Timesheet fraud: An unwanted consequence of new OT regs?
What happens when workers are blatantly cheating the system and fudging their actual “hours worked”?
What happens when workers are blatantly cheating the system and fudging their actual “hours worked”?
Travel and entertainment expenses have long been a sore spot for companies of all sizes. Guest poster Robert Neveu of Certify offers a look at how to develop organization-wide guidelines — and make them stick.
Full-time accounting and finance pro, part-time sociologist? That might be exactly what you want from your team members.
Finance pros are eager to see what the DOL’s new overtime rules will look like this summer — not because they’re fans, but because they want to see how much their FLSA compliance efforts will have to change in a very short period of time (within 60 days, most likely).
It’s been a busy year at CFODailyNews. Here’s a look at the ten stories that attracted the most eyeballs in 2015.
When it comes to cyberfraud, the biggest risk may not be hackers. It could be what’s going on right under your nose.
New tech is generally welcomed in A/P, but dishonest people can quickly take advantage of it.
When financial fraud allegations arise at a public company, the firm that audits the financial statements of that company will often draw the attention of one or more of three very formidable entities: the Department of Justice (DOJ), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB).
Like Finance staffers need more pressure at year-end: The idea of making firms submit Forms W-2 to SSA earlier just won’t go away because of growing concerns about identity theft.