Why Should I conduct an Audit?
These audits not only mitigate legal and reputational risks but also provide a roadmap for embedding fairness, equity, and accountability into business strategy.
A Civil Rights Audit is no longer optional—it’s a strategic imperative. Companies that invest in equity, compliance, and accountability not only protect themselves from risk, but also build enduring trust with employees, customers, and investors.
Louis D. Coppola
Chief Executive Officer & Co-FounderKey Questions and Considerations
Financial services, technology, retail, healthcare, and consumer goods—any industry with material civil rights risks in workforce, product design, or customer impact.
DEI assessments focus on workplace inclusion. Civil Rights Audits broaden the scope to include legal compliance, external impacts, community effects, and systemic equity risks.
Independent third-party experts with legal, ESG, and civil rights expertise—ensuring credibility, impartiality, and defensibility with regulators and investors.
A written report outlining risks, compliance gaps, and actionable recommendations. Many companies use findings to guide disclosures, investor engagement, and policy reforms.
Best practice is every 2–3 years, or more frequently if significant risks, controversies, or regulatory pressures arise.
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