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Corporate cultural change: Awareness and dialog, not training

This is the final entry 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 and conduct at the top and the importance of operationalizing these. The second post discussed how to tangibly encourage organizational justice via consistent, visible investigation and enforcement efforts. The third post focused on policies to have in place, while last week’s post was about the procedures to complement and support those. Today, the fifth and last post in the series will provide ideas for how compliance programs can go beyond traditional training to create a culture which risks and values are addressed and integrated into awareness and communication efforts.

The last four posts have discussed the management controls and organizational structures that are important to implement in order to address needed cultural change and manage compliance risks. Motivating management to act as leadership and vice versa and then taking advantage of their fluency to leverage buy-in for enforcement efforts, policies, and procedures that will contribute to reform and improvement initiatives has been the focus so far. The final area for compliance and ethics professionals to take on in this process is employee and organizational education.

To meet the demands posed by the current cultural moment toward organizational justice and institutional responsibility, compliance programs must embrace a bolder approach to training, going beyond routine, tick-the-box style efforts. The era of un-engaging webinars, slideshows with quizzes at the end, and brochures no one reads, has to be over in order for ethical cultures to develop authentically and thrive sustainably in modern organizations.

Though these typical trainings will always have their place somewhere in a comprehensive education campaign plan, and the value of the generations of work put into developing them should not be disregarded, the content and the purpose of these programs need to be seriously re-imagined.

Consider these best practices for going beyond training, in order to design and deliver engaging and entertaining employee communication and awareness efforts:

For more tips on next-generation compliance training best practices, check out this post or this post.

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