<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none;" alt="" src="https://px.ads.linkedin.com/collect/?pid=4052188&amp;fmt=gif">

Let’s face it, in that great deluge of new regulations and guidance, we’re all just treading water. Many CEO’s and officers have asked, “Do you have some suggestions to give us on keeping compliant?” As with any discipline, there’s never an easy answer.

Here are various suggestions that successful compliance officers have offered over time that seem to work for them:

Read and Stay Up to Date  

credit union compliance

Information is now at a premium but we have numerous means of efficiently capturing it. Use all available resources. This includes state and national trade association periodical, webinarsand list serves. Vendors have devoted whole web sites to providing timely information that can be obtained through any search engine (ex., Google, Bing). Regulatory agencies including NCUA, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Federal Reserve, Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) provide summaries and white papers that allow various perspectives on laws and regulations.

Review and Audit

Consistently review and audit policies and procedures. Never be satisfied. No matter how well you believe your policies and procedures to be written, regularly test them to determine shortcomings or hidden problems. Policies and procedures should always be “works in progress.”

Get Buy-In

Make sure that senior management buys in to your program. You can be the best Compliance Officer, have perfect policies and procedures and receive accolades from examiners but if you don’t have senior management support, your next step may always be disastrous.

It is important for all of senior management (CEO, COO, CFO, EVP Operations, EVP Lending, etc.) to not only buy in but also encourage compliance efforts as part of an effective business strategy. The key here is education. The more information that you can provide, the more comfortable these executives can be with your recommendations and suggestions.

Be Proactive  

Three words: Anticipate; Speculate; Extrapolate. Anticipate regulatory changes by studying trends and watching how supervisory and regulatory professionals are reacting. Make a determination (speculation) based upon past and recent regulatory trends. Then extrapolate — use known facts as the starting point from which to draw inferences or conclusions about something unknown. Once the trends and facts align, we can usually determine what will be coming in the way of regulation or guidance.

Audit Yourself

Don’t depend wholly on exams and audits to gauge your programs effectiveness.  The biggest mistake made by many compliance professionals is to assume that because an exam or audit did not pinpoint or spotlight a particular inaccuracy or omissions, it’s “not important” or “OK.” Coming across problems or issues that examiners/auditors failed to find is a benefit for us in that it evidences the effectiveness of our internal system and showcases our ability to cure this items expeditiously. 

Maintain a Program

Organize your activities, data and networks. Know absolutely who is key in accomplishing your compliance goals. Make sure that staff is aware of the importance of compliance issues with regard to their individual areas. Of most urgency is setting up a database of rules, regulations, their timing and implementation as well as the consequences of failure if they are not achieved.

By Steve Gibbs, CUCE, BSACS, AVP Shared Compliance, Credit Union Resources, Inc.

Get the 2015 Strategic Planning Guide

You may also like

How to Create a Compliance Culture at Your Credit Union
How to Create a Compliance Culture at Your Credit Union
11 November, 2013

Today, we're presenting a guest blog post from our friends over at Credit Union Resources. Steve Gibbs, CUCE, BSACS, AVP...

SEC Fines Wells Fargo $5M in Document Tampering Case
SEC Fines Wells Fargo $5M in Document Tampering Case
16 October, 2014

Yesterday, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged former Wells Fargo Advisors compliance officer Judy K. Wolf wi...

4 Key Elements of a Website Review for Credit Union Compliance
4 Key Elements of a Website Review for Credit Union Compliance
11 December, 2014

In recent years, regulatory requirements such as the Bank Secrecy Act and FACTA Identity Theft Red Flags have diverted o...