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12 O’Clock High-a podcast on business leadership

Jennifer May on Leadership Lessons from Pat Summitt

12 O’Clock High, a podcast on business leadership, brings together stories from history, the arts, sports and movies, research, and current events to consider leadership lessons. In this episode, Tom is joined by Jennifer May, Director of Compliance Advisory at Broadcat, to mine some leadership lessons from former Tennessee women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt.

Pat Summitt was one of the most successful coaches in college basketball history. She is best known for her impressive record of 8 NCAA championships and 1,000 wins. Even more impressive than the wins, however, was the way she coached and led her teams: with an emphasis on servanthood. While this may sound counterintuitive, it can actually lead to great success — and it’s a lesson all leaders can learn from.

In this episode of the 12 O’Clock High podcast with host Tom Fox, guest Jennifer May described how Pat Summitt approached leadership: “It was all centered around one very important concept and idea–the idea of servanthood.”  For leaders, servanthood means recognizing the power of humility and the importance of putting others first. It means building teams that are driven to succeed not through domination but through service, even when that means honoring what others have to contribute and embracing their unique strengths.

Leaders who demonstrate servanthood will create a workplace culture that encourages employees to bring out their best, be open to criticism, and find ways to work together for the collective good.

To hear more of the conversation between Tom Fox and Jennifer May about leadership lessons from Pat Summitt, tune into episode twelve of the 12 O’Clock High podcast.

Resources

Jennifer May on Linkedin

Blog post Don’t Stop the Madness 

Webinar on Ethics Ambassador

Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Operationalizing Compliance: Part 2 – Compliance Program Design Jennifer May and Xinia Pirkey

Welcome to a special five-part podcast series on Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, sponsored by Broadcat LLC. Over this series, we consider various ways to more fully operationalize your compliance regime, including the design and effectiveness of your communications, why the operationalization of compliance is a team sport, why simply data is not the answer, and how to avoid being overwhelmed. In Part 2, I am joined by Jennifer May and Xinia Pirkey to consider your compliance program design.

Highlights from this episode include:

·      Your communications should resonate with your employees.

·      Aesthetic draws an employee in, but content grabs their attention.

·      Clarity and relevance are key elements.

·      Document Document Document

For more information, go to TheBroadcat.com

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Blog

Operationalizing Compliance: Part 2-Compliance Program Design

Welcome to a special five-part podcast series on Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, sponsored by Broadcat LLC. Over this series, I visit with Jennifer May, Director of Compliance Advisory; Taylor Edwards,  Director of Sales; Xinia Pirkey, Design Manager; Alex Klingelberger, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Jaycee Dempsey, Director of Customer Success. We consider a variety of ways to more fully operationalize your compliance regime, including the design and effectiveness of your communications, why the operationalization of compliance is a team sport, why simply data is not the answer and how to avoid being overwhelmed. In Part 2, I am joined by Jennifer May and Xinia Pirkey to consider your compliance program design.

May began that the key is relevance and clarity. If your training or communication is not relevant, it really does not “matter how perfect the design is or even how perfect the message is, if it is being shared with someone that’s the wrong person, it will fall flat”. In other words, your compliance team is “just wasting time blanketing the entire workplace with some piece of information that does not apply to most of them.” Regarding clarity, she said, “If you are not clear about what it is you want them to do, what the behavior is that you are trying to achieve, you will lose their attention there as well.” All of this can lead to wasted time for your employees and wasted effort for your compliance team, “potentially even starting to lose some credibility.”

Pirkey is a design professional so comes at these issues from a different perspective from May or myself. Pirkey said, “we use design, from my point of view, to leverage the content to be on point to the audience that will receive it.” As a design professional, you must always consider the user experience so “we have to think about the users and who we are trying to target.” She added,  “As a designer, I come in and I try to interpret the content and I try to interpret as much as I can and ask the questions, such as “Who is this for? What am I trying to say? How do I want them to read this step by step?” You must always be cognizant not only about the audience, but also how we are projecting to them.”

Next, we considered how effective content can create credibility for your compliance function or conversely, ineffective content can demean your compliance function credibility. Pirkey began by noting that it is all about content, intoning, “we start with content.” Interestingly, she said that “a lot of times this means that we’ve come up with a format, whether it is a decision tree, an infographic, a written piece of content or other; and it is in a manner we can project it as job aid to our audience.” She also noted that conversely, there are times “we have to go back to the drawing board and decide, OK, this does not work as a decision tree. We need to think about a different format, a contrast example, or another approach.”

We closed with a discussion of the ‘secret sauce’ to creating great compliance communications tools. May believes it “is that back and forth and the community of diverse voices that we have, because we all have such unique experiences in our professional backgrounds.” When you couple this with the intent and “focus on trying to help organizations make these communications as simple, easy, straightforward” you can begin to achieve great compliance messaging. “Blending these approaches, the design method, thinking in that way, being collaborative with each other, being open with each other, and then doing that same thing on the backside with our clients too; that is the secret sauce. That’s the thing that makes Broadcat successful and a really awesome place to work with and work for.”

Join us in Part 3 where we look at operationalization.

For more information go to TheBroadcast.com

Categories
Blog

Operationalizing Compliance: Part 1 – Compliance Program Effectiveness

Welcome to a special five-part podcast series on Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, sponsored by Broadcat LLC. Over this series, I visit with Jennifer May, Director of Compliance Advisory; Taylor Edwards,  Director of Sales; Xinia Pirkey, Design Manager; Alex Klingelberger, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Jaycee Dempsey, Director of Customer Success. We consider a variety of ways to more fully operationalize your compliance regime, including the design and effectiveness of your communications, why the operationalization of compliance is a team sport, why simply data is not the answer and how to avoid being overwhelmed. In Part 1, I am joined by Jennifer May to consider what is compliance program effectiveness.

We began with one of the most well-worn words in compliance that still challenges compliance professionals, that being ‘effectiveness’. May said that it is not about getting a hundred percent completion on some sort of training module, which unfortunately in many ways has become the benchmark or the metric used. Instead, it is about getting information to individuals so you can get the right outcomes. Effectiveness is not represented by clicks but rather it is about outcomes.

You should start by identifying your highest risk activities. Begin by asking questions, which might include “Are you having good (or bad) outcomes when it comes to those risky activities? And if you’re not, why are you not? Do your employees understand what it is that they are supposed to be doing and when they are supposed to be doing it? What are those behaviors and the outcomes that we want to change or need to change to get to the appropriate outcomes?”

By asking such questions and delivering training and communications on those topics and areas, you begin to see a shift in people. It is not about a click; the result is compliant behavior. Shifting the focus and conversation to what those outcomes are allows you to start thinking about training in a different way and you can start to see how effectiveness can begin to be impacted by solid training that focuses on outcomes.

May analogized it to a closed-book or open-book test. She does not believe employees should think of compliance as a “closed-book test.” Compliant behavior is not something that you should keep behind a curtain. Your information should be out there and available to any employee who needs it in the moment that they need it. If there is a risk to manage; that is when they will need it. But if your employees need such information “the next time and the next time, and every time subsequent to that, then that’s okay too. There’s no reason why keeping that compliance information hidden or keeping it locked away and making them remember it is going to make them more effective or, more appropriately, compliant in their behaviors. Providing that information upfront and always when they need it, is really the key.”

Obviously, compliance folks cannot be everywhere all at once. Your compliance function may be a single person or a small team. Further, they cannot morph themselves into covering every single risk and every single moment of the organization every time. That is why the closed-book test does not do them any good as they cannot “be standing over someone’s shoulder every time talking about why then need to do something, what they need to do and how they need to do it.” Keep an open book approach and make compliance information openly available whenever employees need it.

We concluded with a few thoughts on credibility for your compliance program, which May believes is a very important concept for compliance. and had an interesting take on that issue. She said that credibility “honors employees as professionals in the work that they are doing.” This ties into “being open about the resources that are available, encouraging them to use them, encouraging them to find them, and perhaps, most importantly, encouraging them to reach out when they have a question.” May sees all this as a part of that credibility. This leads to engagement on a level which is about what they do and demonstrating that you, as the compliance professional, are there to support them.

Join us in Part 2 where we look at program design.

Resources

For more information, check out Broadcat here.