Since more than 55% of thefts are ego-driven (a theft of
something that enhances one’s ego or that serves a personal desire), it is
appropriate that the best acronym for a strategy to detect and deter theft is
MOI – the French word for “me.” However, almost all thefts and frauds, as well
as inadvertent losses and shrinkage, can be monitored more effectively using a
modified MOI Inventory.
MOI Inventories examine the three essential elements of any
intentional loss: motive, opportunity and indicators. Losses and shrinkage
other than theft and fraud also can be tracked using an Opportunity and
Indicator spreadsheet. “Motive” becomes “Method” in the revised MOI Inventory.
These include accidental shrinkage and failures in administrative or
operational systems.
Loss occurs when a combination of the three – motive (or
methods), opportunity, indicators -- reaches a critical mass. Critical mass
results from reaching a threshold level of opportunity and motive, in specific.
Little opportunity but very high motive, little motive but very high
opportunity, average amounts of each, or any variety of those combinations will
result in loss. An abundance of indicators also reveals that critical mass has
or is being reached.
More than a decade ago, I was conducting a seminar on loss
in a very tightly-knit community. As an illustration of the MOI principles, I
placed a five-dollar bill on the front podium, one on the back table next to
the coffee and snacks and one on the floor just outside the conference room
door. By the end of the session all three bills were still there. However, in
the eleven prior seminars across the province, I had lost every one of the
bills placed outside the door, six of the ones placed on the rear table and
none of the ones placed on the podiums, even though the podium was left
unattended occasionally during each two-to-three-hour program. All of the bills
had a telephone number written on them. To me, that illustrated opportunity at
work, and motive. In sixteen instances, the two had reached critical mass.
Where the five-dollar bill lay outside the door, there was
extreme opportunity and, while the amount was relatively small, the risk in
taking the money was negligible. Critical mass was achieved mostly through opportunity.
At the rear table, opportunity was moderate, but sufficient enough for some to
take the cash. At the front, there was almost no opportunity and motive would
have needed to be extreme for theft to occur. However, in the closed community,
even the risk outside the door was high, if anyone had happened to pass by when
the bill was being taken.
By reducing opportunity, even in the face of relatively
strong motive, theft can be averted. By understanding individual motive and
defending against it, opportunity can remain fairly strong and theft will be
less likely to occur.
Indicators simply show where theft likely will occur, or
where it has. These “tracks” will reveal the most available opportunities for
deviant behaviour. Thus, by understanding motive, recognizing the indicators
and responding to opportunity, loss can be reduced or eliminated in almost
every environment.
But what of loss that occurs inadvertently, through
administrative error, miscalculations and oversight? These, too, can be
mitigated by attention to opportunity first, then by examining indicators or
tracks and, finally, by looking at the methodology involved in production,
distribution, presentation, development and delivery of goods or services. Within
such methodology analyses are determination of yields, supply lines, market,
money handling and various other aspects of operations.
Shrinkage is the cause of two-thirds of business failures
(CFIB), with market conditions contributing the largest impact to the remaining
one-third. Shrinkage is preventable. Shrinkage also is detectable. Thus, the
use of the MOI Inventory is a vital strategy to help ensure that your business
remains viable. However, most business managers and owners focus more on the
marketing, rather than on the more tedious details of operations. In order to
provide any business with the greatest probability that it will be successful,
more emphasis needs to be placed on these technical aspects. MOI may well be
the most viable of the tools available to do so.
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