Identifying your “compliance-savvy interviewers” and deploying them in critical hiring processes strengthens your ability to hire ethically aligned candidates.

Final Thoughts

Hiring is not just about filling positions; it is about shaping culture, building resilience, and protecting the enterprise. For compliance professionals, more innovative hiring means embedding compliance into the very first step of the employee lifecycle.

Harris tips provide a roadmap: ask the right questions, probe for substance, hire for character, highlight meaningful work, strengthen employer branding, embrace autonomy responsibly, value internal talent, customize tools, make cultural shifts for skills-based hiring, and deploy your best interviewers. When compliance is part of the hiring process, you don’t simply acquire talent; you utilize the entire process to help build a culture of integrity. That is the ultimate compliance win.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: June 23, 2025, The Is Walmart Cool 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, and general interest, all of which are relevant to the compliance professional.

Top stories include:

  • Will it ever be cool to shop at Walmart? (NYT)
  • Accenture says CEOs are putting off hiring. (FT)
  • China flexes more trade muscles. (WSJ)
  • Purdue Pharma begins to vote on a new deal. (Reuters)
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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

One Month to a More Effective Compliance Program with Boards – The Board Role in Hiring

What is the role of a Board of Directors in hiring senior executives, CCOs, and even other board members? I explored this issue with Candice Tal, who began by noting, that bad senior executive hires can cost a company much more than simply dollars. She related, the “financial costs in day-to-day operations easily can quadruple that of a regular employee, but it can also impact the company’s corporate governance and board of directors if that executive hire was found to be involved with unethical and illegal activities. Not even a signed contract can protect a company if an executive hire’s unethical actions come to the attention of the national media. Fiduciary risk and exposure for the board of directors cannot be overlooked.”

She pointed to the example of Yahoo! and its hire of Scott Thompson. It turned out that Thompson had incorrect information in his online biography regarding his academic credentials. The “implications went beyond the activist shareholder accusations to reflect on the Board of Directors for not vetting his background more carefully. The company may have been exposed to claims of providing false information to the SEC and potential stockholder lawsuits. Thompson’s 120-day tenure at Yahoo! cost the company over $7 million and seriously tarnished the company’s reputation in the business community.”

The key is that a company engages in an executive due diligence investigation rather than simply a routine or even executive-level background investigation. Tal explained that an executive background search is “typically limited to a five-component review of criminal records, employment verification, degree or education verification, social security validation, address verification and sometimes credit history.” Such searches are “very limited searches.”

Conversely, executive due diligence, “looks in-depth at all available public records sources: criminal history, civil litigation issues, financial and legal issues, relationships with other companies and board advisory positions, reputation, misrepresented education and overstated work history, behavioral history (for example litigiousness), and, in particular, undisclosed or adverse issues.” While it is generally “more costly than executive background checks and takes more time, the information gathered is extremely valuable and can save a company substantially more. A high-quality due diligence review can find important information which would not be returned in a routine executive background check.”

Infortal has found that up to 20% of executive search candidates fail a deep-level due diligence investigation. Now consider how many senior executive slots your company has and add to that Board of Directors seats and you can quickly see the risk of failure to consider an executive due diligence search when promoting or hiring. Moreover, you need executive-level due diligence in other business situations as well, including the senior management of new business acquisitions brought into your organization through a merger or other acquisition, selecting new Board members, screening the corporate Board of Directors, and of course, for third party business partners and other agents in the sales and supply chain channels. 

Three key takeaways:

  1. The costs of a bad executive hire can far exceed the dollar loss.
  2. Do not forget the differences between an executive background check and executive level due diligence.
  3. 20% of all senior executives fail an executive level due diligence check.

For more information, check out The Compliance Handbook, 4th edition, available here.

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Daily Compliance News

September 4, 2021 the Hiring, No Hiring edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Is your hiring process preventing you from hiring? (WSJ)
  • Better apply to MSU. (Bloomberg)
  • A new business model? (WaPo)
  • You can’t tell the criminals without a script. (NYT)
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Great Women in Compliance

Jared Knapp – Respect and Dignity in the Compliance Hiring Process

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

Today’s guest is another Compliance professional that Mary met through volunteering with Compliance Career Connection (CCC).  CCC was formed in the fall of 2020 as a support system for peers in the difficult position of seeking new employment during the pandemic.  It is a group that runs at least monthly events encompassing an activity to help exercise skills required in the job search process.  Jared Knapp is also on the CCC leadership team and a trade governance expert.  He joins Mary in this bonus episode to discuss respect and dignity in the Compliance hiring process.  As Ethics and Compliance professionals, isn’t the onus on us to act ethically when building out our teams?  Jared and Mary think so and outline some of the common grievances job seekers are facing.

The discussion focuses on broken aspects of the hiring process and what Jared envisages can be done to make the experience an overall better one for candidates, as well as one that Ethics and Compliance professionals can be proud to be associated with.  He also shares some trade sanctions wisdom to close out the day’s discussion.

 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.  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).

As always, we are so grateful for all of your support and if you have any feedback or suggestions for our 2021 line up or would just like to reach out and say hello, we always welcome hearing from our listeners.

We welcome any feedback you may wish to send in to gwicpod@gmail.com.

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.