Title: Business Ethics
1Business Ethics
2Business Ethics Is a Component of Social
Responsibility
- Business ethics comprises principles and
standards that guide behavior in business. - Social responsibility refers to an organizations
obligation to maximize its positive impact on
stakeholders and to minimize its negative impact. - The dimensions of social
responsibility are legal, economic,
ethical, and philanthropic.
3Corporate Citizenship...
- Corporate citizenship expresses the extent to
which businesses strategically meet the economic,
legal, ethical and philanthropic responsibilities
placed on them by various stakeholders. - How does the firm act on its commitment to the
corporate citizenship philosophy? Does it
measure the extent to which it
follows through by
implementing initiatives?
4Economic Issues...
- relate to how resources for the production of
goods and services are to be distributed within a
system. - Issues of concern
- the economyinflation, recession, unemployment
rates, pollution control and environmental
constraints - employee responsibilities
- competition
5Competitive Issues...
- Intense competition can make managers feel their
survival is being threatened. - Unacceptable acts may be viewed as acceptable.
- Large firms sometimes exert unfair competitive
pressures on smaller competitors - sustained price cuts
- discriminatory pricing
- price wars
6Legal and Regulatory Issues...
- Laws and regulations are established by the
government to set minimum standards of acceptable
behavior. - Laws are passed because society does
not always trust business to
act in its best interest.
7Types of Laws...
- Civil law defines the rights and duties of
individuals and organizations. - Criminal law prohibits specific actions and
imposes punishment for breaking the law. - The difference between the two is enforcement.
- Criminal laws are enforced by the state
or nation. - Civil laws are enforced by individuals
(generally in court).
8How are business ethics disputes generally
resolved?
9Business ethics disputes are generally
resolved through lawsuits.
- Most laws affecting business fall into one of
five categories - laws regulating competition (prevent restraint of
trade) - laws protecting consumers (safety, disclosure)
- laws protecting equity safety (discrimination,
workplace safety, equal employment practice) - laws protecting the environment (air, water,
noise) - laws that encourage ethical conduct (Federal
Sentencing Guidelines for Organizations,
Sarbanes-Oxley Act)
10 Keys to Managing Ethics Programs
- Managers must consider the values and principles
of all key stakeholders of the organization. - The role and support of top management is
critical. - Top management and key stakeholders must address
ethical issues affecting the organization on an
ongoing basis.
11Philanthropic Issues
- involve businesss contribution to the local
community and society. - Quality of life issues
- responsible production of goods and services
- technology improvementsyet not damaging to the
environment or jeopardizing personal privacy - Philanthropic issues
- making the local community a better place to live
- Strategic philanthropy
- synergistic and mutually beneficial use of a
companys core competencies and resources to deal
with social issues
12Ethics as a Force in Social Responsibility
- Business ethics embodies standards, norms and
expectations that reflect the concerns of major
stakeholders. - Consumers, employees and shareholders all
have concerns about what is fair and just. - Ethics goes beyond compliance with
laws and regulations. - Such behavior has been associated with profits.
- It goes beyond the firms wants and needs.
- It should evolve from the culture of the
organization.
13Definition
- Corporate Social responsibility is the managerial
obligation to take action that protects and
improves the welfare of society as a whole and
organizational interests as well.
14Corporate Social Responsibility
- Represents the notion that corporations have an
obligation to constituent groups in society other
than shareholders and beyond that prescribed by
law or contract. It considers both the best
interests of the company and its relationship
with the community and society in general.
15Social Responsibility
- Drucker
- Be responsible for your impact, planned or
unplanned.
- Grandma
- Clean up your own mess!
16Socially Responsible Strategies
- Evaluate the social merits of each corporate and
business strategy. For each strategy, ask these
questions - What social good does the strategy create?
- Does it create any public or stakeholder risks or
harm? - Is it controversial?
- Develop socially responsive specific strategies
by adopting specific strategies towards all key
stake-holders of the firm. Such strategies
pursue multiple stakeholder objectives rather
than simple profitability objectives.
17Common Areas of Social Responsibilities
- Urban Affairs
- Consumer Affairs
- Environmental Affairs
- Employment Practices
18Pros and Cons
- Public expects it now.
- Long run self interest.
- Avoid regulation.
- Dilute responsibility to shareholders.
- Lack of understanding.
- Increases business power to disadvantage of
public.
19Businesses should
- Perform legally required activities.
- Consider voluntary activities beyond legal
minimums. - Inform stakeholders of extent of involvement.
20Federal Agencies
- Discrimination Issues
- Ensures employers holding federal contracts do
not discriminate. - Formulates and enforces environmental standards.
- Promotes clarity of product labeling to reduce
consumer misunderstanding. - Regulates safety and health conditions in the
workplace.
- Equal Employment Opportunity
- Office of Federal Compliance Programs
- Environmental Protection Agency
- Consumer Product Safety Commission
- OSHA
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22Social Responsiveness
- The degree of effectiveness and efficiency an
organization displays in pursuing its social
responsibilities. - Social responsiveness is pragmatic -- managers
scan the environment, identify changing morals
and attitudes, and modify organizational
practices to align with the prevailing standards.
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24Stakeholders Obligations
- Owners - Stockholders
- Suppliers
- Banks/Lenders
- Government Agencies
- Employees Unions
- Customers
- Competitors
- Local communities society at large.
- Increase value of the organization.
- Deal with them fairly.
- To repay debts.
- To abide by laws.
- Safe working environment negotiate fairly with
unions. - To provide safe products.
- To compete fairly refrain from restraints of
trade. - To avoid business practices that harm the
environment.
25Meeting Social Responsibilities
- Incorporate social goals into annual planning
process. - Seek comparative industry norm for social
programs. - Present reports to stakeholders.
- Experiment with different approaches for
measuring. - Attempt cost/benefit analysis.
26Seths Approaches
- Social Obligation
- Obey the laws -- economic purposes.
- Social Responsibility
- Economic societal goals.
- Social Responsiveness
- Both goals plus obligation to anticipate societal
problems and actively work to prevent them.
27Planning for Social Responsibility
- Environmental forecasts
- economic
- political
- technological
- social
- competitive
28Integration of Social Responsibility and Planning
29The Social Audit
- A Progress Report
- Process of taking measurements of social
responsibility to assess organizational
performance in the social responsibility area. - Elements are monitoring, measuring and appraising
performance.
30Elements of a Social Audit
31How society can help business meet social
obligations
- Set rules that are clear and consistent.
- Keep the rules technically feasible.
- Make the rules economically feasible.
- Make the rules prospective, not retrospective.
- Make the rules goal-setting, not procedure
proscribing.
32Understanding Ethical Behavior
- Ethics are moral obligations that usually govern
our conduct, and are the standards or behavior by
which others usually judge us. - Ethics separate right from wrong.
- Morals are our rules or habits, developed from
cultural values and norms, and define our
character.
33Ethics Defined
- Ethics are the moral principals and values that
govern the actions and decisions of an individual
or group. - Ethics serve as guidelines on how to act rightly
and justly when faced with moral dilemmas.
34Classifying business decisions according to
ethical and legal relationships
Ethical
Ethicality
Illegal
Legal
Legality
35Reasons to practice ethics
- Can enhance productivity.
- Positive impact on external stakeholders.
- Minimize governmental regulation.
36Understanding Ethical Behavior
Societal culture and norms.
Personal moral philosophy ethical behavior.
Business culture industry practices.
Organizational culture expectations.
37Organizational factors influencing ethical
judgments
- The extent of ethical problems in the
organization. - Top-management actions on ethics.
- Organizational role.
38Codes of Ethics...
- are formal statements of what an organization
expects in the way of ethical behavior - will not solve every dilemma
- provide rules guidelines
- reflects senior managements desire for
compliance with values, rules policies in
support of an ethical climate - should be specific enough to be reasonably
capable of preventing misconduct
39 Manleys Six Steps to Implement a Code of
Ethics
- distribute the code comprehensively employees,
subsidiaries, associated companies - assist in interpretation understanding
- specify managements role in implementation
- make employees responsible for understanding
- establish grievance procedures
- provide a conclusion or closing statement
40High Level Oversight
- ethics officers or committees are responsible for
oversight of the ethics/compliance program - coordinate program with top management
- develop, revise disseminate the code
- develop effective communication
- establish audits control systems
- provide consistent enforcement of standards
- review modify the program to improve
effectiveness
41Effective Communication of Ethical Standards...
- provides guidance for ethical standards
activities that integrate the functional areas of
business - helps employees identify ethical issues
provides a means to address resolve them - can help reduce criminal, civil administrative
consequences including - fines, penalties, judgments, etc.
42Ethics Training Programs Should...
- reflect organizational size, culture, values,
management style employee base - improve employee understanding of ethical issues
- influence the organizational culture, significant
others, opportunity in the ethical
decision-making process - overall, provide for recognition of ethical
issues, understanding of culture values, and
influence ethical decision making
43Monitoring, Auditing, Enforcing Ethical
Standards...
- an internal system for employees to report
misconduct is an opportunity to register ethical
concerns - ethics hot lines
- questionnaires may be used to serve as benchmarks
- corrective actions provide standards punishment
- consistent enforcement is critical
44Continuous Improvement
- if a company has determined that its ethical
performance has not been satisfactory, management
may want to recognize the way ethical decisions
are made - a decentralized organization may be centralized
(perhaps temporarily) so that top-level managers
can ensure that ethical decisions are made - a centralized organization may be decentralized
(perhaps temporarily) so that lower level
managers can make more decisions
45 Bad AppleBad Barrel Theory
- bad applethe notion that blame for unethical
behavior rests with a few unsavory individuals
(difficult for organizations to influence
ethical decision making) - bad barrelviews that people are not inherently
ethical or unethical, but are influenced by the
corporate culture surrounding them (more
organizational control)
46Codes of Ethics
- Avoid employee confusion in decision-making.
- Force discussion about what is right and wrong in
issues that may arise.
Our Company Code of Ethics
1. Do good. 2. See 1.
47Why have a Code of Ethics?
- to define accepted/acceptable behaviors
- to promote high standards of practice
- to provide a benchmark for members to use for
self evaluation - to establish a framework for professional
behavior and responsibilities - as a vehicle for occupational identity
- as a mark of occupational maturity"
48 - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant is
actively engaged in practice management business
consulting. - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant will
conduct himself/herself with integrity, high
moral purpose, and in the best interest of
his/her clients. - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant shall
not, for personal advantage, subordinate his/her
judgment to others or exploit client
relationships. - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant will
assume only those responsibilities for which
he/she is qualified and he/she will utilize
personnel who are capable of discharging such
functions. - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant will
regard all information acquired in serving
his/her clients as strictly confidential.
49RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
- Certified Healthcare Business Consultants are
dedicated to the highest professional standards.
Each one subscribes to, and is bound by, the
following Rules of Professional Conduct - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant shall
conduct himself/herself in accordance with the
published Code of Ethics, or equivalent
standards. - Consistent with the Code of Ethics, or equivalent
standards, a Certified Healthcare Business
Consultant shall make full disclosure, upon
request, to the Board of Examiners, of all
business activities involving the manner in which
he/she services his/her clients. - A Certified Healthcare Business Consultant shall
provide clients advanced written disclosure of
any potential conflict of interest.
50Cont.
- 5. Certified Healthcare Business Consultants
may use the professional designation, Certified
Healthcare Business Consultant, or the
abbreviation, CHBC, but only in a dignified and
judicious manner. The only proper use of the
professional designation in advertising media
shall be the designation itself. In printed
advertising media, the professional designation
shall be used only after the name of the holder
of such designation appearing in such media and
in type no larger than the type used in his/her
name. The professional designation shall not be
used in the text in such advertising.