Element 4: Influential
Table of contents
What it means to be influential: Policy advice should be compelling, resonate with decision-makers, and drive action by aligning with government priorities and public expectations.
Being influential through a fraud and corruption lens: Frame the policy’s approach to fraud and corruption as a selling point that enhances its credibility and public trust. This means:
- Demonstrating to decision-makers how reducing these impacts aligns with broader government integrity agendas (e.g. the National Anti-Corruption Commission or the APS Reform priorities).
- Highlighting the cost of inaction – financial losses, reputational damage, and eroded public confidence – to make a persuasive case for robust controls. You could highlight data (such as the hundreds of millions lost annually to detected fraud against the Commonwealth) to underscore the importance of building-in integrity measures.
- Engaging stakeholders by showing how integrity measures protect their interests, making the policy or initiative more likely to gain their support.
- You could also link fraud and corruption prevention to public narratives about fairness and accountability, ensuring the policy resonates with ministers, senior executives and the community.
You should ask yourself: ‘How can I best explain what is needed to manage fraud and corruption impacts? Who can help me develop compelling and evidence-based advice about this?