Give your managers a life preserver.

Are managers to blame for cardholders’ unethical and criminal acts, or do they get an undeserved bad rap? A new internal fraud incident involving a Commercial Card got me thinking more about a manager’s role in fraud prevention and detection. Keep reading to learn about the fraud, manager hurdles and nine tips to help managers be successful.

The Fraud

A friend told me about a sales rep his company recently fired for using a company card for personal purchases. “Jane,” a long-time trusted employee, allowed both her husband and adult daughter to use her card for personal car rentals. In addition, Jane used her card for personal food purchases that did not have any business purpose. Because of her sales position, charges for car rentals and meals were common, so they did not raise any red flags.

The company, which had a corporate liability card program, uncovered the fraud after an automated toll road charge appeared on Jane’s card. It had occurred in conjunction with the daughter’s car rental. When the company did research to determine the associated business activity, they soon realized Jane was in the office during the purported trip. Things went downhill from there.

Is the Manager at Fault?

Upon hearing about Jane, my first question was, “Why didn’t her manager catch this?” When fraud of any kind—Commercial Card, expense report or other—goes undetected, it is easy to blame the employee’s manager. However, while managers’ lack of oversight is often a factor, we should dig deeper. Do organizations set up their managers for success or failure?

The friend who told me about Jane is a manager. He admits he only does a cursory review of his employees’ expenses because he has too much on his plate. He shared, “I only have so much time every day. Administrative tasks like expense reviews are not my priority because the risk of potential expense fraud is lower than the risk to my company if I neglect my unique job duties. At the end of the day, I have to trust my employees, so I can focus elsewhere.”  

Like many organizations, his company also enforces a monthly deadline by which managers must complete the expense review process. While the intent is to hold managers accountable for their important role in fraud detection, the downside is hurried sign-offs without attention to detail. Indeed, to avoid being called out for tardiness, my friend says he meets the deadline regardless of whether he actually performs a complete review. Approaches like this can be a matter of manager survival.  

Manager Hurdles

  • The manager is on overload, juggling too many other responsibilities.
  • The manager resides in a different location than the cardholder (this was true in Jane’s case) and might be out of touch with an employee’s daily activities, unable to recognize fraudulent expenses.
  • The manager is responsible for too many employees. We can debate how many is too many, but try to determine how long it takes to review one cardholder’s monthly transactions/statement thoroughly. Multiply by a manager’s number of cardholders to get a sense of the commitment. 
  • The organization does not require any related training or provide any helpful tools.
Are organizations drowning their managers or providing the necessary support for survival and success?

Are organizations drowning their managers or providing the necessary support for survival and success?

Helping Managers Be Successful

I asked my friend what would help make the reviewer/approver role easier. Our discussion reinforced best practices, but also touched on lesser-used strategies. The tips include:

  1. Pursue senior management involvement in communicating the importance of the manager’s role, so they hear it from the top.
  2. Specifically design training for managers; make it relevant. While they need to understand the cardholder’s role, too, they do not need to learn the same details. Learn more...
  3. Require managers to sign an internal agreement like cardholders.
  4. Mandate annual training on card policies, as well as ensure managers are trained on red flag behaviors that could indicate fraud.
  5. Require cardholders to provide key information for each charge. “Car rental for business trip” is too vague. “Car rental for August 31 meeting in NY with ABC Company” is much better.
  6. Utilize electronic review tools that managers can access at any time. Yes, some organizations still have a paper-based process, which is more tedious.
  7. Send managers a weekly report of their cardholders’ charges. My friend observed that this would make him more likely to spot oddities and ease the monthly review requirement. Then he would not be overwhelmed with seeing a month’s worth of charges for the first time and trying to recall what happened weeks ago.
  8. Provide other reporting, too, such as purchasing  history for the manager’s department, which I described in a 2014 blog post on fraud, along with other tips.
  9. Offer an at-a-glance reference of what managers should look for when reviewing expenses.

I also wonder if organizations should encourage or require a recurring “meeting” on managers’ calendars to reserve time each week and/or month for expense reviews. This sends a message that the task is important. What do you think? Feel free to comment and share any additional tips. 

See also other available resources related to card program controls.


About the Author

Blog post author Lynn Larson, CPCP, is the founder of Recharged Education. With more than 15 years of Commercial Card experience, her mission is to make industry education readily accessible to all. Learn more

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Hair-raising data on checks.

Like everyone else in our industry, I have known that check usage for business-to-business (B2B) payments has remained high, but a recent report published by PayStream Advisors goes a step further to help explain why. As a contributing analyst to the report, I was surprised to discover that survey respondents perceive checks as best in four of 10 attributes, compared to other payment methods. For example, 55% rated checks as the option offering the “most complete remittance information.” As the report notes, favorable views of checks influence payment strategy. 

The Prevalence of Checks

Last year, the AP Automation Study by the Institute of Financial Operations (IFO) revealed 52% of survey respondents use checks for at least half of their B2B payments and 32% use checks for at least 75%. The PayStream survey results are even higher:

The report observes, “Although heavy check users are more challenged by high payment processing costs than the other organizations, they are also less likely to change their payment management strategies; the majority of heavy check users have not taken actions to decrease checks and increase electronic payments in the last two years.” Among heavy check users, 40% have taken actions to decrease checks (they are obviously falling short) compared to 81% of the remaining organizations. Indeed, concerted efforts are necessary to reduce checks, including implementing (and enforcing!) specific payment policies, and educating internal staff and suppliers about the benefits of electronic payments. 

Obtain the PayStream Report

The PayStream Advisors’ report, Electronic Payments and Card Solutions in 2015: Perceptions, Realities and Strategies, features:

  • trends in B2B payment method usage 
  • the status of Commercial Cards
  • influential factors for payment strategies
  • a look into payment solution providers

The report is available from PayStream Advisors.

Where Does Your Organization Stand?

Is your organization among the heavy check users? My January 5, 2015, blog post on reappraising the value of card payments included three key questions for organizations to address about their B2B payment strategies.

  1. What will drive your organization to reduce its check volume by adopting more card payments? 
  2. What percentage of B2B payments do checks comprise? 
  3. What is your card payments opportunity?

As you seek increased buy-in for expanded card usage, it can help to first understand what is behind any resistance. Many factors influence people’s perceptions about Commercial Card programs: previous experiences, lack of knowledge, media reports, and resistance to/fear of change. To combat misperceptions, the best approach is to avoid emotional arguments and stick to the facts. 

Face your payment strategy pitfalls head on and embark on some clean up. 

Face your payment strategy pitfalls head on and embark on some clean up. 


Available Education

For those interested in a broad introduction of Purchasing Cards and electronic payables, both of which are key ways to diversify a payments strategy, consider the on-demand course I created for Proformative Academy, an online professional development platform for CFOs and similar. 


About the Author

Blog post author Lynn Larson, CPCP, is the founder of Recharged Education. With more than 15 years of Commercial Card experience, her mission is to make industry education readily accessible to all. Learn more

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Are we ready for chip cards?

The October 1 liability shift in the United States is less than two months away. Are merchants equipped to handle chip/EMV cards? According to an article published by TheStreet, 47% of all merchant terminals will be able to read chip cards by the end of 2015. Further, are cardholders and merchant clerks prepared by understanding how to use the cards? Through my own informal study, I would say no for the most part.

Cardholder Confusion

As Commercial Card professionals, we have a head start on being familiar with chip cards, but, if you question your friends and family on this topic, you might get blank stares. This has been my experience.

TheStreet article reported that, by the end of 2015, 63% of credit and debit cards will be chip enabled. When I received my new business credit card with a chip, an accompanying brochure explained how to use it. I wonder how many cardholders will bother to read such material. Either way, I think my brochure is unclear. For example, it says I can still swipe my card at merchant locations with magnetic stripe point-of-sale (POS) devices. Hmmm... Since basically all U.S. merchant terminals will still have magnetic stripe readers, it sounds like I can ignore the chip altogether. Not so fast. Chip-enabled devices could generate an error message if a cardholder tries to use the mag stripe.    

An article by Computerworld noted a consumer might give up using a chip card because the process takes at least a couple seconds longer than the “old way.” The article also described how the payment confirmation will vary by terminal type or store, which could cause confusion.   


Links to Referenced Articles 

See also more EMV content on this website.

Merchant Confusion

When out shopping, I have been randomly asking store clerks if they are seeing many chip cards. One replied, “Do you mean a card that they wave over the machine?” Well, maybe—if the terminal supports near-field communication (NFC) technology—but when I pointed out the chip card slot on the POS device, she admitted she had not noticed that before. At a different store, a clerk said he did not know whether “that slot” worked.

Generally speaking, clerk training seems to be lacking. Pair untrained clerks with unaware cardholders and we get significant potential for checkout hiccups until everyone adjusts. 

While POS equipment no longer looks like this, many U.S. merchants will not have chip-ready devices by year end.

While POS equipment no longer looks like this, many U.S. merchants will not have chip-ready devices by year end.

What You Can Do

Per my advice in the January blog post on the different EMV options, if you are an end-user organization, ensure you understand your type of chip card, requirements for usage, what could go wrong and how to resolve any issues. For cardholders who make in-person purchases, train them accordingly.

Visit GoChipCard.com

You do not need to create training from scratch. The EMV Migration Forum and the Payments Security Task Force developed GoChipCard.com to assist consumers, merchants and issuers with the migration to chip technology.


About the Author

Blog post author Lynn Larson, CPCP, is the founder of Recharged Education. With more than 15 years of Commercial Card experience, her mission is to make industry education readily accessible to all. Learn more

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