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Managerial Ethics
Managerial Ethics
Standards of behavior that guide individual managers in their work. Three Basic Areas of Concern: Managers need to approach the following from an ethical and moral perspective: Relationships of the firm to the employees. The employees to the firm. The firm to other economic agents.
Important areas of managerial ethics include: Hiring. Firing. Wages. Working conditions. Employee privacy. Employee respect.
Especially in regard to: Conflicts of interest. Security. Confidentiality. Honesty. Most companies have policies that guard against violation of these ethical issues.
Ethics play a part in the relationship between the firm and its employees with other economic agents. Behaviors between the organization and these agents that may be subject to ethical ambiguity include: Advertising Promotions Financial disclosures Purchasing Shipping Solicitation Bargaining Negotiation, and other business relationships.
Actions of peer managers and top managers, as well as the organizations culture, all contribute to the ethical context of the organization. Organizational practice may strongly influence the ethical standards of employees.
Top management establishes the organizations culture and defines what will and will not be acceptable behavior. Code of ethics: a formal written statement of the values and ethical standards that guide a firms actions.
Company-Customer Relations
Company-Shareholder Relations
Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies by James Collins and Jerry Porras
Key finding: Exceptional and enduring companies place great emphasis on a set of core values These core values are essential and enduring tenets defining the company, and not to be compromised for financial gain.
IBM Johnson & Johnson Hewlett Packard Procter and Gamble Wal-Mart Merck Motorola Sony General Electric
of the main benefits for a business of behaving ethically is that a better image is given to the world at large, and especially to consumers, resulting in greater profit. It also means that expensive and potentially embarrassing public relation disasters are avoided. As far as employees are concerned, if the business is seen to behave ethically, for example with regard to the environment, it will recruit more highly qualified employees, and this leads to better employee motivation as the employees are proud of their jobs.
ethical can increase costs for the business, e.g. they have to pay reasonable wages to all employees. If a business is truly putting its ethics into practice it will have to pass on the same standards down the supply chain and this will mean no longer doing business with suppliers who are not prepared to meet the same standards. However, businesses are products of the society in which they operate, and if society does not always have clear standards it is not always easy for a business to decide what to do, e.g. some people in our society are completely opposed to experimenting on animals, but others would argue that it is alright for a business to do so if it benefits
a business needs to consider that its role is to make a profit, provide jobs and create wealth for society as a whole, and it may consider that ethics are good if they help achieve these aims, and to be ignored if they do not. Ultimately to really be ethical a business may have to change its whole business practice and organisational culture.