September 04, 2018 | Corporate Counsel
As Technology Advances, People Remain Key to Successful ComplianceTechnology will never replace strong teams and good culture, says Walmart's chief compliance officer.
By Daniel Trujillo
4 minute read
May 01, 2018 | Corporate Counsel
Can Driverless Compliance Programs Be Effective? One CECO's Perspective on AIOur building blocks are: leadership, risk assessment, standards, training, awareness and monitoring. How a company executes these building blocks is the complicated part.
By Daniel Trujillo
6 minute read
May 01, 2018 | Inside Counsel
Can Driverless Compliance Programs Be Effective? One CECO's Perspective on AIOur building blocks are: leadership, risk assessment, standards, training, awareness and monitoring. How a company executes these building blocks is the complicated part.
By Daniel Trujillo
6 minute read
February 09, 2018 | Corporate Counsel
From Compliance to Commitment: The Way We Work at WalmartI go to work every day thinking about not just how to make the program better—I challenge myself with how to make the company better. I have found that if you start with that question, the program works better and is effective, efficient, and sustainable.
By Daniel Trujillo
7 minute read
January 03, 2017 | Corporate Counsel
Wal-Mart International's Compliance Chief on What's NextDespite tech advances, compliance is still down to people doing the right thing.
By Daniel Trujillo
4 minute read
May 31, 2012 | Corporate Counsel
Playing Moneyball in the Compliance DepartmentThe movie Moneyball showed how baseball franchises use statistics to improve performance. Now, some legal departments have begun gathering statistical data to evaluate their compliance programs.
By Ryan McConnell, Daniel Trujillo, and Katelyn Richardson
6 minute read
June 06, 2012 | Daily Report Online
How to play Moneyball with in-house complianceIn the movie Moneyball, Brad Pitt plays Billy Beane, the innovative general manager of the Oakland Athletics baseball team who used statistical data about player performance to lead the team to 20 straight wins in the 2002 season. Beane analyzed how pitchers released the ball, where the ball crossed home plate, which pitches drew the most swings, and how often players got on base. Moneyball is a baseball movie, but more broadly it illustrates how empirical data and statistics have changed the way we analyze and solve problems.
By Ryan McConnell and Daniel Trujillo
6 minute read