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Insights from psychology for compliance officers

An informed approach to business compliance can be improved by taking theoretical insights from different fields.  For example, a corporate culture which seeks to promote ethical leadership, or provide support for making choices from a basis of integrity, or encourage employee engagement with compliance values, should take lessons from a variety of sources to make relevant and relatable appeals.

Psychology in particular has many affinities with a profession that is focused on culture and values, both of organizations and of the individuals within them.  Study of psychology in search of insights relevant to compliance ethics can be used in creating our culture, informing our norms, and helping us to develop and articulate our values.  All of these insights are necessary for cultivating a compliance culture and professionals in the compliance and ethics function have to be the first ambassadors for this.  To do this effectively, psychology can provide important guidance.

Abraham Maslow – Psychologist Abraham Maslow was best known for creating his eponymous “hierarchy of needs,” which is a psychological theory of mental wellness determined by the priority in which needs are fulfilled in order for individuals to progress from subsistence survival to the ultimate stage of self-actualization. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs was first expressed in his 1943 paper “A Theory of Human Motivation,” which was published in the journal Psychological Review.  It can be applied in the organizational context as well, as companies attempt to succeed, grow, and change, and encounter difficulties with sustainability and identity throughout this process.  At the bottom of the hierarchy are the most fundamental needs, which for humans are physiological and safety needs which dominate their behavior, but for organizations could be business survival and basic market access.  At the top is self-actualization and self-transcendence, which for humans and organizations alike relates to the desire of realizing full potential, mastery of all previous needs, and giving the self over to a higher goal within community and society.  Check out this interview with Abraham Maslow on self-actualization from 1968:

This post was the first in a series of four on insights for compliance officers from different fields of study.  Check back next Tuesday, on February 27, for a post about insights from self-development and coaching – with more from Stephen R. Covey as well as others such as Brene Brown.  On March 6, the post will be about insights from behavioral economics – including an overview of the works of Dan Ariely, Richard Thaler, and Daniel Kahneman among others.  Finally, on March 13, the last post in this series will discuss insights from management theory, with commentary on authors such as Simon Sinek and Daniel Pink.

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