Title: Chapter 6 Management Ethics
1Chapter 6Management Ethics
2Objectives
- Understand the relationships among the legal,
ethical and moral laws. - Comprehend the professional responsibilities of
managers. - Be able to demonstrate the benefits of ethical
management for managers, as well as
organizations. - Apply ethical tests to management actions.
3Can ethics be taught to managers?
- An increasing demand for training in the field of
management ethics for supervisors and managers. - Prevalent in training and education segments of
the hospitality and tourism industry. - Industry leaders and educators believe there is a
need to include some form of ethical training in
programs of higher learning for managers.
4Purpose of Ethics Training Programs
- Create awareness of ethical issues that surround
managerial decision making - Provide a paradigm for proactive management
practices - Convince managers of the need to promote
management as a profession
5Experienced HR practitioners include these
criteria in their management selection activities
- Complete rigorous advanced technical and
supervisory training programs. - Subscribe to high levels of personal and
professional conduct, and should contribute to
society through the practice of management. - Subscribe to codes of ethics established by their
colleagues. - Entry to the field of management should be
restricted to those individuals who possess the
ability and appropriate character to work in a
professional capacity.
6Whats in it for the manager?
- These qualities make a respected manager
- Proactive manager is a balanced individual who is
passionate about the challenges and meaning of
his/ her work. - Proactive management must make good business
sense. - Unethical activities may have adverse impacts on
these managers on both personal and professional
levels.
7Moral and Social Audits
- Both are part of the annual strategic planning
process for the organization in the hospitality
and tourism industry
8Are proactive managers ethical managers? -Moral
evaluation of proactive managers
9Moral Audits
- Focuses on activities within the organization
-
- Evaluate the actions of workers, managers, and
shareholders and compare those actions with the
codes of ethics for the corporation - Designed by a cross section of managers from
every level of the corporation - Form ethic committee to audit the code of ethics
for relevancy on an annual basis
10Social Audits
- Focuses attention outside of the organization
- Provides information concerning the outcomes of
decisions on the environment outside the
organization - Focus on the customer and community
stakeholder groups
11Five Professional Responsibilities of Hospitality
Managers
- Carefully select the hospitality organization
they represent - Acquire and maintain levels of training and
education to ensure competency - Concerns a thorough technical comprehension of
hospitality/tourism interfaces - Require the skills to establish and maintain
standards designed to ensure the welfare of all
stakeholder groups associated with a hospitality
organization - Concern personal and professional conduct to
exemplify integrity as an industry leader and a
member of the social community
12Professional Responsibilities of Hospitality
Managers - Hospitality and Tourism Management
Responsibilities Self-Questionnaire
13Cultural Diversity
- Culture
- A simple definition Shared values, attitudes,
and beliefs - The values for one culture may be incongruent
with those for another culture. - When individuals disagree with or misunderstand
the values of other cultures, conflict occurs.
14Cultural Diversity
- American culture consists of influences from many
races, ethnic backgrounds, communities and global
regions. - Individuals must learn to disregards cultural
differences and embrace cultural similarities - The essence of cultural diversity training
programs
15Cultural Diversity- Organizational Culture
- The collection of shared values, attitudes and
beliefs for members of that organization. - They assimilate into the organization as an
employee and begin to understand the unwritten
core philosophies and rules for behavior in that
organization (norms or acceptable behavior) - Norms include traditions, rites, rituals,
ceremonies, and celebrations within the
organization. - Behaviors including dress codes, formality
levels,
inside humor, buzzwords, company acronyms, and
others are symptoms of the organizational
culture.
16Cultural Diversity- Organizational Climate
- A collective worker emotional response to the
practices of that organization. - The relationship of workers to the organization.
- The climate within an organization- mood,
perceptions, opinions, morale levels, loyalty
levels, enthusiasm, and other attributes relative
to the relationship of workers to the
organization.
17Cultural Relativism vs. Universality
- Two opposite concepts
- Relativism is relative to individual environments
- When in Rome, do as the Romans
- Universality is the same in every level and area
18Cultural Relativism vs. Universality
- Legal laws are Jurisdictional- therefore they are
relative - Codes of Ethics are universal-
- The same codes of correct behavior should prevail
regardless of the immediate environment - Morals
- Personal convictions of correct thinking and
behavior within an individual that are at the
highest level of ethical thinking - The same despite the environment
19Motivation to Commit Immoral and Unethical Acts
- Self- egoism
- Personal greed
- Narcissists
- Those individuals who care only for their own
welfare despite the harm their actions cause to
others. - Motivated primarily by personal gain with little
regard to the ramifications experienced by
others. - Ethical Relativism
- Situational ethics or ethic of convenience
- Justify their actions in some manner
- Everyone does it
- Involves actions that are contrary to universality
20Ethical Tests
- Testing the correctness of an action from an
ethical perspective - Consequential testing
- Formalist testing
21Ethical Tests1. Consequential testing
- Based on the consequences or results of an action
- Utilitarianism (The most common type of
consequential testing) - Focuses on the utility of the consequences of
an action by measuring the harm or good inflicted
on others as a result of the action - Maximize good and minimize harm through ones
actions
22Ethical Tests2. Formalist approach
- Focus solely on the form or intent of the
action - no regard for the consequences of the action
- Emanuel Kant process that categorical
imperative - An action must pass all three categories to be
considered morally correct - Test 1 -- Universality
- Test 2 -- Beings as ends
- Test 3 -- Autonomy
- If it is considered to be morally correct then
the person has a duty to do the action
(imperative)
23Ethical Tests- 2. Formalist approach Categorical
Imperative
24Ethics and HRM
- HR managers are responsible for training managers
in ethical thinking, Includes - Proactive management
- Strategic thinking
- Codes of ethics
- Social and moral audits
- Ethical testing
- HR practitioner must be an eclectic manager.
- As an internal adjudicator within the company
- Function as a managers manager
- well versed in matters of legal, ethical and
moral law for the purpose of testing the actions
of managers to ensure the prevention of harm on
any member of the stakeholder groups