If a “boss” phones or messages with an urgent bank detail change, treat it as a red alert. Here’s the playbook normal teams need but rarely enforce.
What changed
Criminals don’t need to ‘hack your bank.’ They imitate trust.
Cheap synthetic voice and video (“deepfakes”) + scraped org info + an urgent story = you move money for them.
It looks like leadership. It sounds like leadership. It isn’t.
How the scam actually plays out (three real-life patterns)
- The 4:55 pm call: Finance receives a ‘quick favour’ from the CEO: ‘Change a supplier’s bank details for a payment run.’ Voice sounds right. Context sounds right. You act fast. Money’s gone.
- The travel trap: A WhatsApp voice note from the CFO: ‘At the airport…’ asks to bypass a control ‘just this once.’ You’re being helpful. They’re taking cash.
- The fake Teams invite: A short video call shows your “exec” under time pressure. You see a face, you hear a voice, you comply.
Why normal controls fail
- Familiar voice overrides scepticism.
- Urgency collapses the process.
- People want to be helpful to leaders.
- Policies exist. They’re not enforced when it feels awkward.
Your 15-minute defence drill (do this today)
- Break the channel: Never respond/act in the thread that made the request. Call back on a number from your corporate directory (not the number they gave you).
- Use a challenge phrase: Agree a simple ‘code question’ between Finance and Execs (e.g., “What’s the internal project name for [X]?”). If they fail it, you fail the payment.
- Two-person rule for bank changes: Any change to supplier/customer bank details requires two approvers who are not on the same team. No exceptions.
- Cooling-off period: Institute a minimum delay (e.g., 2 hours) for urgent bank changes. “Urgent” isn’t a control; it’s a vulnerability.
- Template lockdown: Payment templates cannot be edited by the same user who executes them. Separation of duties – always.
- Log the attempt: Keep an ‘incident note’:- date/time, request content, channel, who you verified with, and outcome. It protects you later.
Exact scripts to use (copy/paste)
- When you get the request:
“I can’t move money or change bank details based on chat/call alone. I’ll call your main line now and loop in a second approver.” - When they insist on speed:
“The control is for your protection as well as the company’s. If this is legitimate, it survives a 2-hour delay.”
If money has already moved
- Call your bank’s fraud team immediately and request a recall/freeze.
- Notify your insurer and record keeper; preserve messages, call logs, and payment screenshots.
- Report to Action Fraud.
- Do not shame the person who complied. Fix the system that made compliance possible.
For schools, charities and councils
You are specifically targeted because you’re helpful, short-staffed, and process-light. Publish the two-person rule. Print the callback policy. Run a 10-minute simulation in the next team meeting.
Manager checklist (today)
- Publish the callback number and challenge phrase policy.
- Add the two-person rule to your finance SOP (standard operating procedure).
- Disable voice approvals entirely.
- Schedule a quarterly “red team” drill – can we trick ourselves?
Urgency is not a business case; it’s a social-engineering tactic.
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