Tag: preventing embezzlement
So far I’ve presented six strategies for dealing with the problem of employee theft:
This blog will continue to present steps that can help reduce your risk of the very real problem of employee theft. As I’ve said before, keep in mind that each tactic works on its own but is exponentially more effective when paired with an overall strategy employing multiple approaches. (Haven’t I said this before?)
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So far I’ve presented four strategies for dealing with the problem of employee theft:
This blog will continue to present steps that can help reduce your risk of the very real problem of employee theft. As I’ve said before, keep in mind that each tactic works on its own but is exponentially more effective when paired with an overall strategy employing multiple approaches.
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A recent thread on the optcom list got me thinking about employee theft. Several interesting things came to mind but mostly I was pondering the grand naiveté and ubiquitous hubris regarding this most fundamental of business topics. To be blunt, practice owners are ignorant of the threat and have an “it can’t happen to me” attitude about the possibility of employee theft in their businesses. Nothing can be further from the truth. But there are dozens of scare pieces based on truth out there. I may be more in your face in my presentation style than most out there but I am not going to scare you into action either. A real example might be instructive in putting the potential impact into proper perspective. About seven years ago a doctor purchased an established practice for $285,000. He spent the next four plus years growing and improving the practice successfully. At this point he hired Waugoo to help him deal with a growing problem: sky rocketing labor costs. In the course of this consult I spent a day interviewing the staff members and getting a feel for how a typical patient day goes down in his office. The day after my employee interviews one of the staff members abruptly quit. She happened to be the person responsible for accounts payable (AP). The doctor asked me about her interview. I had noticed some odd behavior during her interview (mostly that she diverted the discussion away from the practice continuously) but I wasn’t tipped off on about anything specific other than a quirky personality. The doctor decided to spend a week or two doing her AP job at my recommendation. What he discovered made him ill. After several weeks of investigating we uncovered over $300,000 in embezzled funds paid to mysterious vendors that didn’t exist. As we were discussing the final results the doctor said to me “I was just robbed of more money than I paid for this entire business!” He was right on. He eventually spent almost $30,000 to help recover $80,000 from her. Think about that for a minute. This doctor effectively had to pay for his practice twice because of trusting an employee. That is scary. I know you’ve heard these types of true stories before and you’ve not been moved to action. I know “it can’t happen to you.” I know you “trust” your staff and you have dinner with the person that does your AP every couple of weeks. It is time to stop the rationalizing and get real. Assume you are being robbed today and do something to stop it now. What are some things you can do? I’ll start with a couple in this blog and then present a few more in an additional blog or two (gotta keep you coming back for more, right?) First, if you have a signature stamp burn it before it burns you. And don’t be the fool that delegates the task of gathering and destroying any and all stamps to your staff (true story, I swear). A colleague of mine once said that all signature stamps leave two impressions: the copy of the boss’s signature and proof positive that someone is looking to be stolen from. Signature stamps save time, no question. The cost of that time savings may be more than you paid for your practice. Is that a price you are willing to pay for some time savings? Second, create a list of those in the business (and outside the business) that have check writing capability. Then take all the names on that list that are not the owner and eliminate their check writing capabilities. Do this yesterday. One of the most common and simple theft methods is tapping the business checking account for a little money “here and there.” Those “here and there” checks can add up to tens of thousands of dollars in a New York minute. Don’t have the time to write all those checks? Make time. Delegate other things, hire more staff, add a part time doctor, but just make it happen now. More to come soon…tell all your friends! Le Meas, John G. McDaniel, OD, MLHR President/Founder Waugoo Consulting Group, LLC This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
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Justin Bazan, OD
Park Slope Eye
John Warren, OD
Warren Eye Care
Dickson Chen, OD, FAAO
High Definition Vision
Nathan Bonilla-Warford, OD
Bright Eyes Family Vision Care


