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What’s up, fraud fighters, and welcome back to Fraud Forward!
In this episode, I’m sitting down with Angela Diaz to talk about something that sounds simple on the surface, but honestly, it creates more fraud gaps than a lot of teams realize. We throw around terms like controls, strategy, and process all the time in fraud operations. We say them like they mean the same thing. They do not. And when we start treating them like they are interchangeable, that is exactly where things begin to break down.
This conversation came directly from Angela, and I loved that immediately because when a practitioner says, “we need to talk about this,” that usually means there is something real happening inside fraud programs right now. And this one is real. I have seen it. You have probably seen it too. Teams are busy, alerts are firing, processes are moving, and yet losses are still getting through. That is usually not because nobody cares. It is because the foundation is off.
So this episode is really about getting back to basics in the best possible way. We slow down and separate fraud controls from fraud strategy and from fraud processes, because if we cannot define those correctly, we are going to build the rest of the fraud program on top of confusion. And once that happens, fraudsters do what they always do. They find the gap and they use it.
What you’ll hear in this episode:If this episode makes you pause and rethink something in your own program, send it to your team. Really. Start the conversation. Pressure test the way controls, strategy, and process actually show up in your environment. And if you want more of these real conversations, make sure you are subscribed to Fraud Forward and signed up for the Monday Fraud Fix.
By Hailey Windham4.9
1717 ratings
What’s up, fraud fighters, and welcome back to Fraud Forward!
In this episode, I’m sitting down with Angela Diaz to talk about something that sounds simple on the surface, but honestly, it creates more fraud gaps than a lot of teams realize. We throw around terms like controls, strategy, and process all the time in fraud operations. We say them like they mean the same thing. They do not. And when we start treating them like they are interchangeable, that is exactly where things begin to break down.
This conversation came directly from Angela, and I loved that immediately because when a practitioner says, “we need to talk about this,” that usually means there is something real happening inside fraud programs right now. And this one is real. I have seen it. You have probably seen it too. Teams are busy, alerts are firing, processes are moving, and yet losses are still getting through. That is usually not because nobody cares. It is because the foundation is off.
So this episode is really about getting back to basics in the best possible way. We slow down and separate fraud controls from fraud strategy and from fraud processes, because if we cannot define those correctly, we are going to build the rest of the fraud program on top of confusion. And once that happens, fraudsters do what they always do. They find the gap and they use it.
What you’ll hear in this episode:If this episode makes you pause and rethink something in your own program, send it to your team. Really. Start the conversation. Pressure test the way controls, strategy, and process actually show up in your environment. And if you want more of these real conversations, make sure you are subscribed to Fraud Forward and signed up for the Monday Fraud Fix.