Culture in Regulated Organisations: What Recent Exam Fraud Cases Really Reveal
7 May 2026
Culture in regulated organisations is what fines actually expose, even when headlines focus on numbers. Regulatory fines have a knack for simplifying complex stories. A number lands. Headlines follow. Statements appear. Then, mostly, the conversation moves on.
Yet the recent fines against several Dutch accountancy firms deserve a closer look. Not because of the sums involved. These fines deserve attention for what they expose: culture, governance, and the gap between stated and lived values.
The core finding repeats across investigations. Hundreds of professionals, across firms, over many years, shared answers on mandatory training exams. These exams confirmed that auditors held the knowledge and ethical standards their profession depends on. Junior staff joined senior leadership in the same conduct.
Regulators reached clear conclusions. Firms lacked the policies, controls, and culture to prevent it. In some cases, leaders who knew did not act.
The question worth sitting with is not ‘did they cheat?’. It is this: what cultural conditions allowed this to spread so widely, for so long?
This Is Not About a Few Bad Apples
We often frame misconduct as an individual failing. A few people make poor choices, consequences follow, lessons emerge. However, that framing collapses when the same behaviour appears across organisations, at scale, over years. What we see, then, is a systemic pattern. Systemic patterns point straight to culture.
Specifically, they reveal the conditions that shape behaviour when stakes feel high and oversight feels distant. Research into organisational ethics consistently identifies the same drivers. Performance pressure runs intensely. Staff treat compliance as administrative friction rather than a professional obligation. Leaders signal, often implicitly, that results count for more than process. None of this creates misconduct. Together, however, these conditions create fertile ground for it.

Accountancy faces a sharp version of this tension. Commercial pressure, client deadlines, certification requirements, and billable targets all run at once. When training exams feel like bureaucracy to clear rather than standards to uphold, the cultural drift has begun.
What the Findings Reveal About Culture in Regulated Organisations
The investigations surfaced four recurring themes. All four travel beyond the specific misconduct.
1. Weak Controls Reveal Cultural Priorities
Regulators consistently found firms lacked specific policies, procedures, and monitoring for exam integrity. However, the absence of controls is more than an operational oversight. It tells staff what the organisation actually considers important. If leaders do not measure, monitor, or govern something, the message is that it does not matter.
2. Senior Misconduct Reshapes the Whole Dynamic
When partners and senior leaders engage in the same behaviour as junior staff, the consequences spread far wider. It removes the behavioural anchor that middle management and staff look to. The rules suddenly appear to apply differently by seniority. Above all, it undermines any speak-up culture the firm claims to have built.
3. Speak-Up Mechanisms Need Trust to Work
Several firms had formal reporting channels. Yet the conduct continued, in some cases for years. That gap reveals something important. A mechanism on the page and the trust people place in it are not the same thing. People speak up when they believe it is safe to do so, and that something will actually change.
4. Enforcement Without Cultural Change Is Temporary
Regulatory sanctions are consequential, and rightly so. They protect the credibility of the profession. Furthermore, they signal clearly what behaviour the industry will not tolerate. However, a fine, however large, does not change how an organisation thinks about itself. That kind of change demands something more deliberate. Visible leadership commitment counts. Sustained investment in behavioural expectations counts equally. So does the willingness to measure outcomes rather than mere actions.
What Real Culture Change in Regulated Organisations Looks Like
Several firms responded with substantial action: root-cause analysis, governance reform, stronger monitoring, and clearer leadership expectations.
That matters. How an organisation responds to a crisis often reveals more than the crisis itself.
However, cultural change is a long game. The strongest indicators are not what firms announce in the weeks after a fine. They are what is still true twelve months later.
For boards and senior leaders in any regulated sector, honest questions beat any checklist:
- Do the daily pressures our people face actually align with the values we say we hold?
- Does our reward and development system genuinely value integrity and ethical judgement?
- Across all levels, including junior staff, do people trust that speaking up is safe and worthwhile?
- Do we apply accountability consistently, regardless of seniority?
- Are we tracking changes in behaviour, not just changes in policy?
- What does the data tell us about whether learning is actually happening?
These are not comfortable questions. They are the right ones. Asking them honestly and regularly is itself a sign of cultural maturity.
A Wider Lesson Across Regulated Organisations
The exam fraud cases came from accountancy. However, the dynamics behind them appear across financial services, insurance, technology, healthcare, and professional services. Anywhere regulatory complexity meets commercial pressure and high individual performance, the same conditions can take hold.
The combination is familiar. Non-negotiable regulatory obligations sit alongside career progression tied to assessment outcomes and demanding performance environments. Under that combination, shortcuts can feel, to some, like a rational response. Understanding that reality, without excusing it, is where genuine cultural leadership begins.
Compliance tells people what they must do. Culture decides what they actually do.
Getting that gap right is more than a regulatory matter. It is a strategic one. Firms with strong compliance cultures resist regulatory shocks better. They face less conduct risk. Ultimately, they earn more trust from clients, regulators, and markets.
How Argus Pro Approaches Culture in Regulated Organisations
At Argus Pro, regulatory intelligence means more than understanding the rules. It means asking whether an organisation’s culture, governance, and controls genuinely align to meet them. Our frameworks give compliance leaders a clear, structured view of how their controls perform in practice. They show what is actually happening, not what is documented. The distance between policy and behaviour is where most regulatory risk lives.
If the questions raised here resonate, we welcome the conversation. You can explore our approach to compliance intelligence at arguspro.co.uk. Alternatively, reach out through our contact page directly.
