Categories
Best Practices

Key compliance culture values for promoting employee integrity

Employee integrity is the cornerstone value for establishing organizational integrity, and therefore for the success of any compliance program. As fundamental as employee integrity is, it is also complex, elusive, and affected by a huge array of factors and influences. Perceptions and biases can defeat individual intentions for ethical behavior. External forces on the decision-making process and the impact of management in a complicated organizational structure and business world can defeat incentives for integrity and honesty.

What can a compliance program do to address the need for employee integrity in a world which presents so many obstacles and hindrances to developing and maintaining this trait? Compliance professionals should be the organizational standard bearers for encouraging good people to do good things and limiting access of the occasional bad people to do bad things. This message can be very simple and should focus on reinforcing positive perceptions of corporate values and leadership expectations so that employees aspire to model their own character within this.

  • Openness: Transparency and honest, active communication are crucial to the success of a compliance program. Employees must see that openness of communication and transparent reporting and sharing are highly valued. Open communication is directly linked to reduction of reputational risk and perceptions of greater honesty. Establishing a culture where employees feel it is encouraged or expected to speak up and speak out requires management to be meaningfully open, accessible, and relatable. In an environment where employees feel that all behavior and performance can be discussed openly, they will also be aware that it will all be noticed, and therefore will feel positive pressure to meet best expectations for integrity.
  • Clarity: Clarity of expectations and perceptions is essential for a culture of integrity. As with all objectives for compliance culture at an organization, norms and values must be clear and consistent across all employee populations. Communicating different or confusing messages, or giving information that impacts everyone to only some and leaving others out to hear it indirectly, is disastrous for imbedding ethical traits in an organization. Clarity promotes understanding and discussion, both of which are necessary for employees to take up the cultural objectives of the organization as their own.
  • Leadership: Tone at the top is just the first step. Leadership should be encouraged as a professional competency at all levels in the organizations, so that advocacy for the compliance culture can take root everywhere. Employees need to see leaders speaking up about the importance of integrity, but they individually also need to feel they are in the position to speak up themselves, and will be looked upon as vested with responsibility for their own integrity and choices in everyday ethical dilemmas.
  • Trust: Trust is the most simple factor for encouraging integrity in organizations, and indeed in all interactions and relationships, and it is also one of the most difficult and fraught qualities to meaningfully establish and maintain. Trust is constantly threatened and questioned. It cannot be given automatically and still have meaning, but it must be given confidently and with expectation that it will be received in return. Investments in mutual trust cannot be forced or demanded. The pain of having colleagues or managers who are not trustworthy can cause deep damage in teams and organizations and impede individual development. The only solution to this is to see trust as a reward and an ongoing evaluation, and to embrace frank and open dialogs which can help to resolve prior mistrust and discourage future violations.
  • Engagement: Engagement discussions usually focus on employees, but the quest for achieving it starts with management. Employees should see that management follows up, takes integrity seriously by individually espousing all the values, responds visibly to problems and complaints, and confronts issues boldly and confidently. Management engagement in the compliance culture should embrace professional skepticism and pursue public accountability. When employees see this, then they are empowered in turn to engage with their direct managers, peers, and direct reports to have discussions about integrity matters and to demonstrate all the traits that support ethical decision-making.

Modelling the key values of a compliance culture to create strong organizational drivers for integrity should be the focus of the conduct objectives of every compliance program. The fundamental message should be that performance and behavior linked to demonstrating integrity will be encouraged and appreciated.

Categories
Compliance and ethics business case studies

THINX, Miki Agrawal, and the immature leadership of a visionary entrepreneur

THINX was founded by Miki Agrawal with the ambition of disrupting the feminine hygiene industry. The company makes underwear specially designed to be worn by women on their menstrual periods. In line with this female-centered product and its revolutionary approach to a timeless need, THINX has a mission to re-center the public discussion about periods and women’s bodies. The company has become known for its provocative, bold advertising campaigns on the internet and in the New York City subway.

However, the company has also become known for something less progressive: allegations that its founder-CEO Agrawal created a hostile work environment with inappropriate behaviour and insufficient management controls.

THINX started with the objective to normalize the way people talk about periods, making it no longer a taboo topic. This societal change is an admirable goal, but at THINX it was undermined by an immature compliance culture that perverted this openness into permissiveness for mistreatment and poor conduct. It may be a positive societal change to open and encourage dialogs about feminine hygiene practices and women’s bodies, but the standards for treatment of others and respect for people’s personal boundaries, everywhere in life but especially in the work place, should not be subverted in interests of promoting this message. Empowering women does not stop at the office door, especially in a company with this ambition as its supposed core value.

Agrawal, who has successfully started several businesses, has not been so successful in taking a professional approach to ongoing operations at those organizations. Her ideas and approaches to entrepreneurship may be disruptive in a good way – novel, unique, bold – but her management style appears disruptive in a bad way – immature, overly casual, confrontational. Personal conduct and character ethic should distinguish the profile of a CEO, not tarnish it. A true leader should focus his or her philosophy into appropriate behaviour and interactions with employees and a tone at the top of professional integrity.

Despite Agrawal’s own behaviour that crossed the line, she could have made up for her managerial shortcomings by placing people around her whose leadership could contribute to a more acceptable corporate tone for the employees while still servicing the cultural change Agrawal wanted to encourage in the world at large. Adequate management controls such as a formal, experienced HR department and written employee policies and procedures would have helped to set a standard towards which the company could mature.

THINX replaced Agrawal as CEO with Maria Molland Selby, a more traditional leader who was worked in a variety of established companies included Thomas Reuters and Dow Jones. Selby also is a passionate about the THINX product from a personal perspective, hopefully she can value the people working at THINX as individuals by treating them positively and focus on a corporate culture that will support the company’s goals of destigmatizing feminine and changing the product market to make it better. As for Agrawal, she has rebranded herself as a SHE-eo and a disrupt-“her,” indicating that her interest is really on focusing on her perceived positive accomplishments and the future, rather than learning from the criticisms of the past, which she perceives as obstacles or tests rather than self-created challenges or failures to mature.

For more detail on THINX and Miki Agrawal, read Noreen Malone’s story on The Cut.

Categories
Compliance in popular culture

Selected TED/TEDx talks for compliance and ethics insights

TED and TEDx conferences and events have become important and popular venues for speakers from all walks of life.  This includes academics and business leaders but also ordinary people who have had inspiring or extraordinary experiences, to share their insights and stories. Given how ever-present ethics and morality are in business and life, many talks touch on useful compliance topics.

  • Creating Ethical Cultures in Business (Brooke Deterline) – We must question why we don’t speak up on behalf of other people or ideals, and how it makes us feel after we encounter a situation where we want to say something but don’t. Challenging discomfort and fear can help us advocate for each other and our principles and create corporate cultures where standing up courageously and speaking our values is seen as safe and helpful. Courage is an inspiring and powerful antidote to corruption and unethical behavior.

  • Building Business on Character Ethic (Kevin Byrne) – Commercial profitability and competitive advantage dominate most metrics of business success, but how can these be achieved and sustained without integrity? Taking care to do the right thing in all areas of business – from dealing with customers to retaining employees and everywhere in between – and avoid reputational risk are powerful drivers in building a business designed to last.

  • Why Credibility is the Foundation of Leadership (Barry Posner) – Speaking to the perennial compliance topic of tone at the top, leaders must be people worth believing and following. We evaluate whether those in senior management or supervisory positions are competent and credible. Expertise, intelligence, passion, and innovative thinking – all of these things are also necessary for leadership to succeed, but in order for anyone to believe in them, integrity must come first.

  • We Need a “Moral Operating System” (Damon Horowitz)  A strong, developed moral framework is necessary for knowing what to do with all the information and power we possess and must make decisions about how to use on a regular basis in both business and life in general. Ethical decision-making is challenging and nuanced and can even be awkward. Thinking, discussing, debating, and defining beliefs are all integral to understand our human ability to distinguish right from wrong and make a principled choice on how to act.

  • Our Buggy Moral Code (Dan Ariely) – Confronting the theory that purely bad people are to blame for the majority of bad things that happen in society, the work of behavioral economists such as Dan Ariely suggests that human behavior is far more complex than static good or bad values. Rather, wrongdoing in decision-making is influenced greatly by intuition and context. Situational awareness and a strong affinity for personal morality are therefore important mitigating factors to unethical behavior.

This is merely a brief selection of TED/TEDx talks touching upon personal empowerment, entrepreneurship, leadership, decision-making, and behavioral economics – all topics which are linked powerfully to compliance and organizational ethics.