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FCPA Compliance Report

Tom Fox has practiced law in Houston for 30 years and now brings you the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Report. Learn the latest in anti-corruption and anti-bribery compliance and international transaction issues, as well as business solutions to compliance problems.
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Mar 21, 2017

Prong 6, Training and Communication, of the Justice Department’s Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs reads, in part: 

Form/Content/Effectiveness of Training – Has the training been offered in the form and language appropriate for the intended audience? How has the company measured the effectiveness of the training? 

Most companies have not considered this issue, the effectiveness of their compliance program. I would suggest that you start at the beginning of an evaluation and move outward. This means starting with attendance, which many companies tend to overlook. You should determine that all senior management and company Board members have attended compliance training. You should review the documentation of attendance and confirm this attendance. Make your department, or group leaders, accountable for the attendance of their direct reports and so on down the chain. Evidence of training is important to create an audit trail for any internal or external assessment or audit of your training program. 

One of the key goals of any  compliance program is to train company employees in awareness and understanding of the law; your specific company compliance program; and to create and foster a culture of compliance. In their book, entitled “Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Compliance Guidebook: Protecting Your Organization from Bribery and Corruption”, Martin T. Biegelman and Daniel R. Biegelman provide some techniques which  can be used to begin evaluate ethics and compliance training. 

The authors encourage post-training measurement of employees who participated. A general assessment of those trained on the FCPA and your company’s compliance program is a starting point. They list five possible questions as a starting point for the assessment of the effectiveness of your FCPA compliance training: 

  1. What does the FCPA stand for?
  2. What is a facilitation payment and does the company allow such payments?
  3. How do you report compliance violations?
  4. What types of improper compliance conduct would require reporting?
  5. What is the name of your company’s Chief Compliance Officer? 

The authors set out other metrics, which can be used in the post-training evaluation phase. They point to any increase in hotline use; are there more calls into the compliance department requesting assistance or even asking questions about compliance. Is there any decrease in compliance violations or other acts of non-compliance? 

What if you want to take you post-training analysis to a higher level and begin a more robust consideration of the effectiveness of compliance training through an analysis of return on investment (ROI)? Joel Smith, the founder of Inhouse Owl, a training services provider, advocates performing an assessment to determine ethics and compliance training ROI to demonstrate that by putting money and resources into training, a compliance professional can not only show the benefits of ethics and compliance training but also understand more about what employees are getting out of training (IE., effectiveness). The goal is to create a measurable system that will identify the benefits of training, such as avoiding a non-compliance event such as a violation of the FCPA. Smith admits that calculating compliance ROI is very difficult as ethical and compliance behavior is an end-goal and of itself - not necessarily one that everyone feels should be subject to a ROI calculation. 

Smith noted, “it is extremely difficult to isolate the training effect to calculate what costs you avoided due solely to your ethics and compliance training. Although each organization will have a unique ROI measurement due to unique training objectives, it is possible to use a general formula to calculate ethics and compliance training ROI.” 

Smith’s model uses four factors to help determine the ROI for your ethics and compliance training, which are: (1) Engagement, (2) Learning, (3) Application and Implementation, and (4) Business Impact. These four factors are answered through posing the following questions. 

  1. Figure out what you want to measure. Before you ever train an employee, you should have a goal in mind. What actions do you want employees to take? What risks do you want them to avoid? In the FCPA, you want them to avoid non-ethical and non-compliant actions that would lead to FCPA violations. So your goal is to train employees to follow your Code of Conduct and your compliance program policies and procedures so you avoid liability related to actions. Therefore the benefit to calculate for ROI purposes is the total amount saved by the company because employees now understand not to engage in unethical and non-compliant conduct around bribery and corruption. 
  1. Were employees satisfied with the training? What is their engagement? The next step is to get a sense of whether employees feel that the training you provided is relevant and targeted to their job. If it’s not targeted, employees will likely not be committed to changing risky behavior. Smith believes you can get data on employee engagement through a quick post-training survey. Although this factor does not produce a quantitative number to use in the ROI calculation, it will help you isolate and qualify the training benefit. 
  1. Did employees actually learn anything? Smith believes that a critical part of any employee training is the assessment. If you want to understand the “benefit” of training employees, you must know whether they actually learned anything during training. You can collect this data in a number of ways, but for compliance training, the best way is to measure pre and post training understanding over time. Basically, each time you train an employee, measure comprehension both before and after training. 
  1. Are employees applying your training? Smith says that for this point you will need to conduct a survey to determine employee application and their implementation of the training topics. To do so, you must conduct employee surveys to understand whether they ceased engaging in certain risky behaviors or better yet understand how to conduct themselves in certain risky situations. These surveys can provide a good sense of whether the training has been effective. 
  1. What’s the quantitative business impact of your training? At this point you are ready to determine the numerical business impact of your ethics and compliance training. Smith has an approach he calls the “Best Guess” approach. Smith believes there are two parts to the business impact calculation: (1) the benefit calculation and (2) the isolation calculation. Smith provided five questions he would pose. 
  1. How often could a noncompliance event occur?
  2. How much revenue would be involved?
  3. What is the profit margin on the revenue?
  4. What are the other costs?
  5. What are the noncompliance hard costs? 

The next step is to isolate the benefits of training so that you properly attribute the ROI to the ethics and compliance training. To make this determination, you need to know at a minimum (1) whether employees understood the training and (2) whether employees are applying the training. This information must be compared with other factors, namely: (1) the effects of any other company initiatives involving anti-corruption, (2) employee attitudes regarding the topic and training, and (3) any business factors such as decreasing/increasing international revenue, macro-economic trends, etc. that may contribute to avoidance of a noncompliance event. From these calculations, you should then apply a percentage of the benefit to the training. Here Smith suggests 25%. 

  1. ROI: bringing it all together. Now it is time to calculate the ROI. Here I turn to the formula as laid out on Smith’s company website: “Total FCPA Noncompliance Costs Avoided - Total FCPA Training Program Costs  ÷Total FCPA Training Program Costs ($20,000) x 100=ROI”. Smith concludes by noting, “Even though calculating training benefits is often difficult and imprecise, it’s incredibly important to make an attempt to quantify training ROI” to demonstrate not only effectiveness but also “so you can show business people the incredible effect that engaging training can have on the bottom line.” 

The importance of determining effectiveness and the evaluation of your ethics and compliance program is now enshrined by the Department of Justice (DOJ) in its Evaluation. The Evaluation is the first formal step taken by the DOJ to demonstrate it wants to see the effectiveness of your compliance program. This is something that many Chief Compliance Officers (CCOs) and compliance professionals struggle to determine. Both the simple guidelines suggested and the more robust assessment and calculation laid out by Smith provide you with a start to fulfill the Evaluation but you will eventually need to demonstrate the effectiveness of your compliance training going forward.

Three Key Takeaways

  1. You must demonstrate you have measured the effectiveness of your compliance training?
  2. The DOJ is clearly moving into requiring a demonstration of effectiveness of compliance training.
  3. You should be moving towards a model of demonstrating compliance training ROI to validate full operationalization of your compliance training.

 

This month’s podcast series is sponsored by Oversight Systems, Inc. Oversight’s automated transaction monitoring solution, Insights On Demand for FCPA, operationalizes your compliance program. For more information, go to OversightSystems.com.

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