• Home
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Digital Edition
  • Books
  • Events
  • Products
  • RSS Feeds

Home › This Week”s Issue › Effectively Communicate Compliance Risk to the Board of Directors

Font Size: increase font decrease font

Effectively Communicate Compliance Risk to the Board of Directors

By Ryan McConnell Contact All Articles 

Texas Lawyer

February 4, 2013

  •    
  •    
  •    
  •      
 

Fifty years ago in Washington D.C., Martin Luther King Jr. departed from his prepared remarks and delivered a speech that left an indelible mark on the American conscience. No PowerPoint, no technology — just imagery and cadence. He watched his audience, not a screen.

In an age where so many of us rely on technology and PowerPoint presentations, the most effective communicators understand that, to persuasively present ideas, you have to understand your audience and react to signals sent to the presenter in real time.

One of the challenges compliance officers will face this year is communication — providing the board of directors with the information they need about the company's compliance program — and they will need to know how to pay attention to people instead of a slide.

Boards of directors rely on the general counsel or a compliance lawyer to describe the existing and developing risks for the organization, as well as historical and future efforts to mitigate compliance risk. In addition to the federal sentencing guidelines and New York Stock Exchange listing requirements, directors have corporate law duties to understand risks faced by the company and ensure the organization is effectively mitigating those risks. The failure to do so has economic costs for the company, shareholders and directors, as highlighted in the statistics published by NERA Economic Consulting, which tracks securities litigation related to compliance failures (among other things).

To ensure directors understand compliance risk, GCs and compliance lawyers must know both what to report to the board and how to deliver the message.

The first challenge is deciding what to tell the board about the compliance program. Compliance lawyers properly advise their board on the compliance program when they give them three key pieces of information:

1. emerging compliance risks,

2. historical compliance failures, and

3. mitigation efforts undertaken by the organization.

To advise the board on emerging compliance risks, the compliance lawyer must track new legal developments that pose compliance risks, new markets the company will enter, and benchmarking to show risks that peer organizations are considering. This may be accomplished by sharing compliance risk information with peer compliance officers or by conducting benchmarking exercises (for instance, following which risks companies are elevating into their codes of conduct for a certain industry).

A browser or device that allows javascript is required to view this content.

Continue reading

  • 1
  • 2

Next



Subscribe to Texas Lawyer

You must be signed in to comment on an article

Find similar content

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • PowerPoint
  • NERA Economic Consulting
  • New York Stock Exchange Inc.
  • New York Times Company
  • U.S. Army

Key categories

    
  • Law Firm Management

Most viewed stories

    
  1. Former State Bar of Texas Employee Pleads Guilty to Theft
    •         
      • Subscription Required
  2. Judges Spar, But Fake Lawyer's Conviction Stands
    •         
      • Subscription Required
  3. Trey Apffel Wins Run-Off Election for State Bar President
    •      
  4. Judge Christopher Dupuy Indicted, Removal Petition Filed
    •         
      • Subscription Required
  5. Advising Clients on Weather and the Workplace
    •         
      • Subscription Required
lawjobs.com

TOP JOBS

MORE JOBS

POST A JOB

From the Law.com Network

Hiring Interns? Be Sure to Do It Right

ACC Weighs in on Arizona's In-House Pro Bono Rules

Ex-Dewey Partners Face New Foe in Firm's Bankruptcy

S&C Adds Linklaters Restructuring Partner in London
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Contrite Companies Can Win Forgiveness in Bribery Cases
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Plaintiffs Want to See Toyota's 'Crown Jewels'
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Enron Sandbox Stirs Up Private Data, Again

LegalTech West Coast Wraps Up With Ethics, VC News

In Tricky Prosecutions, Judges Play Peacemakers

Ropers Majeski Tries to Re-Invent Itself
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Fla. Attorneys Lead Force-Placed Insurance Fight

Lawsuit Names Missing Fla. Attorney for Alleged Fraud
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Summer Programs Still in a Drought

Lawyer Not Covered for Alleged Malpractice at Prior Firm
  •      
    • Subscription Required

The Affordable State-Specific Practice Solution
Available in NY, NJ, PA and CT editions - research, draft and prepare even the most complex cases with ease.

Firm Takes Another Hit in Bid for 'Unconscionable' Fees

New York's Martin Act Faces Test in Challenge to 2005 Case

Castille Testifies in Favor of 'Civil Gideon' Funding

Workers' Comp Judges Can't Fight Rescinded Raise
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Law Schools Are Looking Beyond LSATs, Says Mich. Dean

Is Freezing Your Eggs the Solution?

Advising Clients on Weather and the Workplace
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Texas Sues BP, Others Over Deepwater Oil Spill Disaster
  •      
    • Subscription Required

'Follow That Escapee!'

Judge Who Tossed Defense Counsel Accused of 'Partiality'
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Corporate Bribery Case Part Of National Trend
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Court Continues To Grant Lawyers Fraud Immunity
  •      
    • Subscription Required

 
About texaslawyer.com  |  Contact texaslawyer.com  |  Advertise with Us  |  Sitemap
  • About |
  • ALM Properties |
  • ALM Reprints |
  • Customer Support |
  • Privacy Policy |
  • Terms & Conditions |
  • ALM User License Agreement
ALM Media