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Corporate cultural change: Concise and accessible procedures

This is the fourth in a series of five posts suggesting best practices for implementing corporate cultural change.  For an overview of all the tips on this subject, check out this preview postThe first post in the series was about tone at the top and conduct to support it. The second post discussed the role of consistent, visible enforcement in promoting organizational justice and fairness.  Last week’s post focused on the importance of putting concrete, values-based policies in place.  Today’s post will be about implementing procedures that are consistent with those policies.  Next week, on March 27, the fifth and last post in the series will suggest how compliance professionals can foster a culture where employees are effectively engaged in awareness and communication to combat risks and support controls.

Last week’s post focused on the importance of creating and implementing policies that sufficiently and authentically support systemic responsibility for reform and intention for improvement.  Just as the appropriate tone and conduct must be observed from the highest levels of the organization in order to support enforcement efforts in the event of misconduct and abuse, corresponding policies must follow in order for the cultural norms to thrive.

For the standards set by the policies to succeed, organizations must put in place procedures that dictate practices which are consistent with and supportive of them.

Creating and implementing concrete, values-based policies is critically important for organizations to demonstrate operational commitment to improvement.  In order to take material advantage of momentum for reform in the examples set at the top in both attitude and behavior, as well as to nurture the culture of compliance created to support organizational justice and fairness, the policies in place must formalize this all.

Corporate compliance professionals should seek to create and communicate procedures that include the following traits in order to support a culture of compliance and enable progress, encourage organizational integrity and moral engagement, and protecting the vulnerable while punishing and preventing wrongdoing.

In order to accomplish this lofty goal, keep in mind “The 5 C’s” of procedures to implement for corporate cultural change:

Check back next week, Monday March 26, for the final post in this series of five, which will suggest best practices for going beyond training, in order to create convincing and compelling employee education campaigns and communications.

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