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If it's disclosed, it can be managedEveryone thinks they can manage their own conflicts. Use this graphic piece to help your team identify and disclose all conflicts, all while reducing the stigma of doing so. One of employees’ core misunderstandings about conflicts of interests is...8✨Tokens -
We Play Fair: Anticorruption BasicsHelp employees understand how your anticorruption processes fit into the big picture with this overview infographic. Whether your anticorruption program is the pinnacle of best practices or just starting out, it’s critical that employees know how...8✨Tokens -
Conflicts of InterestMake sure your employees know what's a conflict of interest—and, just as important, what to do about it. It’s too easy for folks to just “go with their gut” about potential conflicts. This piece uses simple icons to explain when...8✨Tokens -
Watch out for red flags from third partiesDo your employees know what to look out for when managing third parties? This piece supports their due diligence efforts by covering the five red flags they need to spot and tell you about ASAP!8✨Tokens -
What happens when I make a disclosure?Employees are hesitant to disclose their personal interests for a conflict review because they’re worried they’ll be in trouble, have to ditch their side gig, or who will see their personal information. Eliminate the uncertainty of...8✨Tokens -
Tis Always the Season to Give SmartThe holidays are a fantastic time ... for things that could look like a bribe. Use this graphic piece to remind your folks how to give the right way. You don’t have to be a downer around the holidays! Use this fun reminder that, just like...6✨Tokens -
How to tell if someone’s asking for a bribeSince shady people rarely come out and say, “pay this bribe,” it can be tricky to know when someone’s asking for one. especially when it involves non-monetary favors and sharing information. This clever infographic reveals the five...8✨Tokens -
Give this, not that (never OK version)Use this highly visual guide to empower your team to easily identify what's an acceptable gift and what's never allowed. With examples drawn from the 2012 DOJ guidance, this version works for companies that ban cash, cash-equivalent, and high-value...8✨Tokens -
Should you disclose it?Refocus your COI messaging on disclosing “interests” instead of “conflicts” with this ingenious infographic. It begins by answering why disclosure is so important and ends with the “how,” but the real magic is in the...8✨Tokens -
Business Courtesies: What Can You Do?Distill your gifts and entertainment policy into a handy chart—this one’s great for more complex policies. We made your gifts, entertainment, and travel policy simple by breaking out what can be expensed with without approval, what needs...8✨Tokens -
How to identify a government officialGovernment officials can be difficult to spot. Sure, senators and mayors are some obvious ones, but what about someone who works in infrastructure? Or a city government consultant? And if one of your folks doesn’t know the answer to that question,...8✨Tokens -
Give this, not that (pre-approval version)Use this highly visual guide to empower your team to easily identify what's an acceptable gift, what needs approval, and what's never allowed. With examples drawn from the 2012 DOJ guidance, this version works for companies that allow cash,...8✨Tokens -
Conflicts of Interest (line art version)Make sure your employees know what's a conflict of interest—and, just as important, what to do about it. It’s too easy for folks to just “go with their gut” about potential conflicts. This piece uses simple icons to explain when...8✨Tokens -
Hiring a new service provider?Quickly educate your team on how to avoid potential bribery when hiring outside providers who will be interacting with the government with this graphic piece. Statistically, if something's going to go wrong for you in the anticorruption space, it's going...8✨Tokens -
This is a third party (definition version)The concept of government intermediaries can be complicated. Enable your employees to understand who "third parties" are and why they're important to identify. This piece lives between our simple graphic on uniformed third parties and our more complex...6✨Tokens -
Who's a Government Official?Take the mystery out of who is—and who isn’t—a government official with this job aid. Just because someone doesn’t have a regal title or isn't a politician doesn’t mean they’re not a “government official.”...6✨Tokens -
We Play Fair: Anticorruption Basics (line art version)Help employees understand how your anticorruption processes fit into the big picture with this overview infographic. Whether your anticorruption program is the pinnacle of best practices or just starting out, it’s critical that employees know how...8✨Tokens -
Business Gratuities: What Can You Give/Receive?Distill your gifts and entertainment policy into a handy chart—this one’s great for simpler policies. We made the gift-giving and -receiving process simple by breaking out what can be exchanged, what documentation or approval is needed, and...8✨Tokens -
Is your third party expensing something unusual?Make spotting red flags involving third-party expenses super easy with this highly visual infographic. This piece includes both obvious red flags like jewelry and art as well as some less-obvious things like water bills and high discounts.8✨Tokens -
Export Controls OverviewExport controls are tricky because they apply to all sorts of technology and information—even conversations with non-citizen teammates or business partners. This infographic simplifies: why these laws exist which tech and activities are...8✨Tokens -
Before a service provider starts workShow your team the basics—and importance—of vetting service providers and obtaining proper documentation before work begins. Whether it be control for anticorruption, fraud, or sanction screening, it’s the same idea: don’t have...8✨Tokens -
What can you give to a government official?Based DOJ guidance on the FCPA, this explainer breaks down how to think about what is appropriate to give folks in government. Contrasting examples are used to highlight what are truly acceptable gifts and entertainment when government officials are...6✨Tokens