|
|
 |
|
Viewing report
|
|
 |
 |
How to Conduct an Internal Investigation as a CEO
ExecSense, Nov 2010, Minutes: 60
In How to Conduct an Internal Investigation as a CEO, ExecSense examines the practical and strategic considerations that CEOs need to consider when initiating (or deciding whether to recommend) an internal investigation of an employee or event that has occurred at their company. Take the 60 minutes to view this webinar (on your computer, mobile phone, iPod, iPad, Kindle or printed out) to have answers ready to key questions that you are sure to be asked by your colleagues and board of directors about whether an internal investigation is called for, and get guidance as to the best practices that you and your company should follow if an internal investigation is launched.
Upon ordering, ExecSense will email you a link to download the webinar files for viewing on your computer, mobile phone, iPod, iPad, Kindle or printed out. The downloaded files will include the PowerPoint presentation, audio narration and jpeg images of the slides (for watching on your mobile media device). Take advantage of your next commute, flight, business trip, lunch, or free hour in your schedule to view this webinar.
The webinar is led by an expert on internal investigations and best practices specifically for CEOs, and focuses on: - Everything you need to know in 60 minutes about conducting (or recommending) an internal investigation as a CEO - A roadmap to the most important practical, strategic and legal considerations that CEOs need to consider with respect to internal investigations, including how to determine if a formal internal investigation of an alleged wrongdoing by an employee is called for, how to approach the board, who should conduct the investigation, who should the investigators report to, and what actions to take at the conclusion of the internal investigation (self-reporting, etc.) - Effective and easy-to-implement “best practices” for you and your company to follow in the internal investigation to mitigate your company’s legal exposure, minimize potential public relations fallout, and more efficiently get to the bottom of the suspected wrongdoing - The top 10 questions being asked by CEOs about when they should recommend a formal internal investigation, whether (and when) to self-report a suspected financial wrongdoing to the appropriate regulatory officials, and other internal investigation best practices - Case studies of other companies and CEOs that effectively oversaw an internal investigation of a suspected wrongdoing, examples of internal investigations that were not handled properly from a legal or public relations perspective, and important lessons learned
Praise for ExecSense Webinars: “Well organized, well articulated, and easy to follow. The ExecSense webinar I attended was the best virtual learning experience I've had in quite some time.” – Brian K. Moore, HR Communications, Humana “Dynamic, up-to-date resource...” – Tina Ferguson, CEO of Rapid Success Partners “ExecSense webinars are convenient and on-point…an intelligent discussion on a very relevant subject.” – Meghan Wulff, Focus Management Group
Customers who bought this item also bought
How to Conduct an Internal Investigation as a Compliance Executive in 2011
How to Conduct an Internal Investigation as an HR Executive
How to Conduct an Internal Investigation as a COO
How to Conduct an Internal Investigation as a CFO
A CFO's Guide to Corporate Governance Best Practices for Their Company
What Board Members Need to Know Before Initiating an Internal Investigation - How to Know When an Internal Investigation Is Called For, Best Practices, and Potential Legal Issues
What to Know Before Signing or Negotiating a Severance Agreement as an HR Executive in 2011
CFO Best Practices for Conducting an Internal Audit - How to Improve Your Company's Risk Management, Control & Governance Processes
CEO Best Practices for Motivating Key Team Members in 2011
How to Write and Deliver a Motivational Speech as a CEO - Jumpstart the Year for Your Management Team, a Certain Group of Employees, or Your Entire Company
|
 |
|
|