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Ep. 94: Neta Meidav - Internal Ethical Reporting

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Manage episode 275330644 series 2538467
เนื้อหาจัดทำโดย IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) เนื้อหาพอดแคสต์ทั้งหมด รวมถึงตอน กราฟิก และคำอธิบายพอดแคสต์ได้รับการอัปโหลดและจัดเตรียมโดย IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) หรือพันธมิตรแพลตฟอร์มพอดแคสต์โดยตรง หากคุณเชื่อว่ามีบุคคลอื่นใช้งานที่มีลิขสิทธิ์ของคุณโดยไม่ได้รับอนุญาต คุณสามารถปฏิบัติตามขั้นตอนที่อธิบายไว้ที่นี่ https://th.player.fm/legal

Contact Neta Meidav: https://www.linkedin.com/in/netameidav/

Vault: https://vaultplatform.com/

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
Adam: (00:05)
Welcome back for episode 94 of Count Me In, IMA's podcast about all things affecting the accounting and finance world. I'm your host, Adam Larson, and today I'll be bringing you right up to a conversation between my cohost Mitch Roshong and Neta Meidav. Neta is the Co-founder and CEO of Vault, a reporting platform designed to resolve workplace misconduct incidents. In this episode, she discusses the pitfalls with traditional internal reporting or whistleblower policies within organizations, and how technology such as her platform can enhance internal, ethical reporting moving forward. So without further ado, let's hear their conversation now.
Mitch: (00:45)
So we're here today to talk about alternative and innovative solutions to traditional whistleblower policies within organizations. I'd first like to set the stage for our listeners and kind of explain the why for our conversation. So can you share some examples of activities that would require employees to act as whistleblowers?
Neta: (01:04)
Sure, of course. I'm happy to do so. Maybe first it would be helpful to distinguish for the purpose of this conversation, between whistle-blowing and internal, reporting. I think it's important to explain that, the way we see it, whistleblowing is the act of reporting misconduct or ethical breaches externally. For example, to an enforcement agency of sorts like the SEC, whilst, internal reporting is really what, we want to be talking about today and the process which we want to fix and optimize, for, for everyone's benefit. So when we talk about kind of activities that would require employees to act as whistleblowers, I think that the past year showed how that category for internal reporting has it has expanded. So, we of course consider the traditional corporate and financial fraud and corruption issues that require people to, come forward and report, and only today, I, woke up to, the interesting article on the Wall Street Journal about, Volkswagen, which I'll, I'll come back to, later on in this conversation, because I think it's, it's crucial, but the things that happen in every organization, that require, to kind of surface up concerns and, and make management aware.
Mitch: (02:43)
So then in response to these activities and the various things that go on within an organization, what are some of the traditional solutions or policies that companies have in place, whether it is the internal or the external, like you mentioned, and what are some of those normal outcomes in your opinion?
Neta: (02:59)
Sure. So I think, you know, I think company’s are largely trying to do the right thing by saying, come forward to us internally. Speak to your manager speak to someone in the organization, speak to our compliance office, but if you cannot, here's a hotline for you, right. And that's the, the traditional mechanism that we've seen for decades that was, you know, became specifically popular, due to, the Sarbanes Oxley Act and the requirements on, on a third party operated whistleblowing platform that was put in place back in 2002. The issue with such legacy solution such as, third party hotlines is that number one, they don't really do much to build trust, right? They're not helping with building the internal trust that we need to see today, in every modern organization, because essentially what they're saying is if there's an issue, well, call this call center and report a problem, and the company will communicate with this call center and pick it up. But here's an intermediary for you and this is how you need to come forward because the act of reporting is just so scary and difficult, and so here's, here's a route for you. The second thing is if you look at the data and the statistics, they actually tell you that hotlines are in many cases, not only are there not the solution, but I would say that they're part of the problem, because if you look at, the global business ethics survey that was published this year, it talks about, the fact that only 6% of all cases that are reported internally in corporate America are reported to the hotline. In other cases, you find, so one of the biggest providers of hotlines in the world, I was talking about 11% of reporting happens to its platform. So that's a very low number, and that comes to show that people essentially do not really trust that option, and do not find it as a, as an optimal solution for when they are experiencing something that is in fact very difficult, to come forward and speak up about. And I think that is perhaps one of the reasons that we're seeing, the Department of Justice just published its guidelines a few months ago, to measure the effectiveness of your ethics and compliance program, and, now it's time to do so because humanity has moved on and so did technology, and there are other ways to create today. And there are other ways to ensure that people feel like they're comfortable, in, in coming forward and reporting misconduct when, when and where it happens
Mitch: (06:10)
So let's talk a little bit more about your thought process when it comes to this whole situation here. Obviously you looked at these outcomes and recognize there's a gap or there's insufficient resolutions going on. So what did you really try to come up with as far as a need that you recognized when evaluating these outcomes and where did your thought process take you, before we get into these actual innovative solutions?
Neta: (06:36)
Sure. The few guiding principles, that have guided us in looking at this is that we need to look at, these legacy solutions and processes that are in place, and we need to completely, reinvent them by putting the employee at the center of the experience, right? So we need to look at the solution from the outlook of the employee, because essentially we want to encourage people to come forward and report more. So when we're thinking about creating this new employee centric experience, we need to consider several things. Technology is just one of them. It's really, it's an, it's a very important element of it, but it's just one of the elements. And indeed, you know, this we're, you know, the year is 2020. people communicate through their phones through, apps. They're used to digital solutions that are serving them. That's how, that's how the workforce is communicating today, and it's important to bring those solutions forward, to meet, uh, where, where we are and to meet your employees where they are. So that's, that's the first element. The second element is to do with trust and, and there's, you know, that's really important to highlight that trust can only be rebuilt if there is a direct communication between reporter and company. Be it, if the employee is anonymous or not anonymous, it's really important to create that trust internally, and we can do that by taking the intermediary outside of the equation and empowering people to come forward and report. The third element is to do with psychological safety. So one of the things we looked at with our technology is not only how you create a sense of, you know, not only how you digitize the old ways of reporting, but how you can really create a sense of psychological safety, and, empower more people to report who would have otherwise not reported misconduct when they experienced it. So we were thinking about how can that be created, and recreated the technology in a way that empowers people to speak up still safeguards everyone's data and privacy from each other, but ensures that people have that sense of, what we call a blind network and t...

  continue reading

293 ตอน

Artwork
iconแบ่งปัน
 
Manage episode 275330644 series 2538467
เนื้อหาจัดทำโดย IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) เนื้อหาพอดแคสต์ทั้งหมด รวมถึงตอน กราฟิก และคำอธิบายพอดแคสต์ได้รับการอัปโหลดและจัดเตรียมโดย IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) หรือพันธมิตรแพลตฟอร์มพอดแคสต์โดยตรง หากคุณเชื่อว่ามีบุคคลอื่นใช้งานที่มีลิขสิทธิ์ของคุณโดยไม่ได้รับอนุญาต คุณสามารถปฏิบัติตามขั้นตอนที่อธิบายไว้ที่นี่ https://th.player.fm/legal

Contact Neta Meidav: https://www.linkedin.com/in/netameidav/

Vault: https://vaultplatform.com/

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
Adam: (00:05)
Welcome back for episode 94 of Count Me In, IMA's podcast about all things affecting the accounting and finance world. I'm your host, Adam Larson, and today I'll be bringing you right up to a conversation between my cohost Mitch Roshong and Neta Meidav. Neta is the Co-founder and CEO of Vault, a reporting platform designed to resolve workplace misconduct incidents. In this episode, she discusses the pitfalls with traditional internal reporting or whistleblower policies within organizations, and how technology such as her platform can enhance internal, ethical reporting moving forward. So without further ado, let's hear their conversation now.
Mitch: (00:45)
So we're here today to talk about alternative and innovative solutions to traditional whistleblower policies within organizations. I'd first like to set the stage for our listeners and kind of explain the why for our conversation. So can you share some examples of activities that would require employees to act as whistleblowers?
Neta: (01:04)
Sure, of course. I'm happy to do so. Maybe first it would be helpful to distinguish for the purpose of this conversation, between whistle-blowing and internal, reporting. I think it's important to explain that, the way we see it, whistleblowing is the act of reporting misconduct or ethical breaches externally. For example, to an enforcement agency of sorts like the SEC, whilst, internal reporting is really what, we want to be talking about today and the process which we want to fix and optimize, for, for everyone's benefit. So when we talk about kind of activities that would require employees to act as whistleblowers, I think that the past year showed how that category for internal reporting has it has expanded. So, we of course consider the traditional corporate and financial fraud and corruption issues that require people to, come forward and report, and only today, I, woke up to, the interesting article on the Wall Street Journal about, Volkswagen, which I'll, I'll come back to, later on in this conversation, because I think it's, it's crucial, but the things that happen in every organization, that require, to kind of surface up concerns and, and make management aware.
Mitch: (02:43)
So then in response to these activities and the various things that go on within an organization, what are some of the traditional solutions or policies that companies have in place, whether it is the internal or the external, like you mentioned, and what are some of those normal outcomes in your opinion?
Neta: (02:59)
Sure. So I think, you know, I think company’s are largely trying to do the right thing by saying, come forward to us internally. Speak to your manager speak to someone in the organization, speak to our compliance office, but if you cannot, here's a hotline for you, right. And that's the, the traditional mechanism that we've seen for decades that was, you know, became specifically popular, due to, the Sarbanes Oxley Act and the requirements on, on a third party operated whistleblowing platform that was put in place back in 2002. The issue with such legacy solution such as, third party hotlines is that number one, they don't really do much to build trust, right? They're not helping with building the internal trust that we need to see today, in every modern organization, because essentially what they're saying is if there's an issue, well, call this call center and report a problem, and the company will communicate with this call center and pick it up. But here's an intermediary for you and this is how you need to come forward because the act of reporting is just so scary and difficult, and so here's, here's a route for you. The second thing is if you look at the data and the statistics, they actually tell you that hotlines are in many cases, not only are there not the solution, but I would say that they're part of the problem, because if you look at, the global business ethics survey that was published this year, it talks about, the fact that only 6% of all cases that are reported internally in corporate America are reported to the hotline. In other cases, you find, so one of the biggest providers of hotlines in the world, I was talking about 11% of reporting happens to its platform. So that's a very low number, and that comes to show that people essentially do not really trust that option, and do not find it as a, as an optimal solution for when they are experiencing something that is in fact very difficult, to come forward and speak up about. And I think that is perhaps one of the reasons that we're seeing, the Department of Justice just published its guidelines a few months ago, to measure the effectiveness of your ethics and compliance program, and, now it's time to do so because humanity has moved on and so did technology, and there are other ways to create today. And there are other ways to ensure that people feel like they're comfortable, in, in coming forward and reporting misconduct when, when and where it happens
Mitch: (06:10)
So let's talk a little bit more about your thought process when it comes to this whole situation here. Obviously you looked at these outcomes and recognize there's a gap or there's insufficient resolutions going on. So what did you really try to come up with as far as a need that you recognized when evaluating these outcomes and where did your thought process take you, before we get into these actual innovative solutions?
Neta: (06:36)
Sure. The few guiding principles, that have guided us in looking at this is that we need to look at, these legacy solutions and processes that are in place, and we need to completely, reinvent them by putting the employee at the center of the experience, right? So we need to look at the solution from the outlook of the employee, because essentially we want to encourage people to come forward and report more. So when we're thinking about creating this new employee centric experience, we need to consider several things. Technology is just one of them. It's really, it's an, it's a very important element of it, but it's just one of the elements. And indeed, you know, this we're, you know, the year is 2020. people communicate through their phones through, apps. They're used to digital solutions that are serving them. That's how, that's how the workforce is communicating today, and it's important to bring those solutions forward, to meet, uh, where, where we are and to meet your employees where they are. So that's, that's the first element. The second element is to do with trust and, and there's, you know, that's really important to highlight that trust can only be rebuilt if there is a direct communication between reporter and company. Be it, if the employee is anonymous or not anonymous, it's really important to create that trust internally, and we can do that by taking the intermediary outside of the equation and empowering people to come forward and report. The third element is to do with psychological safety. So one of the things we looked at with our technology is not only how you create a sense of, you know, not only how you digitize the old ways of reporting, but how you can really create a sense of psychological safety, and, empower more people to report who would have otherwise not reported misconduct when they experienced it. So we were thinking about how can that be created, and recreated the technology in a way that empowers people to speak up still safeguards everyone's data and privacy from each other, but ensures that people have that sense of, what we call a blind network and t...

  continue reading

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