Customer relations has sometimes become shaky recently with the amount of cybersecurity hacks and fraudulent activity that has been happening. Because of these incidents, consumers have lost faith and it becomes a job of the board of directors to improve their corporate governance and compliance policies to try to regain the faith in their organization and subsidiaries. These companies are asking us to trust in their own definitions of ethics. And by using phrases like ''rededicating ourselves to our customers'' and ''remembering why we're here,'' they are signaling that there's been a lapse, both in their companies' adherence to laws and in the vision that guides the companies' leadership. The distinction between these two - following the rules and creating an overall ethos for the company - is the difference between corporate compliance and corporate governance.
In many contexts, corporate governance and corporate compliance are inextricably linked. Insofar as both efforts constitute a response to risk management, this link makes sense. Businesses wish to integrate and align their governance and compliance initiatives wherever possible to eliminate duplication, conflicts, wastefulness and gaps.
But to understand the intricate relationship between governance and compliance, it's useful to pull them apart for a second and unpack the motivations and intentions that underpin these initiatives. Let's start with some definitions.
Governance
- Governance is the overall management approach board members and senior executives use to control and direct an organization.
- Governance integrates information gleaned from reporting with management control structures.
- Governance ensures that important information is communicated to appropriate organizational levels in a complete, accurate and timely fashion.
- Governance instills control mechanisms to make sure strategies, directives and instructions from management are carried out systematically and effectively.
- Governance attempts to balance the interests of a company's many stakeholders, such as shareholders, management, customers, suppliers, financiers, government and the community at large. Corporate governance is intended to increase accountability and to facilitate prudent management.
Compliance
- Compliance is the process through which companies demonstrate that they have conformed to specific requirements in laws, regulations, contracts, strategies and policies.
- Compliance assessments determine the present state of compliance and measure the projected cost of implementing compliance against the potential cost of non-compliance.
- Compliance initiatives prioritize, fund and implement any corrective actions deemed necessary.