Why Smart Companies Discourage Office Romance - A Matter of Integrity, Not Emotion - By Taghogho Von Apochi

In today’s corporate world, office romance might seem inevitable. After all, we spend nearly one-third of our lives at work. But in high-performing organizations, especially those where compliance, control, and accountability are mission-critical, romance in the workplace is not just discouraged; it is forbidden.

At AXA, where I previously worked, there’s a strict policy: no couples are allowed to work under the same corporate umbrella, whether at AXA Health, AXA Investment, or AXA Insurance. This wasn’t to crush companionship or human connection; it was a proactive safeguard against conflicts of interest.

Let’s be clear: when partners work in departments that require mutual independence, like Internal Fraud Investigations (SYSCON) and Sales, there’s a serious risk of bias, manipulation, and covert collusion. Picture a wife working in SYSCON and a husband in Sales. If sales numbers are being reviewed for irregularities, can we honestly expect full objectivity?

💬 As one AXA compliance officer once said, “A love affair across Sales and Investigations is a scandal waiting to happen. Dem go ruin the company.”

Real-World Case Studies: Love Meets Liability

1. Wells Fargo Scandal - United States (2016)
Wells Fargo came under fire when over 5,000 employees were fired for opening over 2 million fake accounts without customer consent. While this scandal was not explicitly about romance, later internal investigations exposed that many of the fraudulent activities were enabled by close personal ties across sales, compliance, and IT teams. These silent alliances created an environment where red flags were ignored, and whistleblowers were suppressed.
Source: CNN Money, Sept 2016

2. Punjab National Bank - India (2018)
One of the biggest banking frauds in India’s history, over $1.8 billion; was orchestrated with the involvement of employees from different departments, including those in foreign exchange, audit, and SWIFT operations. Investigative reports hinted at personal relationships and long-standing unmonitored access between the implicated employees, contributing to unchecked fraudulent guarantees.
Source: Reuters, Feb 2018

3. South African Bank IT-Sales Scandal - Capitec (2021)
In another example, a mid-level sales officer at Capitec Bank was found colluding with her partner in the IT support team to bypass backend alerts and siphon off client funds in small, undetectable amounts. The fraud was discovered only after 18 months and caused significant reputational damage.
Local news report – Business Insider South Africa, July 2021

These examples underscore the ugly truth: love across conflict-sensitive departments is not just risky, it can be destructive.

The Hidden Triangles: When Romance Enables Fraud

In some of the most alarming scenarios, fraud isn't committed by a couple, but by a trio. One works in IT, the second in Sales or Marketing, and the third in Audit or Risk Control. Together, they manipulate data, override flags, and cover each other’s tracks.

I’ve witnessed this firsthand in boardrooms and post-mortem audits. What started as innocent bonding spiraled into blind loyalty, and ultimately, data compromise. And make no mistake: the damage is never limited to finances. It erodes public trust, investor confidence, and internal morale.

The Takeaway: It's About Ethics, Not Emotions

This isn’t an anti-love policy. It’s pro-integrity.

Smart companies do not discourage office relationships because they are outdated or cold. They do it to protect their most valuable asset, trust. And in a digital age where fraud can be coded in seconds, and whistleblowers silenced by silence itself, boundaries aren’t optional, they are essential.

So, the next time you see a company policy against workplace romance, don’t dismiss it as harsh or old-fashioned. Behind that rule lies a deep understanding of human behavior, corporate vulnerability, and the high cost of unchecked affection.

Taghogho Von Apochi
Clinical Research Strategist | Data Manager | Director, TCPR Institute



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