This crime in the workplace is costing US businesses $50
billion a year!
There
is a hidden risk facing businesses across the country that often goes unnoticed
until it suddenly rips through a firm’s finances: employee theft. It’s a crime that is costing U.S. businesses
$50 billion annually, according to Statistic Brain. Is your company running background
checks and protecting the business and its’ employees? Secure Employment Group (SEG) can
help.
Matt
Ham has had two run-ins with thefts by employees at his
small business, Computer
Repair Doctor, which has eight stores in Florida,
Ohio and South Carolina, which collectively totals 30 employees.
At a store in Florida, two employees were
caught stealing parts from inventory and skimming cash about a year and a half
ago, he said. After a thorough investigation, Ham sat them down with his
attorney and they came up with a plan for restitution. Both employees had to
pay back the thousands of dollars they stole. The chain has now put more
safeguards in places, such as better inventory controls and a strict
cash-counting process.
Then, at LaptopMD, a store in New York City
that his firm runs on behalf of another company, Ham said an employee misused
the company’s Amazon Services account by changing it to his personal account.
“All of the funds we were charging customers kept getting redirected into his
personal account,” said Ham, claiming that the employee had also started aside
business and used employees at the store to perform work for it without their
knowledge. Fortunately, he said, the situation was discovered within two weeks
and the company currently has filed embezzlement charges against the employee.
Ham isn’t alone in his travails. A new study
by Hiscox, a global specialist insurer, found that U.S. businesses affected by
employee theft lost an average of $1.13 million in 2016. Small and midsize
businesses were hit disproportionately, representing 68 percent of the cases.
Their median loss last year was $289,864.
Often, the employees who embezzle are trusted
members of a company’s team. “It can be incredibly devastating to find out they
have been ripping you off,” said Doug Karpp, crime and fidelity product head at
Hiscox.
Hiscox’s researchers studied publicly
available data on nearly 400 U.S. federal court cases in which employee fraud
was alleged that either became publicly known or were active in the federal system in 2016. The cases involved public and private corporations, limited
liability companies, municipal and government agencies, nonprofit organizations
and Native American tribal businesses.
Funds theft was the most common embezzlement
scheme, showing up in more than one-third of all cases. It was followed by
check fraud (22.1 percent). Seventy percent of all check fraud occurred at
companies with fewer than 100 employees.
Despite the alarming levels of embezzlement
taking place, it isn’t top of mind for many small-business owners. When asked,
“What is the most critical issue facing your business?” only 1 percent said the
threat of crime or vandalism in the CNBC/SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey of
2,030 self-identified small-business owners ages 18 and up. Among these owners,
1,423 had 0–4 employees; 225 had 5–9 employees, 243 had 10–49 employees and 128
had 50 or more employees.
Interestingly, in Hiscox’s study, financial
services firms had the highest total losses across industries. They
collectively lost more than $120 million in 2016. One case went on for 41 years
and involved $2.5 million stolen at a bank.
High-loss cases often took place in schemes
where an employee repeatedly diverted small sums of money over time, making the
theft extremely difficult to detect. In 28.7 percent of cases, employee
theft took place for more than five years.
“A lot of people think embezzlement is one big
score and it’s over with,” said Karpp. But that’s not always the case. Some
cases involved the theft of small amounts of money over many years, he said.
Those small amounts can really add up. The average loss for cases that continued for five years or more was $2.2 million,
and for cases lasting 10 years or more, the loss was $5.4 million.
Safeguards against theft
So how can
small-business owners protect themselves? One way is by instituting checks and
balances, said Karpp. Never let one person have end-to-end control of funds, he
said, adding, “If they are an authorized signatory on a check, don’t let them
print a check out on the system.”
Hiscox also recommends
that smaller businesses have bank statements for their business accounts sent
directly to the owner’s home. “That way, the owner can take a look at them and
make sure there isn’t anything suspicious,” he said. Otherwise, an employee
might be able to cover up unusual transactions in the company’s books.
So who is embezzling?
There is no definitive profile, but Hiscox found the median age of perpetrators
was 48 for women and 49 for men. In cases of funds theft, 56 percent of the
perpetrators were women.
[Embezzlers] are diligent and ambitious. They come in
early. They are working late. They never take a vacation.
Often, there are
tip-offs in employees’ behavior, Hiscox found. Employees may, for instance,
make extravagant purchases that would not be affordable for someone of their
financial means. “I’ve seen a case where an employee showed up in a new luxury
car every three to six months and made up a story about flipping cars,” said
Karpp.
Nonetheless, it can be
hard to identify embezzlers, because they often demonstrate behaviors that a
good employee would show. For instance, Hiscox found that they tend to be
curious about how the company works and want to be the go-to people to solve
system problems. “They are diligent and ambitious,” said Karpp. “They come in
early. They are working late. They never take a vacation.”
But their reasons for
camping out at their desks aren’t to help the company — it is to cover up the fraud. “A lot of cases get discovered when the employee is on vacation,” said
Karpp. Employers who discover embezzlement may need to hire a certified fraud
examiner or legal counsel to help them with the investigation, he said, adding,
“If you end up terminating the employee, you should press charges and publicize
it within your company. That will show employees you take fraud seriously and
help repair any damage to a company culture that exists when employees are found
stealing.”
Hemorrhaging red ink
Many business owners
never recoup their losses and are forced to simply move on. Max Agrad said he
and his business partner at Voxel Worlds, a three-employee start-up in
Washington, D.C., which makes a mobile virtual-reality solution for the real
estate industry were deceived by a former employee who was hiring overseas
technology contractors for them through one particular company.
Agrad became
suspicious when a search-engine optimization contractor reached out to ask why
he had not been paid his $90 — far less than the $500 he understood that Voxel
Worlds were paying the contractor. After deciding to look for several
contractors himself and soliciting bids on his own instead of relying on the
employee, Agrad concluded the company had been greatly overcharged. “The bids
were about one-third of what we were being told to pay,” he said.
Agrad claims the
company his employee was using to find the talent ended up being a front
operation the employee-owned. Agrad estimates that his company lost $37,000
before firing the employee, but he and his partner, James Boisvert, decided to
move on without pressing charges. They’re now occupied with bigger and better
things, like serving a big account they just won and going after new business.
“We accepted this as a business lesson,” said Agrad.
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