Title: Carrolls Pyramid of Social Responsibility
1Carrolls Pyramid of Social Responsibility
- Source A Carroll (1991) The pyramid of corporate
social responsibility, Business Horizons,
July-August, pp 39-48
Compare with the Reidenbach and Robin Model
2The Pyramid of Social Responsibility
PHILANTHROPIC
Responsibilities Be
a good Corporate Citizen.
Contribute resources to the
community improve quality of life.
ETHICAL Responsibilities Be
ethical. Obligation to do what is right,
just and fair Avoid harm.
LEGAL Responsibilities Obey the
Law Law is societys codification of right
and wrong Play by the rules ECONOMIC
Responsibilities Be Profitable
The foundation upon which all others rest
Source Carroll (1991)
3Level 1 ECONOMIC
- Responsibilities
- Be profitable
- The foundation upon which all other levels rest
4Economic Components
- It is important to perform in a manner consistent
with maximising earnings per share - It is important to be committed to being as
profitable as possible - It is important to maintain a strong competitive
position - It is important to maintain a high level of
operational efficiency - It is important that a successful firm be defined
as one that is consistently profitable.
5Level 2 LEGAL
Responsibilities Obey the Law Law is societys
codification of right and wrong Play by the rules
6Legal Components
- It is important to perform in a manner consistent
with expectations of government and the law. - It is important to comply with various national
and supra-national laws and regulations. - It is important to be a law-abiding corporate
citizen. - It is important that a successful firm be defines
as one that fulfils its legal obligations. - It is important to provide goods and services
that at least meet the minimal legal
requirements.
7 Level 3 ETHICAL
Responsibilities Be Ethical Obligation to do what
is right, just and fair Avoid harm.
8Ethical Components
- It is important to perform in a manner that is
consistent with the expectations of societal
mores and ethical norms. - It is important to recognise and respect new or
evolving ethical/moral norms adopted by society. - It is important to prevent ethical norms from
being compromised in order to achieve corporate
goals. - It is important that good corporate citizenship
be defined as doing what is expected morally or
ethically. - It is important to recognise that corporate
integrity and ethical behaviour go beyond mere
compliance with laws and regulations.
9 Level 4 PHILANTHROPIC
Responsibilities Be a Good Corporate
Citizen Contribute resources to the community
improve quality of life
10Philanthropic Components
- It is important to perform in a manner consistent
with the philanthropic and charitable
expectations of society. - It is important to assist the fine and performing
arts. - It is important that managers and employees
participate in voluntary and charitable
activities within their local communities. - It is important to provide assistance to public
and private educational institutions. - It is important to assist voluntarily those
projects that enhance a communitys quality of
life.
11Moral Management and Stakeholders
- Three Moral Types
- Immoral Managers
- Amoral Managers
- Moral Managers
12Immoral Managers
- Characterised by
- managers whose decisions, actions and behaviour
suggest an active opposition to what is deemed to
be right and ethical - These managers care only about their or their
organisations profitability or success - Legal issues are there to be circumvented
- Strategy is to exploit opportunities for personal
or organisational gain at any cost
13Amoral Managers
- Amoral Managers are neither immoral nor moral but
are not sensitive to the fact that their everyday
business decisions may have a deleterious effect
on others. - These managers may lack an ethical perspective in
their organisational lives. - Typically their orientation is to the letter of
the law as their ethical guide. - Sometimes we can have a sub category - the
unintentional amoral manager
14Un-intentional Amoral Manager
- These managers are un-intentionally amoral in
their behaviour. They tend to see ethical issues
are for their private lives not their business
lives, where different rules apply. - They tend to believe that business activity
resides outside the sphere to which moral
judgements may apply. - Amoral managers here may not consider a role for
ethics in business.
15The Moral Manager
- In moral management, ethical norms that adhere to
a high standard of right behaviour are employed - Moral managers not only conform to accepted and
high levels of professional conduct, they also
lead on issues of ethical behaviour. - The law is seen as giving a minimal guide to
ethical behaviour. The spirit of the law in
more important than the letter of the law. The
objective is to operate well above what the law
mandates the firm to do.
16The Moral Manager
- Moral mangers want to be profitable and ethical.
- Moral mangers will use ethical principles to base
their judgements upon - justice, rights, the
Golden Rule, utilitarianism etc. - When ethical dilemmas arise, moral managers and
moral companies will tend to assume leadership in
their companies and industries.
Compare this model with the Reidenbach Robin
Model
17The Three Moral Types
- Orientation towards Stakeholders
- Shareholders
- Employees
- Customers
- Local Community
18Moral Types and Stakeholders
- Our goal is to gain a fuller understanding of
what it means to engage in moral management and
what this implies in terms of relationships with
key stakeholders. - The next four slides are in table form showing
the orientation of moral types and stakeholder
orientations.
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23Finally
- Though the concept of social responsibility may
change from time to time, the pyramid model gives
us a framework for understanding the evolving
nature of the firms economic, legal, ethical and
philanthropic performance.
24Issues, Questions and Reflections
- Marketing Ethics
- Social Responsibility
- Moral Management
25Marketing and Ethics
- From Buyer Beware to Seller Beware
- See
- Smith, N.C., (1995) Marketing Strategies for the
Ethics Era, Sloan Management Review, Summer, pp.
85-97.
26Marketing Ethics Continuum
Producer Interests Producer
Interests Favoured Less
favoured Consumer Interests
Consumer Interests Less Favoured
More Favoured
Caveat Industry Ethics
Consumer Caveat Emptor
Practice Codes Sovereignty
Venditor
Profit General business Codes of
Capability Consumer maximisation
practice (average individual
satisfaction across all firms)
firms Information Subject to
Practices of Industry
Choice legal constraints specific industries
codes Practice of
Professional best firms codes
Source N C Smith (1995)
27Some Ethical Maxims
- Marketers often rely on simple maxims to
evaluate their marketing practices. While useful,
they generally lack specific guidance. - Do unto others as you would have them do unto
you. - Would you be embarrassed in front of your family/
friends/ colleagues if the media publicised your
decision ? - Good ethics is in the long term interests of the
firm. - Would an objective panel of professional
colleagues view my actions as proper ? - When in doubt, dont.
- Read the article in the reading list
entitled Ethics - a view from the trenches
28Social Responsibility
- Look at the principles of key companies -
Shell, Lockheed Martin and Body Shop - The new Philanthropy
Shells principles can be found in the Shell
folder in Readings
29Some Issues to Consider
- Compare the Carroll Model with the Reidenbach and
Robin Model. Look at the similarities and
differences. - Read the section in the Visions folder
particularly on the articles by - Malcolm McIntosh - particularly focus on the last
paragraph which quotes Timberlands mission
statement. See next slide - Glazebrook and Birch
- Go to the web sites of Shell, Lockheed Martin and
Body Shop. Compare their principles of
business. - Where would you place them on model ? Why?
30Timberlands Mission Statement
- We do not give money to charity. Instead we
try to create a return. We create values for our
customers, the community and the non-profit
organisations we work with. The traditional
notion of philanthropy is not adequate. It is not
smart or wise to approach social problems with
the financial leftovers of companies. - Consider this statement carefully, and reflect on
the issues that it addresses. To what extent can
this statement be be said to be enlightened?
What is your position about businesses and the
community and how does this relate to Carrolls
model and moral types ?
31Moral Management Cartel - 1999 Style
32Vitamins Inc - An International Cartel
Featuring Europes Top Companies BASF -
Germany Roche - Switzerland Rhone-Poulnec -
France This Cartel lasted 9 years and was busted
in May 1999 Members were fined 725m under US
Anti-trust laws and a Senior Executive was jailed
for 4 months and fined 100,000 See FT cuttings
in Readings/Cartel Folder
33Vitamins Inc How to Run an Efficient Cartel
- Hold and annual summit between hot shot
executives in late summer - Negotiate a budget for the year, covering prices
and sales volumes around the world - Fix quarterly meetings between mid-level managers
to watch each others figures - Police the cartels targets with regular
telephone calls - Review each years performance at a
shareholders meeting of top executives
34Questions for Reflection
- Where would you classify these three companies on
the Carroll and the Reidenbach and Robin Model ? - What would morale and attitudes of managers be in
other parts of the these firms ? - Can firms like Roche and BASF be moral and
ethical in their other SBUs, while at the same
time be manipulating the market by running an
illegal cartel ? Discuss. - Would you be attracted to such a firm for a
managerial opportunity ?