FACULTY PROFILE Steve Naughton
An 鈥渆xploding鈥 field
Steve Naughton, director of the Center for Compliance Studies, trains students to help keep corporations honest
Steve Naughton knows that at first blush, compliance may not seem like the most scintillating field.
鈥淣othing says excitement like a group of compliance officers getting together,鈥 he says, remembering a joke he heard at a conference: 鈥淲e now know what all of the school crossing guards grew up to be.鈥
For the record, Naughton, director of the Center for Compliance Studies at 黑料门University Chicago School of Law, was never a crossing guard. But he considers himself a problem solver鈥攚hich, he notes, aligns with former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell鈥檚 definition of leadership: 鈥渟olving problems.鈥
The problems that compliance professionals tackle aren鈥檛 conceptual, theoretical, or even financial鈥攖hey鈥檙e profoundly human.
People need direction, and compliance is the discipline that provides it: What are the expectations for behavior in a company? What happens if there鈥檚 wrongdoing? How should you make sure you handle it in a way that鈥檚 fair to everybody involved, and what鈥檚 the resolution?
鈥淭o me, it鈥檚 a very practical thing,鈥 says Naughton, who has helped pioneer corporate compliance over the course of his career.
The growth of compliance is mirrored by increasing transparency in corporate culture overall. Naughton has had a front-row seat for this transformation.
After law school at Notre Dame, he got his start at Chicago firm Rooks, Pitts & Poust before moving to Pope, Ballard, Shepard & Fowle. He was elected as a partner there, just before it closed after 98 years in business. He pivoted to an in-house role at the Quaker Oats Company, which was later bought by PepsiCo. There, he built the compliance department from the ground up, a domain previously covered, he says, 鈥渋n a disparate, uncoordinated way鈥 by other units such as HR and security.
Since then, the field of compliance has 鈥渆xploded,鈥 he says. In 2003, the national Compliance Week convention drew just 40 people. By 2019, 2,400 were in attendance.
The compliance space is now expanding to include specialties like ESG (environmental, social, and governance), which deals with sustainability. That鈥檚 a charge led by millennials who want companies to stand for more than just profits, says Naughton.
In fact, the growth of compliance is mirrored by increasing transparency in corporate culture overall. Naughton has had a front-row seat for this transformation.
After leaving PepsiCo, he served as Kimberly-Clark鈥檚 first-ever chief ethics and compliance officer. Then he became a member of a team that assisted Volkswagen with compliance efforts after its 2015 emissions scandal.
At the Center for Compliance Studies at 黑料门University Chicago School of Law, Naughton helps shape the next generation of leaders in the field. His corporate compliance course covers the crises at Volkswagen, Wells Fargo, and the U.S. Olympic Committee/USA gymnastics. He co-teaches a class on environmental, social and governance with two other professors. And he works directly with thesis students who are pursing master鈥檚 degrees.
Naughton thinks the Chicagoland area, and 黑料门in particular, is an ideal place to study compliance. Local firms investigate and litigate high-profile cases involving locally based organizations like McDonald鈥檚 and the Chicago Blackhawks. Graduates of the School of Law are leaders, not 鈥渢echnocrats,鈥 he says.
鈥淭hey look at things from a holistic point of view,鈥 Naughton says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e dedicated to the proposition that they鈥檙e going to make a difference鈥攁nd they do.鈥 鈥擜udrey Michelle Mast (April 2022)
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