Oct 18, 2023
Do You Have A Diligence Problem? How To Tell
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Do your organization, your team, your co-workers have a diligence problem? That is the subject of this post. Identifying red and orange flags that signal diligence issues.
Look For Signs
Diligence serves as the foundation for multiple functions within your organization, including mission, finance, business operations, legal and compliance work. So how would you you know if your diligence foundation has problems that need to be addressed?
The answer is that you need to be on the alert for outcomes, behaviors and attitudes that signal possible diligence problems.
This post is going to list twenty of these outcomes, behaviors and attitudes that may be signs of a diligence issue. Some of these are more indicative of diligence problems than others but you won’t know unless you take the time to do a review.
These lists are not exhaustive and are very general, it is not refined for your business. But it is a starting point and the expectation would be that you would take the list and refine it to fit your business adding your own ideas based on your experiences and observations.
Red Flags
Begin with the red flags. These are events that are pressing because the event may:
- involve third parties including regulators, government officials, or parties to legal proceedings
- have external consequences such as fines, losses, suspension or loss of a license
- have “domino” effects within the organization and even outside of the organization, including triggering reporting requirements, loss of reputation and even leadership turnover.
The diligence review for these types of event needs consider that there may be two types of diligence issues present:
- specific diligence lapse(s) that resulted in the event and
- internal diligence lapses that allowed the event to go unrecognized, unchecked, unresolved, or unreported
Orange Flags
If red flags present at least the possibility of direct evidence of a diligence lapses, orange flags are either precursors to more serious issues or taken in the aggregate are hints that there may be serious underlying diligence lapses.
These orange flags do not appear as audit results, regulatory or legal actions or give rise to investigations or formal complaints. These are more subtle. So, how do you know if this is happening? The answer is – by paying attention. This isn’t about spying or micromanaging, just paying attention. Paying attention when you assign work, when you discuss work, when work product is submitted.
What Is Next?
These flags are a beginning. They are signs and like all signs they can be ignored or they can be followed. The way to go forward is to take these flags as the start of a process. A process in which the organization seeks to understand, repair, educate, support, reinforce and ultimately build diligence into its foundation. The result will then be not just more diligence but better business decisions, better ethics, integrity better mission adherence and better legal and regulatory compliance.
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