Title: Professional Ethics: Obsolete or Replaced
1Professional Ethics Obsolete or Replaced?
by Earl Johnson, Jr., Sr. Consultant Millican
Associates
- ARMA Houston Chapters 2005 Spring Conference
- Information Powers Success
- Stafford, TX
- April 26-28, 2005
2What you will take away
- A realization that meaningful conflict is a
cornerstone in healthy, successful organizations
due to the dependence on business ethics. - A better appreciation of the real costs to our
society when our leaders fail ethically, and the
price we pay. - A set of learning tools that can be used to
build, rebuild, and/or strengthen your own
foundational ethical standards and principles.
3What are ethics?
- Ethics is about deciding whether an action is
good or bad and what to do about it if it is
bad. - The problem in discussing ethics is that it turns
everybody into judge and jury, each deciding what
is good or bad behavior, inevitably attempting to
impose that judgment on others. -
- Peter de Jager, The Information Management
Journal -
September/October 2002
4Professional Ethics
- How many of you consider yourselves to be ethical
people?
2. How many of you believe that it is important
for businesses to function in an ethical manner?
3. How many of you believe you know an ethical
dilemma when you see it?
4. How many of you feel there are clear answers
to ethical problems?
5. Now, how many of you believe that you always
know an ethical dilemma when it arises, and
always know how to resolve it?
5Business ethics timeline
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
Ethical Climate
Ethical Dilemma
Ethical Develop-ment
SOURCE www.ethics.org
6Ethics in the workplace
Proportion of employees who admit
SOURCE The Wall Street Journal Online
7Who do we trust (by profession)?
- Gallup Poll News Service Annual Survey on
Honesty and Ethical Standards, 12/7/2004
83 Approaches to Dealing With Ethical Dilemmas
- Neglect, or an absence of formal ethical programs
- 2. Compliance programs based on regulations to
prevent violations - Values oriented program that combines functional
values with individual responsibility
9The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics Is Power because for people who operate
ethically their word is their bond. Time
consuming and costly written agreements aren't
needed. - Ethics Is Power because for people who operate
ethically, there are no hidden agendas to worry
about. - Ethics Is Power because you dont have to watch
your back. - Ethics is Power because it fosters the
development of one of the most crucial success
elements for organizations - trust.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
10The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics is Power because those known to operate
ethically are preferred team members revered as
even equal to and sometimes greater than
technical competence. - Ethics is Power because operating ethically
increases ones Rep or reputation in the firm,
a key to the amount of informal influence and
power they possess in the eyes of others.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
11The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics is Power because ethical people are more
resistant to influence attempts from political
Sharks who use unethical means. The power of
those acting unethically is thus dampened and the
overall ethical influence is enhanced by
comparison. - Ethics is Power because ethics means doing the
right thing which often results in doing the
right things for the task. Doing things right
increases the chances of success and success
usually increases power. A bit convoluted but
true nonetheless.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
12The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics is Power because bosses who believe their
subordinates are ethical worry less that they
will be negatively surprised by something wrong
in their unit. They know the person will tell
them if something is going wrong that could
embarrass the boss in the organization. Often the
result is a boss who is willing to delegate more
responsibility to an ethical person, other
factors being equal. This can give the ethical
person more responsibility and influence.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
13The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics is Power because ethical people are less
likely to spend precious energy in internal turf
battles, both personally and departmentally. This
can free up an enormous amount of energy for task
accomplishment which versus internal friction. It
thus empowers teams and organizations to better
serve customers and operate more efficiently. The
result can be greater power and influence in the
market place.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
14The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics is Power because operating ethically can
increase personal self esteem. Those with high
self esteem often have high confidence which can
make them more powerful and influential with
others than those with low self esteem. - Ethics is Power because those higher in the
organization are more likely to listen to someone
they know to be ethical versus someone who they
believe are trying to advance personal versus
organizational agendas.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
15The Bakers Dozen
- Ethics is Power because ethical environments are
more likely to bring out peoples personal best
instead of their personal worst - often the
result of unethical environments. When ordinary
people are functioning together at their personal
best they are often capable of extraordinary
performance thus increasing personal and
organizational impact and power.
from the book Political Savvy by Dr. Joel
DeLuca, Ph.D. www.politicalsavvy.com
16Are things getting better?
Chuck Prince Citigroups CEO wants to be the
chief executive officer who brings a new culture
of ethics He argues that Citigroup's leaders
-- himself included -- failed to make their own
values and ethics part of the fabric of the
corporation. "We emphasized the short-term
performance side of the equation exclusively," he
said. "We didn't think we had to say And by the
way, don't violate the law.' There were unspoken
assumptions that need to be spoken." It wont
be easy. Citigroup played a pivotal role in
financing fraud-ridden Enron, WorldCom, and
Adelphia among others. Its private Japanese bank
flouted regulators, and European bond traders
developed a trading strategy so extreme its been
dubbed "Dr. Evil." The company has been caught
misbehaving multiple times, on multiple
continents. The first sign Mr. Prince was
serious about all this came when he fired three
senior executives for failing to manage the Japan
problem.
Source The Wall Street Journal, March 2, 2005
17Earl Johnson, Jr.
- Senior Consultant
- Millican Associates
- 2699 Stirling Road, Suite C106
- Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33312
- (954) 963-1771
- ejohnson_at_millican-assoc.com
- www.millican-assoc.com