So, what else is new?

Editor's Letter

ellen-davis-compressed

I laughed like a drain when I heard about Paul Moore, the Cassandra of HBOS. All the breathless media coverage in the UK - oh my goodness, nobody on the board or in senior management listened to the risk manager, how could that be? - veered from the ridiculous to the sublime.

Most operational risk managers have had to cope with this collective deafness at the top of their organisations for years. At a panel discussion last November, 'Delivering GRC to the board' (posted on the OR&C website), participants talked about their frustration with the way reports get 'cleansed' before they are passed on up the organisation. The consensus seemed to be that board reports about risk management are pretty sanitised.

Nobody wants to deliver bad news. Let's be honest - whistleblowers are inevitably portrayed as noble but slightly nutty. Paul Moore himself was treated to some fairly robust spin and insinuation in the media. People who point out problems are branded 'difficult personalities' who 'aren't team players' and 'didn't get along with their colleagues'.

Again, hearty laughter from this quarter. Of course these attributes apply to most whistleblowers. In the environment for truth-telling that existed up until now, who but someone that was very individualistic and not afraid of being isolated by their colleagues would even bother to point out potential problems? Most of the time, if the whistleblower isn't pushed out of the organisation, they know they will have to jump when they do speak their mind.

In a perfect world, these individualists who don't quite fit in to corporate politics would be seen as valuable additions to the corporate mix of personalities and valued for their insights. Concerns about the way businesses are being run or the way individuals are behaving would be swiftly passed up the organisational communication chain, heard by management and the board with interest, and acted upon.

This is really the place that financial institutions need to strive to get to. Certainly, there are technology tools out there that can help firms achieve better communication and more transparency regarding the risks they face. But at the end of the day, all technology can be fiddled with to produce the desired result. It's the organisations themselves that need to change - from the tone at the top all the way through to the front line. Speaking out needs to be visibly rewarded - creativity and perception must be nurtured.

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