Let’s consider a hypothetical story. You’ve noticed how the CFO of your company has accepted bribery from a vendor in order to favour them in a big tender. You’ve thought about reporting it for a while now but you are afraid of the consequences if somebody hears about it. What makes it more complicated is that the CFO is your manager’s manager and you are pretty sure he’s willing and capable of attacking against the people who may accuse them of any wrongdoings.
Then the CFO does it again and again and you decide you’ve seen enough. You open the web browser, navigate to Ethical Principles sub-page of the website and scroll to the whistleblowing section, if you can find one. After the typical “we value the confidentiality etc.” text, there’s just a simple website form that you need to fill. You fill in the details of your findings, add supporting documents and are about to send the report to ether.
But then you stop to consider a bit. Who is it that actually reads the reports? The page says it’s the Head of Compliance and the General Counsel who receive the reports. But you are pretty sure the IT department manages the form on the website. Will they see the report as well or at least see where and when it has been reported? What if the CFO finds out that such a case has been opened? Can he pressure the IT to check the IP addresses of the report or even remove the report altogether? Now that you think about it again, you are not so sure anymore should you blow the whistle after-all. Would you?
Whistleblowing is not a new thing for financial institutions or for a lot of publicly traded companies. What’s new however is how the whistleblower channel should be arranged in order to comply with the new EU Whistleblowing directive. Consider the following facts:
If you currently have one or more of the following conditions present in your whistleblowing channel, we can assure you that your channel is not compliant with the directive.
The directive clearly requires organisations to protect the identity of whistleblowers through confidentiality. In order for the whistleblower to trust the channel being confidential, nobody else except specifically defined people should have access to the reports.
Why aren't traditional website forms confidential then? Whoever manages the website, can also manage the data where visitors are coming from. Unless your IT department are the ones who receive and investigate the cases, they shouldn’t even have access to view the IP address information of the reports. To protect the confidentiality of the report and the identity of the reporter, the channel mustn’t be controlled by your own IT department and the access to non-authorised staff members should be prevented.
Email is not an anonymous channel. Whistleblowers know this and are more willing to report their findings to somewhere else. Even worse is a shared inbox, which provides less security for the reporter who reads the reports and more vulnerability for leaks. Remember, it’s the whistleblower’s choice if they want to stay anonymous or not but the choice has to be there.
In case the whistleblowers want to stay anonymous, they need to know who the people that receive the reports are. Thus the receivers must be clearly defined. The directive also requires organisations to name and appoint a person or people with the right competence to manage the whistleblowing cases professionally. Having a shared email inbox or website form without clear instructions who is on the receiving end is not enough.
The confidentiality and anonymity must be provided throughout the lifecycle of the case if the whistleblower so wishes. What this means is that it’s not just the original report that has to stay anonymous but also the further communication with the whistleblower. Email is not for anonymous dialogue.
If you currently have either email inbox, shared inbox, website form or some combination of the three, it’s nearly impossible for you to comply with the directive requirements.
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If you're looking for an electronic whistleblowing channel that is in line with the new directive, ticks all the boxes for anonymity, enables real dialogue, has built-in investigation features and more, have a look at our Whistleblowing module and contact us for more information!
We are building the world's first operational involvement platform. Our mission is to make the process of finding, sharing, fixing and learning from issues and observations as easy as thinking about them and as rewarding as being remembered for them.
By doing this, we are making work more meaningful for all parties involved.
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