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April 29, 2018 by fiscaldoctor

Cyber Risk Downloadable “How Safe Is Your Business? “

Your will enjoy and benefit from my cyber / risk six page “How Safe Is Your Business? “

Before you start spending any money for an external assessment of your cyber exposure, start with Three-Minute Self-Scoring  Review to suggest your Cyber Job Security category and the article’s accompanying 5-step remedy.

How Safe Is Your Business? Why Cybersecurity Equals Job Security for CEOs, CFOs and Others was originally published by Corporate Compliance Insights.

For more value from applying this overview to your cyber situation, use the final one or two minutes to briefly note, your one to three key take away points, one next step action note and whose help you would benefit from as you make your action step.

Consider sharing this with colleagues in IT, risk management, strategic planning, internal audit, business continuity, supply chain management, safety or financial planning and analysis.  You all are kindred spirits on making others more aware of major potential risks, of which cyber probably is one.

The job you save by considering this may be that of a colleague, friend, or your own.

How open minded are you to a brief strategic overview of your findings. Just imagine the value if you call  Gary Patterson at 678-319-4739 or [email protected] to discuss your unique situation.

Download link for PDF

How Safe is Your Business eBook

Start with Three-Minute Self-Scoring Review to suggest your Security and risk categories

Filed Under: Risk Management Tagged With: best practices business growth Cyber cyber threat risk risk assessment Atlanta supply chain sustainability

April 3, 2018 by fiscaldoctor

CEO, President, and Directors: Booster Shot 2018 New Year’s Resolutions

No Cost No Risk Assessment to help improve your bottom line to empower sustainable growth

Strategic enterprise risk management and growth expert and speaker Gary W. Patterson, FiscalDoctor®, recommends a 15-minute free discussion with the C Suite leaders of any US organization larger than 20 million regarding a No Cost No Risk Fiscal Clinic Assessment. Keep more of your money, take less risk and grow your business’s cashflow and value. linkedin.com/in/garywpatterson

Here’s how you can use this newest way to jumpstart, even exceed, 2018 goals, targets and New Year’s Resolutions to benefit your organization. In a roller coaster world of accelerating change, disruption and second guessing,

  1. Look for the focus on how you can move toward better addressing an opportunity, pain point or challenge when cash savings are unlocked to help meet your organization’s unique situation and needs.
  2. Compare your category spend with a best of business review process.
  3. Review how savings enabled can help grow your top line revenue and organizational value – both in the commercial and nonprofit sectors.

Who should consider applying this process using a value based operational and strategic assessment framework?

  • Family business, private and public business and equity group investors
  • Corporate directors, key committee chairs and board chairs
  • Corporate officers and C-suite executives
  • Shareholders, stakeholders, regulators and legislators
  • SMB, middle market and global 2000

Just as every person needs a medical doctor, every organization needs a FiscalDoctor and periodic fiscal checkups. He also supports special projects for business growth, risk assessments, value based enterprise risk management (ERM), operational risk management (ORM), fiscal checkups, corporate governance, strategic planning updates, special board projects or requests and strategic growth diagnostics.

If you have ever felt a little too much of a best kept secret, stuck or coasting on past success, call him now at 678-319-4739 for your free discussion.

About Gary W. Patterson

Patterson, a Big 4 CPA / Stanford MBA with over 30 years’ experience helping over 200 companies, consults and speaks regularly on business growth, accountability, facilitation, governance, risk management, achieving corporate financial goals, and building long-term wealth.

He can also help increase your profitability providing access to 100 best of business experts who are often better and cheaper than incumbents. Reach Gary at 678-319-4739 or [email protected].

© Gary W. Patterson.   ###

Audiobook – how to ask the best questions.

https://fiscaldoctor.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/How-to-Ask-the-Right-10-Questions-For-Your-Business.mp3

Increase your cash on hand

Filed Under: Audios Timely Reports

March 5, 2018 by fiscaldoctor

Middle Market CEO, CRO, CFO or Directors – Cyber Job Security Index

Why Cybersecurity Equals Job Security. Better manage your reputational and financial risk.

 Strategic enterprise risk management (ERM) expert and speaker Gary W. Patterson, FiscalDoctor®, points out that “It’s not if, but when, you’ll be attacked” in his article How Safe Is Your Business? Why Cybersecurity Equals Job Security for CEOs, CFOs and Others published by Corporate Compliance Insights (CCI)

at http://www.corporatecomplianceinsights.com/how-safe-is-your-business/

Learn:

  1. Why CSuite jobs now are at risk and actually being lost.
  2. How organizations, not unlike yours, are silently and invisibly breached every day
  3. Which preventive steps you can implement.

Before you start spending any money for an external assessment of your cyber exposure, start with Three-Minute Self-Scoring Review to suggest your Cyber Job Security category and the article’s accompanying 5-step remedy.

Who should consider applying this process with applications for profitable growth, risk assessments and enterprise risk management (ERM) type issues, inside a value based operational and strategic assessment framework?

Start with Three-Minute Self-Scoring Review to suggest your Security and risk categories
Start with Three-Minute Self-Scoring Review to suggest your Security and risk categories
  • Family business, private and public business and equity group investors
  • Corporate directors, key committee chairs and board chairs
  • Corporate officers and C-suite executives
  • Shareholders, stakeholders, regulators and legislators
  • SMB, middle market and global 2000

About Corporate Compliance Insights

Corporate Compliance Insights is a professionally designed and managed forum dedicated to online discussion and analysis of corporate compliance, risk assessment, ethics, audit and corporate governance topics. Additionally, Corporate Compliance Insights is a focused knowledge-sharing forum designed to educate and encourage informed interaction within the corporate compliance community – dealing with issues of ethics, audit, compliance, FCPA, governance, risk, fraud and GRC.

Corporate Compliance Insights is founded by Maurice Gilbert, managing partner of Conselium, a compliance-focused executive search firm. www.corporatecomplianceinsights.com

About Gary W. Patterson

Patterson, a Big 4 CPA / Stanford MBA, speaks regularly on business growth, accountability, facilitation, governance, risk management, achieving corporate financial goals, and building long-term wealth.

He can also help increase your profitability providing access to 100 best of business experts often better and cheaper than incumbents. Gary can be reached at 678-319-4739 or [email protected].

© Gary W. Patterson.  ###

Filed Under: Timely Reports

February 6, 2018 by fiscaldoctor

12-step roadmap to reduce procurement fraud risk: (852 words)

This article was first published in Corporate Compliance Insights

What do basketball recruiting and procurement fraud have in common? Part 2

Leaders rightly get aggravated with their staff when someone brings them a problem without a suggested path forward, or even better, a potential resolution.

My prior article “What do basketball recruiting and procurement fraud have in common?” (http://www.corporatecomplianceinsights.com/) presented the problem of business and personal procurement-fraud exposure, using five strategic questions to evaluate potential risk. As promised, Part 2 now offers 12 steps for improvement.

This 12-step process was gathered anonymously from highly experienced attendees at the 2017 NACD (National Association of Corporate Directors) Global Board Leaders’ Summit. They confidentially offered new insights and suggested actions, which have been aggregated into 12 highly focused steps of improved checks and balances. In a world where far too many people enjoy second-guessing well after the fact, potential million-dollar blind spots are better found and resolved as part of enterprise risk management (ERM), compliance or governance processes.

These 12 steps enable organizations in various phases of addressing procurement fraud, across a wide range of industries and sizes, to transform risks and attitudes. This process requires only prudent additional investments of money, people and time. For best results, tailor the timing or application of these steps to your industry, size and current risk profile.

12 steps for improvement based on current potential risk

The two highest levels of risk in Part 1 of this article were “Train wrecks occur every day” and “You may only be investing the minimum.” Think of these as a D and F grade, respectively. If you scored your organization in either of these categories, just verbalizing that your business may have procurement fraud exposure can be a reasonable first step toward improvement. Then use these top three suggestions as foundational steps to move forward:

  1. Obtain C-Suite (or at least CEO) buy-in to champion change and drive accountability. The tone at the top is crucial.
  2. Select a cross functional group to create an agenda based on what they feel are the organization’s top procurement fraud exposures and opportunities.
  3. Engage an external procurement-fraud or forensics expert to better verify, prioritize and supplement your internally generated list of exposures.

With a better understanding of potential risks and areas for improvement, you can move into the category “You didn’t get here overnight, and you won’t get out overnight.” Think of this as a grade of C, and use the next three top suggestions from attendees to improve:

  1. Better align compensation to incentivize gross margin and profitability, ethical behavior, and greater conformance with culture.
  2. Involve Internal Audit in targeted key areas identified in the prior sections, and bring in the Board of Directors to make focused deep dives.
  3. Use this new level of understanding to determine whether you need to make an example of someone. Depending on the severity of what you’ve now found, consider firing someone — from as high as the external auditors to as focused as a very flagrant offender.

With these specific tools and tactics employed, your organization moves into the category “Life is good, until it isn’t” — or a B in school. You’re now ready to use the following three top suggestions to progress toward more of a return-on-investment (ROI) level:

  1. Revise and automate procedures, drawing upon external best practices, as part of re-evaluating the financial and people resources required.
  2. Determine whether it is necessary for your company to move up to the top category at this time.
  3. Support these actions with specialized training for both procurement and other appropriate personnel throughout your organization.

If your organization moved up to or was originally rated in the top category “Ongoing diligence and vigilance make a good combination” — an A grade — well done! Take a brief victory lap. Then consider how to further improve and expand your lead over competitors. Use these three top suggestions to maintain your outstanding status:

  1. Review the alignment of strategy, procurement and your overall supply chain.
  2. Create appropriate metrics for ongoing monitoring.
  3. Bring back or engage another external expert for a “booster-shot” type of overview.

In conclusion, consider these 12 proven suggestions and apply those that make the most sense at this point in your organization’s life cycle. Taking any of these actions will help reduce your exposure to procurement fraud and strengthen the related areas of ERM, compliance and governance.

The consensus of NACD Summit attendees was that your business should be able to quantify its status before and after it follows these field-tested steps. Use those hard numbers and results to clearly demonstrate that this is one more area where better compliance and governance is not just a cost — it is an investment with a clear ROI.

About Gary W. Patterson

Gary W. Patterson, president & CEO of FiscalDoctor®, works with leaders who want to uncover their blind spot before it finds them, so they can make better decisions. He also helps increase profitability, providing access to 100 best-of-breed experts who are often better and cheaper than incumbents. Gary can be reached at 678-319-4739 or [email protected].

Downloadable article file

 

Filed Under: Risk Management

February 4, 2018 by fiscaldoctor

What do basketball recruiting and procurement fraud have in common? (971 words)

This article was first published in Corporate Compliance Insights

Consider the initial fallout from the basketball recruiting sandal. Six major universities and a coach or athletic director from each are immediately tarnished, possibly forever. Their defenders ask if these really are criminal acts.  After all, the NCAA is supposed to be the protector of honesty, integrity and professionalism of prominent universities (i.e. reputational risk). Yet when the FBI gets involved with all its powers including subpoenas and threat of prosecution and jailtime, risk and reward change dramatically. Maybe this truthfully is a black swan event which no one could have imagined.

Louisville, Auburn, Oklahoma State, the University of Southern California, Miami and Alabama are getting publicity their chancellor, board of directors and alumni never wanted.  As this investigation rolls out and expands to others, the game has changed – for basketball, college sports and the ability of leadership at the top and boards to proclaim, “they had no idea this could or was happening, at their organization.”

Many people point out that despite protestations of innocence, many of the coaches (leaders) involved are hardly as pure as “driven snow” with prior violations, sometimes multiple times.

Just as in business, when athletic directors and their boards of directors make coaching decisions, they balance reward and risk. Potential rewards of better athletic results and enormous bottom line cashflow increases seemingly with minimal risk of being caught if, or when, front line leaders (read coaches) get caught.  But sooner or later, they always do get caught.

Now turn the bright spotlight onto business.

How does the exciting world of sports and athletics even compare to the murky, dull sounding business aspects of procurement aspects of a business supply chain?

The 2016 Certified Fraud Examiners Report to the Nation shows estimated losses due to all categories of fraud at 5% of a company’s revenues.  With people so focused on foreign corrupt practices, have we forgotten fundamentals of major potential frauds like procurement? Bribery acts in other countries are becoming even tougher and financial exposures determined without regard to the country it occurs.

In most cases, procurement fraud takes place in the organizational procurement process, not the financial area, where most consultancies audit.

Consider this simple test below to evaluate your level of procurement fraud exposure. On a scale of 1 to 10, where 1 is “Completely Unsure of the answer” and 10 is “You Absolutely have this under control”, how do you rate each of the following statements?

  1. Audit processes have procurement fraud well under control and minimized.
  2. All aspects of procurement major fraud risk areas are documented, identified and defined. These risks are reviewed and updated periodically and separately from the annual risk assessment.
  3. Organizational internal and external auditors have deep (a) Strategic, (b) Financial, and/or Operational expertise to support focus on their work for you.
  4. The min/max estimate of potential organizational fraud is thoroughly documented and regularly updated.
  5. Reputational risk from procurement fraud for your organization and senior leadership is minimal.

After totaling your points, consider your rank below:

41 to 50 – Ongoing diligence and vigilance make a good combination.

31 to 40 – Life is good, until it isn’t.

21 to 30 –  You didn’t get here overnight and you won’t get out overnight.

11 to 20 – You may only be investing the minimum.

1 to 10 – Train wrecks happen every day.

Foundational wisdom says that the first step to recovery or improvement is to admit you have a problem. Change the categories above into the letter grades of A, B, C, D, and F which we received in school. Use D and F as failing to simplify this strategic overview of your personal and corporate risk exposure.

  • What letter grade does your business receive?
  • What grade do you want?
  • Where can you quickly and reasonably start the path to recovery?

Now turn the bright spotlight onto the personal area.

For the risk element of your personal and business exposure, consider the total cost when others will after the fact handicapping your decisions and results by the total of:

  1. Start with actual hard and soft costs damages from those frauds.
  2. Add reputational risk from front page exposure for some of the many ways media makes leaders look unethical and sleazy when bribery, theft or failure to protect stockholder and customer interests might occur.
  3. Next move to the plaintiffs’ bar lawsuits alleging everything imaginable with triple damages to teach bad people like you a lesson.
  4. Then assume you get the attention of some fair-minded politician who finds a way to bring criminal charges, well after the fact and using 5 years from now standards of behavior, that probably few of us can even imagine today.

Your self-assessed total guesstimate exposure is ____________. How scary is your back of the napkin exposure total?

 

For those admitting they may have a problem, your next step can be as simple as looking at your lowest score on the five-question quiz and creating a path to solve the risk area now spotlighted.

Like some insights from others who have lived through making changes to reduce these type exposures? Stay tuned for part of two of this article where you can learn what attendees at the National Association of Corporate Directors Global Board Leaders’ Summit, generously and anonymously shared about helping navigate from where your business may be to a more desirable less risky level.

About Gary W. Patterson

Gary W. Patterson, president & CEO of FiscalDoctor®, works with leaders who want to uncover their blind spot; before it finds them, so that they can make better decisions. In his present role, he can also help increase profitability providing access to 100 best of breed experts often better and cheaper than incumbents. Gary can be reached at 678-319-4739 or [email protected].

Download like for article

Basketball v procurement fraud – part 1

 

Filed Under: Risk Management Tagged With: business growth corporate governance fraud procurement supply chain

January 3, 2018 by fiscaldoctor

Post-holiday gift for a small or SMB business you know

You can help a small or middle market company CEO or leader gain a free 25K+ package. This includes companies as large as $80 million, 3rd generation family businesses and nonprofits.

Someone you know may benefit from learning about the Goldman Sachs 10,000 small business initiative to stimulate business growth and employment. I believe in the program enough to give back contributing time as a national Virtual Business Advisor (VBA) for an evening where any CEO can ask any questions they want about financial statements and how to better use them.

Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses launched in 2009 as an investment to help entrepreneurs create jobs and economic opportunity by providing greater access to education, capital and business support services (in every state).

Companies that are accepted obtain free access to a 11 session blended learning program geared to helping them identify opportunities, develop leadership skills and maximize their business operations, including 2 fully paid groups trips for sessions led by some of Babson’s best professors.

http://www.goldmansachs.com/citizenship/10000-small-businesses/US/

A large number of current attendees do so after being told about this program by a prior graduate, or related organization. Since you may know an organization which would benefit from this, I thought helping someone you know benefitting from this program warranted one of my emails.

The FiscalDoctor part of me wanted to know an estimate of the value of the package that the winning entrepreneurs earned. I was told my guesstimate of at least 25 to 30k was definitely reasonable.

Let me know if you want to talk more about the value I saw the leaders I help receive or any other questions.
Or, if you know a CEO who is lonely at the top and would like to have coffee and ask what CEOs are learning in the Goldman Sachs 10,000 small business program, have them call me at 678-319-4739.

You can also contact me today at [email protected] to talk about your special situation or project that needs immediate attention. On that note, I look forward to serving you.

Gary

Gary Patterson
FiscalDoctor, Inc.
[email protected]
(678) 319-4739

Key member of 2 successful Inc. 500 international Companies always ready to help you next.

PS. Helps leaders increase profitability providing access to 100 insider ways to unlock cashflow often better and cheaper than incumbents. Gary can be reached at 678-319-4739 or [email protected].

WHAT I DO: Help you keep more money, with less risk. You know how your organization sometimes feels like it is a best kept secret, coasting on past success, or just stuck, so you have nagging under-performing or even a loss of control feeling?
WHAT I DO: Help you keep more money, with less risk. You know how your organization sometimes feels like it is a best kept secret, coasting on past success, or just stuck, so you have nagging under-performing or even a loss of control feeling?

Filed Under: Timely Reports Tagged With: CEO growth income statement profitability revenues

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Gary W. Patterson, The Fiscal Doctor

812 Hallbrook Lane, Alpharetta, GA 30004
Contact No: 678-319-4739
Email: info (at) fiscaldoctor (dot) com

Copyright © 2016 - All Rights Reserved - Website Design by Pixelion Art

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