Title: Personal and Organizational Ethics
1Personal and Organizational Ethics
7
1
2 Chapter Seven Objectives
- To understand the different levels at which
business ethics may be addressed - To appreciate principles of personal ethical
decision-making - To identify factors affecting an organizations
moral climate - Describe actions or strategies to improve ethical
climate
2
3Chapter Seven Outline
- Levels at which Ethical Issues May Be Addressed
- Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Managing Organizational Ethics
- From Moral Decisions to Moral Organizations
- Summary
4Introduction to Chapter Seven
- This chapter focuses on the day-to-day ethical
issues that managers face
5Levels at Which Ethical Issues May Be Addressed
- Personal levelsituations faced in personal life
(income tax, doing kids homework, etc.) - Organizational levelworkplace situations faced
as managers and employees (cutting corners, etc.)
6Levels at Which Ethical Issues May Be Addressed
- Industrial levelsituations confronted as
professionals (the practices of stockbrokers,
accountants, etc.) - Societal and international levelslocal-to-global
situations confronted indirectly as a management
team
7Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Resolving Ethical Conflicts
- Three Approaches
- Conventional (covered in Chapter 6)
- Principles
- Ethical tests
8Personal and Managerial Ethics
Principles Approach
Anchors decision making on an ethical principle
such as
- Utilitarianism
- Rights
- Justice
- Caring
- Virtue ethics
- Servant leadership
- Golden Rule
9Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Principle of Utilitarianism focuses on an act
that produces the greatest ratio of good to evil
for everyone - Consequentialist theory
10Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Principle of Rights focuses on examining and
possibly protecting individual moral or legal
rights
11Personal and Managerial Ethics
12Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Principle of justice involves considering what
alternative promotes fair treatment of people - Types of justice
- Distributive
- Compensatory
- Procedural
- Rawlsian
13Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Rawls Justice
- Each person has an equal right to the most basic
liberties comparable with similar liberties for
others - Social and economic inequalities are arranged so
that they are both - reasonably expected to be to everyones advantage
and - attached to positions and offices open to all
people
14Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Principle of caring focuses on a person as a
relational (cooperative) and not as an individual - Feminist theory
- Virtue ethics focuses on individuals becoming
imbued with virtues - Aristotle and Plato
15Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Servant leadership focuses on serving others
first such as employees, customers, community and
so on
16Personal and Managerial Ethics
Characteristics of Servant Leaders
- Foresight
- Conceptualization
- Commitment to the growth of people
- Stewardship
- Building community
- Listening
- Empathy
- Healing
- Persuasion
- Awareness
17Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Golden rule focuses on the premise that you
should of unto others as you would have them do
unto you
18Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Concerns to be Addressed in Ethical Conflicts
- Obligations
- Ideals
- Effects
19Personal and Managerial Ethics
- When Our Obligations, Ideals and Effects
Conflicts - When two or more moral obligations conflict, use
the stronger one - When two or more ideals conflict, or when ideals
conflict with obligations, honor the more
important one - When effects are mixed, choose the action that
produces the greatest good and the least harm
20Personal and Managerial Ethics
- Ethics Test Approach
- Test of common sense
- Test of ones best self
- Test of making something public
- Test of ventilation
- Gag test
21Managing Organizational Ethics
Factors Affecting the Morality of Managers
22Managing Organizational Ethics
- Factors Influencing Unethical Behavior
- Behavior of superiors
- Ethical practices of ones industry or profession
- Behavior of ones peers in the organization
- Formal organizational policy (or lack of one)
- Personal financial need
23Managing Organizational Ethics
6-23
24Managing Organizational Ethics
Questionable Behaviors of Superiors or Peers
- Amoral decision making
- Unethical acts, behaviors or practices
- Acceptance or legality as the standard behavior
- Absence of ethical leadership
25Managing Organizational Ethics
Questionable Behaviors of Superiors or Peers
- Objects and evaluation systems overemphasizing
profits - Insensitivity toward how subordinates perceive
pressure to meet goals - Inadequate formal ethics policies
26Improving Ethical Climate
Ethics Programs Officers
Ethics Audit
Effective Communication
Realistic Objectives
Top Management Leadership
Ethics Training
Ethical Decision-making Processes
Codes of Conduct
Whistle-blowing Mechanisms (Hotlines)
Discipline of Violators
Codes of Conduct
27Ethical Decision-Making
28Ethics Audits and Self-Assessment
29From Moral Decisions to Moral Organizations
Moral Decision(s) Moral Manager(s) Moral
Organization
30Selected Key Terms
- Codes of conduct
- Codes of ethics
- Compensatory justice
- Distributive justice
- Ethical tests
- Ethical audits
- Golden rule
- Legal rights
- Moral rights
- Principle of caring
- Principle of justice
- Principle of rights
- Principle of utilitarianism
- Procedural justice
- Rights
- Servant leadership
- Utilitarianism
- Virtue ethics