Episode 47

Richard Bistrong: Moving from corruption to compliance

Available on these channels and more

The news is littered with examples of ethical lapses and corruption. In fact, a Strategy& study showed that it was the biggest reason for CEOs resigning. Yet, compliance is still a word and a practice that is not always considered pivotal to the success of organisations. It’s often perceived as part of the bureaucracy that stops or slows down progress.

Who better to talk to than a man who has transformed himself from somebody who was corrupt and sent to jail, to somebody who is now a world authority on the subject.

This is the podcast for you if you want to:

  • Hear his own fascinating story of redemption and transformation.
  • Learn where to start if you feel your organisation or team is close to or over the edge when it comes to ethical practices.
  • Manage risk in an organisation that is more dispersed, especially in hybrid working arrangements.
  • Help somebody who you feel has moved to the dark side of the force.
  • Make the difficult issues discussable. Or how to position and sell the role of compliance within an organisation — from policeman or policewoman to an enabler.

More about Richard

Richard is the CEO of Front-Line Anti-Bribery LLC. He is a speaker, author, and consultant to multinationals, on ethics and compliance. He supports existing initiatives by helping people, teams and organisations appreciate that no one is ever alone when it comes to ethical decision-making, and that we never have to sacrifice integrity to succeed.

His clients include Volkswagen, Novartis, Airbus, Kraft Heinz and Microsoft, among other Fortune 100 multinationals and global trade groups. In person and virtually, Richard has presented to hundreds of diverse global multinationals in North America, South America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. His talks focus on anti-bribery, ethics and compliance challenges, sharing his frontline experience and perspective on real-world corruption and compliance risk.

“It takes a village to do something right. And it also takes a village to do something wrong.”

Richard Bistrong, CEO, Front-Line Anti-Bribery LLC

VIEW RUNNING ORDER

03.22 Ethical lapses.
06.44 Convincing people.
08.56 The challenges of decentralisation.
11.26 Signs and signals.
14.02 Your options.
16.45 Good to great.
20.20 Self-awareness.
23.56 Richard’s story.
26.23 Interventions.
30.56 Coping with prison.
32.57 Managing his personal brand.
35.15 Second chance.
37.31 Richard’s impact.
38.34 Richard’s best practices and habits.
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