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The amount of fraud being perpetrated against businesses is getting worse, both in terms of the
number of instances and the amount of money that is being lost, and some of that can be
attributed to worsening economic times, according to research. Almost half of the companies
around the world surveyed by PriceWaterhouseCoopers (www.pwc.com) in 2009 reported that
they suffered one or more instance of economic crimes. The survey, which involved 3,000
executives of businesses large and small in 54 countries, found that 88 percent of U.S.
companies that reported some type of fraud also reported declines in financial performances. In
addition, three-fourths of the crimes against businesses in the U.S. were carried out by insiders.
For small and mid-sized businesses, the vulnerability to fraud can be compounded because of the
sometimes informal nature and the fact that fewer staff members can result in less oversight --
and a lack of checks and balances.
'Small businesses tend to be very informal in nature. A lot of times they're either formed with
friends or family members, and all the formalities are not in place as they would be in a larger
business, ' says Elena N. Lougovskaia, co-founder of Lougovskaia Boop, LLC
(www.lougoboop.com), a law practice in Cleveland, Ohio, focused on business law and
commercial litigation. 'Employees wear many different hats and perhaps decision makers should
be separated from people who sign the checks or one person should be responsible for signing
check and a separate person should be responsible for accounting, processing invoices, and
purchasing.'
The following pages will cover the types of fraud against business, how to detect fraud in your
business, and how to set up policies and procedures to prevent your business becoming a victim
of fraud.
How to Protect Your Business against Fraud: Types of Fraud against Business
The media is filled with stories of consumer victims of fraud. But the reality is that businesses,
especially smaller enterprises, are more often the victims of fraud than consumers. The types of
fraud can vary wildly, from accounting scams carried out by employees to fraudulent returns from
customers to data theft by outsiders. Businesses have less protection than the consumer and, in
some cases, can be held responsible in a business fraud scheme, owing liability to banks,
shareholders, insurers, credit card processors and other entities. New laws also hold businesses
accountable for liability in the event of some types of fraud perpetrated by third parties, such as
data breaches.
Sources of Business Fraud
In order to understand the types of fraud that your business may be vulnerable to, you must first
understand the different sources of these crimes. Most professionals agree that the top sources of
business fraud, ranked in the order of frequency and cost, are as follows:
Employees and Officers
In previous surveys, PriceWaterhouseCoopers had found that the sources of crimes against
business were evenly split between insiders and outsiders. But in the 2009 survey, the numbers
tipped in favor of insiders carrying out the majority of crimes -- in 76 percent of the cases in the
U.S., according to the survey. The increased financial pressures in many companies have also
prompted a rise in the amount of fraud committed by middle managers, which now accounts for
42 percent of internal frauds globally from 26 percent in 2007, the survey found. Meanwhile, the
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) (www.acfe.com) estimates that business
organizations lose 5 percent of annual revenue to fraud by employees and officers.
'Managers and small business owners have a tendency to trust their employees to a higher
degree and, because they are doing more, they may not be as detail oriented as they should be,'
says Allan Bachman, education manager for the ACFE. 'That level of trust is often betrayed.
Sometimes employees start taking advantage of the fact that the boss isn't looking and thinks I'm
doing a great job.'
The most common types of insider frauds include theft of assets and accounting frauds, but this
type of crime can also include other categories, such as fraudulent worker's compensation claims.
'If you're in a no-fault worker's compensation state, as long as they're injured within the scope of
employment, they can receive compensation for their injuries,' Lougovskaia says. 'That's an area
where employees could be taking advantage.'
Employees, managers, and directors have the inside track and understand how a business works.
That's why they are able to perpetrate so many different types of schemes -- and how they can
often go undetected. Bachman says that the biggest source of insider fraud against businesses
involves purchasing and procurement of goods and supplies. Insiders may be buying more goods
than a business needs and lining their own pockets or paying invoices to an external third party
for fraudulent orders. Other common schemes, says Bachman, include creating fictitious vendors
or no-show employees -- who get paid for doing nothing. Accounts payable is another area where
insiders may be skimming money by taking cash payments and failing to report them or replacing
today's payments with cash paid at later dates.
Customers
Customers can also be notorious for trying to perpetrate fraud against businesses. Whether
writing bad checks, using stolen credit cards, returning items not purchased from a business, or
filing fraudulent injury and liability claims, there are a whole host of schemes that customers can
perpetrate that will cost your business money.
'This is a very litigious society, so if you own a store or surface where customers walk or you have
a parking lot, you are susceptible to people claiming they fell and injured themselves,'
Lougovskaia says. 'If you don't have any surveillance and safety procedures in place, you are
susceptible to frivolous liability complaints.'
False return schemes are another type of fraud that tends to impact retailers. People sometimes
bring back merchandise from one store to another or they bring back merchandise that has been
used. 'I've seen frauds where someone walks into a store and bought three pieces of
merchandise, went out to their car and put the merchandise away, and came back into the store
and picked the same stuff up and put it in a bag and walked out with it,' Bachman says.
Contractors
Businesses are often the target of unscrupulous contractors' overcharging, over billing, kick
backs, failing to perform contracted work or service, and other actions.
Some vendors you hire may try to scam you by billing for work they never complete. 'I can come
into your company to provide carpet cleaning and you give me the alarm code and I come in once
a month instead of once a week but bill for providing the service once a week,' Bachman says. 'Of
you can short out services or goods because no one is paying attention. You order 50 chairs and I
send 45. There are a lot of different ways of doing this.'
Third-Party Attacks
A growing number of types of fraud are being perpetrated by electronic means. Hacking,
slamming (changing your telephone service without your knowledge), phishing (acquiring user
names, passwords, credit card information), identity theft and other forms of business fraud are
some of the most difficult to control. More businesses are being held accountable for data
breaches perpetrated by third parties, as 45 states, the District of Columbia, and some U.S.
territories now have laws on the books requiring companies to notify potential victims if their
personal information has been stolen or otherwise compromised.
How to Protect Your Business against Fraud: How to Detect Fraud
Given that fraud against your business can impact the bottom line, it's important to set up
procedures to verify adherence to anti-fraud policies and to detect and deter possible business
fraud. Lougovskaia says business executives should commit to talking control by developing an
enterprise-wide, anti-fraud policy that:
-Verifies that anti-fraud work practices are followed and detects fraudulent activity.
-Develops written procedures that dictate work processes in critical areas.
-Institutes checks and balances and divides key responsibilities.
Below are several ways to deter and detect fraud in your business:
Employee Tips and Reporting
An often overlooked, but excellent way to prevent fraud is to develop an anonymous way for
employees to report suspected fraud and work practices that lead to fraud. Businesses that
institute anonymous employee reporting detect fraud earlier and significantly limit financial losses.
'You could have an anonymous tip box,' Lougovskaia suggests. If you do opt for a tip box, you
should take steps to ensure that the process isn't abused to settle personal grudges. One way
would be to appoint one individual to investigate all claims and ensure that anonymity is
protected.
Internal Audits and Surprise Audits
Work processes, inventories, and accounting should be subject to regularly scheduled and
announced internal audits. In addition, unscheduled -- or surprise -- internal audits also should be
conducted. Work processes, inventories, and accounting can be altered in advance of regular
audits, but knowing a surprise audit may occur removes temptation and increases the chance for
fraud detection.
External Audits
At a regular interval, external auditors should be employed to review company accounts,
contracts, inventory and work processes, Lougovskaia says. Depending on the size of your
business and whether it is a publicly-held enterprise, this may be required by law. Thus, it makes
sense to set up external audits early in the history of your business so compliance with applicable
laws and regulations can be achieved as your business grows.
How to Protect Your Business against Fraud: How to Deter Fraud
There are ways to deter fraud. One of the most important steps a business can take is to create a
system of awareness at the top level of management. 'Never think that it can't happen here,'
Bachman says. 'Create a level of awareness throughout the organization that we're watching for
it. Make it clear in terms of deterrents that, if we catch it, we're going to prosecute, both criminally
and civilly.' Civil action may be needed because people who have profited from ill-gotten gains
may not have the cash on hand to return - they may have bought items, such as fancy cars or
jewelry.
Written procedures are necessary to develop internal consistency and to insure adherence to
anti-fraud work practices and policies. At a minimum, the business should take the following
steps:
-Hiring practices and background checks. Background checks should be a precondition to
employment. The business should secure written permission to conduct such investigations,
which should include criminal background investigation, verification of education, right to work,
licensure and past employment, Lougovskaia says. A credit check should be performed on
employees who will handle cash or inventory.
-Cash and receivables and accounting. A written cash and receivables handling policy should
accomplish two goals. It should train employees to spot bad checks, counterfeit currency, and
stolen credit cards and insure proper accounting. 'The policy should address possible discipline
for cash shortages and failure to strictly follow handling guidelines,' Lougovskaia says. The policy
should address the use of customer-provided information and the handling of vital customer data.
-Inventory handling and tracking. A written inventory policy covers sales stock and company
equipment. Pilferage is often an 'entry level' criminal enterprise. Contractors and employees
engaged in this activity often perceive a weakness in inventory controls as an indication that fraud
will not be detected. 'What happens to those items from the time they get off the truck to the time
they hit the store shelves?' Lougovskaia says. Put those procedures in writing and give them to
employees.
-Contract and invoice reviews and procurement. Regular reviews of accounts payable
invoices, purchase orders, and payments can eliminate various types of fraud. It is important for
small businesses to be able to verify that contractors have performed the work that they bill for --
before paying the invoice from that contractor. 'You need to outline billing practices with your
contractors and require them to itemize billing, including the names of employees involved and
listing a quarter hour itemization for each task,' Lougovskaia says. 'You need to provide better
oversight and you need to have it in writing.'
-Critical data and corporate information. These days, every business that keeps sensitive data
-- whether about customers or employees or the company -- need to have written data handling
policies. These policies should spell out who has access to vital information, passwords, account
numbers, databases, etc. Document retention policies should include scheduled, mandatory
shredding of certain documents containing employee information or corporate data. Use
confidentiality agreements and non-compete agreements for key employees.
-Customer returns. Customer returns can be a significant source of fraud. Since most state
consumer laws require a posted customer return policy, it makes sense to develop a written
return policy that will eliminate fraud risk, Lougovskaia says. Elements of your policy might include
that you require returns to take place where the item was purchased, require a receipt, and do not
issue cash refunds for credit card or check purchases.
-Visitor/customer injuries. There are ways of deterring fraudulent customer claims of accidents
or incidents involving your business property. Retail establishments should consider installing
video surveillance systems and having a handheld video camera ready in the event a customer
falls on the premises to protect your business. If your business is not a retail establishment, you
might consider requiring visitors to sign in and wear clearly identifiable badges. Tracking customer
claims of injury via incident reports, and training employees to create reports immediately, cuts
down on fraudulent injury claims.
-Internet, e-mail, laptops, cell phones, and storage devices. Clearly defined policies need to
establish that Internet access and e-mail remain the property of the business for business
purposes. Eliminate all employee access to non-work e-mail and Internet sites, Lougovskaia says.
Written guidelines addressing the use of business laptops, cell phones, and storage devices will
reduce the possibility of critical corporate and customer data being lost or stolen.
How to Protect Your Business against Fraud: Creating Checks and Balances
Internal controls are one of the great fraud deterrents. Internal controls involve the processes by
which a business operates and goals are achieved. In accounting, it refers to the reliability of
financial reporting and compliance with laws and regulations. Setting up good controls is
important for a business to detect and deter fraud.
'A lot of organizations have an internal audit department, but small organizations can't always
afford that luxury,' Bachman says. 'But they do have accountants and other people in charge of
keeping track of accounts.' However, small businesses may have some weaknesses in terms of
controls, such as putting the same employee in charge of making deposits and reconciling bank
statements. Allowing one employee/department to perform multiple critical functions is
inconsistent with preventing fraud. By dividing the responsibility of certain functions, a system of
checks and balances is created and this creates an environment where fraud is less likely to
occur. Lougovskaia says businesses should consider the following examples to establish better
checks and balances:
-Separate the person/department writing the checks from the person/department that reconciles
the bank statement.
-Do not let the person initiating a purchase order approve the payment regardless of position
within the company.
-Separate the functions of creating databases, maintaining databases and using the data. For
example, the person responsible for generating payroll checks should not be entering employee
data.
-Require separate confirmation and storage of inventory records away from the location of the
inventory and rotate responsibility for taking inventory.
-Assign administrative access to the business data, web site, intranets, and email accounts to
different individuals.
Implementing a fraud prevention plan requires commitment and also requires the business to
provide the right tools and support to its employees. Businesses are better off if they build in
deterrents, establish good controls, and provide oversight. It's also important to encourage
employees to have a conscientious attitude, says Bachman, such as: 'Our business' survival
depends on employees being honest.'
For over two decades, the financial experts of Alfa One Corporation Accounting Solutions in
Tokyo, Japan have provided a one-stop financial-services source in management of business
practice, tax and financial planning, accounting, transition, investment counseling and retirement
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