Title: Business Communication Ethics
1Business Communication Ethics
Includes material from Guffey text Ch 1
2Examples of Dishonest Business Communication
- Abflex
- claim that 3 minutes per day on the machine will
produce a washboard stomach - Publishers Clearing House
- use of large/small font sizes and tricky wording
to encourage recipients to believe they had won a
prize and/or buying magazines increased chance of
prize. - Beach Nut
- Sold baby apple juice with picture of apple on
label, but no apples actually used in the
vitamin-enhanced sugar water
3Discussion Communication Matters
- The Truth, The Whole Truth, and Nothing But The
Truth - Why do people lie?
- What did you find helpful about this article?
4Ethical Issue Exists When
- Violation of a behavioral norm
- Intent/motive
- Causing harm
- Physical, financial, psychological
- Individual, group, society
- Higher standard for defenseless
5Five Common Ethical Traps (from Guffey)
- The false-necessity trap
- (convincing yourself that no other choice
exists) - The doctrine-of-relative-filth trap
- (comparing your unethical behavior with someone
elses even more unethical behavior) - The rationalization trap
- (justifying unethical actions with excuses)
- The self-deception trap
- (euphemistic labeling, minimizing perception of
harm) - The ends-justify-the-means trap
- (using unethical methods to accomplish a
desirable goal)
6Additional Ethical Traps(from Bandura, 1990)
- Displacement of responsibility or attribution of
blame - just following orders, he made me
- Diffusion of responsibility
- if everyone is responsible, no one is
- Dehumanization
- objectification, stereotyping (Arabs
terrorists)
7Organizational Ethical Trap Darleys Law
- Performance measurement systems can incentivise
unethical behavior - Cheating/lying to protect or advance self
- Cheating/lying to protect or advance
organization (cooking the books) - Sub-optimization - Optimize metrics to detriment
of overall organization
8Goals of Ethical Communication
- Telling the truth
- Half truths
- Exaggerations
- Deceptions
- Video Real Estate example
9Goals of Ethical Communication
- Labeling Opinions
- differentiating between facts (quantifiable
and/or verifiable) and opinions (beliefs that are
not verified) - stating opinions as if they were facts is
unethical
10Goals of Ethical Communication
- Being Objective
- recognize your own biases and keep them from
distorting your message - honest reporting means presenting the whole
picture and relating all facts fairly - Video Advertising example
11Goals of Ethical Communication
- Communicating Clearly
- use language comprehensible to average reader
- short sentences, simple words, clear organization
- Example performance goals
12Goals of Ethical Communication
- Giving Credit
- Referring to originators names within the text
- Using quotation marks
- Documenting sources
- Verbal credit for ideas from peers/subordinates
13Tools for Doing the Right Thing
Utilitarianism
Virtue
Rights
Justice
Caring
Common Good
14Rotary 4-Way Test
- Of the things we think, say or do
- Is it the TRUTH?
- Is it FAIR to all concerned?
- Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
- Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?"
15Framework for Identifying and Resolving Ethical
Issues (source Dunn Bradstreet)
- Why is this bothering me?
- Am I genuinely perplexed?
- Am I afraid to do what I know is right?
- Who else matters?
- Implications for customers, peers shareholders?
- How does the problem appear from the other side?
- Is it my responsibility?
- What will happen if I do/ dont act?
- What is the ethical concern?
- Legal obligation?
- Honesty, fairness, promise-keeping, avoiding
harm? - Whom can give me advice?
- Supervisor, peers, HR, legal, ethics hot line?
- Am I being true to myself?
- Consistency with my values and personal
commitments? With company values? - Can I share my decision with family, colleagues,
customers? - Can I see my decision on the front page of the
newspaper?
16Markkula Center for Applied Ethics (Santa Clara
College)
- What benefits and harms are produced ? which
action best overall? - What moral rights to the parties have ? which
action respects those rights? - Which action treats all equally?
- Which action advances the common good?
- Which action develops moral virtue?
17Ethical Communication Honesty/Integrity
- Being honest means more than not deceiving.
For leaders within organizations, being honest
means do not promise what you cant deliver, do
not misrepresent, do not hide behind
spin-doctored evasions, do not suppress
obligations, do not evade accountability, do not
accept that the survival of the fittest
pressures of business release any of us from the
responsibility to respect anothers dignity and
humanity. - Dalla Costa The Ethical Imperative 1998
18VIDEO
19The End