Ethics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ethics

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February 21st Ford/Firestone background Long History 1999 14 deaths in Saudi Arabia (not reported in US) 2000 first deaths reported in the US Tires recalled In ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethics


1
Ethics
  • February 21st

2
Ford/Firestone
3
background
  • Long History
  • 1999 14 deaths in Saudi Arabia (not reported in
    US)
  • 2000 first deaths reported in the US
  • Tires recalled

4
  • In December 2000, Firestone blamed Ford
  • Firestone tires worked fine on Rangers problems
    were limited to Explorers
  • SUVs role over easily independent of the tires
  • In August 2001, Ford blamed Firestone
  • Goodyear tires work fine
  • May 21st 2001, Ford and Firestone officially part
    ways

5
Wherein lies the blame?
  • Ford
  • Ford was alone SUV makers in equipping the
    Explorer with Class C tires versus class B tires
  • To be a class C tire you have to withstand two
    hours at 50 mph when properly inflated and
    loaded, plus another 90 minutes at speeds up 85
    mph. (The standards were set in 1968)
  • Class B tires are more heat resistant
  • most Explorer death took place in hot Southern
    States and hot-climate countries
  • The Good year tires that were used on the
    Explorer were class B
  • Ford should have been aware of dangers (perhaps
    not immediately but certainly after a few years)

6
  • Firestone
  • Early investigations linked deadly vehicle
    accidents to tire failure, shoddy manufacturing
    in the Decatur, Illinois plant
  • Still GM picked Firestone as its supplier of the
    year for the sixth consecutive time in 2001
  • Government
  • Too slow to investigate deaths or to upgrade
    standards
  • Driver
  • Neglected tire pressure, too heavy loading,
    driving too fast for extended periods of time.

7
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8
Consequences
  • In may of 2001 Ford announced it would triple the
    size of the Firestone recalla 2.8 billion
    prospect, a cost Ford wanted to shift to
    Firestone
  • At that time Firestone refused to supply the
    company with more tires.
  • Ford lost market share to foreign rivals, in July
    of 2001 it reported its first loss from
    operations since 1992

9
  • Ford also faced 200 product liabilities lawsuits
    involving Explorer rollovers
  • Bridgestone/Firestone faced a more dangerous
    situation in 2000 earnings dropped 80
  • Legal expenses were at 750 million and were
    expected to reach billions of dollars
  • Some analysts doubted Firestone as a brand could
    survive

10
Firestone Options
  • Option 1
  • Deemphasize firestone and push business to the
    Bridgestone label
  • Option 2
  • Stop using the firestone brand altogether
  • Option 3
  • Try to salvage the brand name The American
    Public is quick to forget.

11
Postmortem
  • Buyers of Ford Explorers with firestone tires
    faced higher risks of deaths and injuries for
    years. The New York times reported that the tire
    defects were known in 1996. Not till three years
    later did Ford replace tires in Saudi Arabia and
    not till after television reports on problems did
    federal regulators and the two manufacturers take
    it seriously

12
  • Ford refused to admit that anything was wrong
    with its SUV
  • Firestone was slow to clean up defective
    manufacturing practices in Decatur, Illinois and
    other plants
  • Minor ethical abuses became major when lives were
    lost. Still the companies delayed until lawyers
    were brought in. Then each company tried to
    blame the other.
  • Throughout this time, saving lives did not
    apparently have a very high priority.

13
Group Think
  • The unethical behavior of groups
  • The Abilene paradox

14
Eight Main Symptoms of Group Think
  • Illusion of Invulnerability Members ignore
    obvious danger, take extreme risk, and are overly
    optimistic.
  • Collective Rationalization Members discredit and
    explain away warning contrary to group thinking.
  • Illusion of Morality Members believe their
    decisions are morally correct, ignoring the
    ethical consequences of their decisions.
  • Excessive Stereotyping The group constructs
    negative stereotypes of rivals outside the group.

15
  • Pressure for Conformity Members pressure any in
    the group who express arguments against the
    group's stereotypes, illusions, or commitments,
    viewing such opposition as disloyalty.
  • Self-Censorship Members withhold their
    dissenting views and counter-arguments.
  • Illusion of Unanimity Members perceive falsely
    that everyone agrees with the group's decision
    silence is seen as consent.
  • Mindguards Some members appoint themselves to
    the role of protecting the group from adverse
    information that might threaten group
    complacency.

16
Examples
  • The most famous example of Groupthink is the
    presidential advisory group who almost led
    Kennedy into invading Cuba and potential nuclear
    war in the Bay of Pigs affair.
  • The Challenger disaster was another effect where
    NASA officials disregarded engineers concerns
    and decided to launch the shuttle.

17
Abilene Paradox
  • The Abilene paradox is a paradox in which the
    limits of a particular situation force a group of
    people to act in a way that is directly the
    opposite of their actual preferences. It is a
    phenomenon that occurs when groups continue with
    misguided activities which no group member
    desires because no member is willing to raise
    objections. It was observed by management expert
    Jerry B. Harvey in his 1988 book The Abilene
    Paradox and other Meditations on Management. The
    name of the phenomenon comes from an anecdote in
    the book which Harvey uses to elucidate the
    paradox

18
  • On a hot afternoon visiting in Coleman, Texas,
    the family is comfortably playing dominoes on a
    porch, until the father-in-law suggests that they
    take a trip to Abilene (53 miles away) for
    dinner. The wife says, "Sounds like a great
    idea." The husband, despite having reservations
    because the drive is long and hot, thinks that
    his preferences must be out-of-step with the
    group and says, "Sounds good to me. I just hope
    your mother wants to go." The mother-in-law then
    says, "Of course I want to go. I haven't been to
    Abilene in a long time."
  • The drive is hot, dusty, and long. When they
    arrive at the cafeteria, the food is as bad. They
    arrive back home four hours later, exhausted.
  • One of them dishonestly says, "It was a great
    trip, wasn't it." The mother-in-law says that,
    actually, she would rather have stayed home, but
    went along since the other three were so
    enthusiastic. The husband says, "I wasn't
    delighted to be doing what we were doing. I only
    went to satisfy the rest of you." The wife says,
    "I just went along to keep you happy. I would
    have had to be crazy to want to go out in the
    heat like that." The father-in-law then says that
    he only suggested it because he thought the
    others might be bored.
  • The group sits back, perplexed that they together
    decided to take a trip which none of them wanted.
    They each would have preferred to sit
    comfortably, but did not admit to it when they
    still had time to enjoy the afternoon.

19
Avoiding Group Think
  • The group should be made aware of the causes and
    consequences of group think.
  • The leader should be neutral when assigning a
    decision-making task to a group, initially
    withholding all preferences and expectations.
    This practice will be especially effective if the
    leaders consistently encourages an atmosphere of
    open inquiry.
  • The leader should give high priority to airing
    objections and doubts, and be accepting of
    criticism.
  • Groups should always consider unpopular
    alternatives, assigning the role of devil's
    advocate to several strong members of the group.
  • Sometimes it is useful to divide the group into
    two separate deliberative bodies as feasibilities
    are evaluated.

20
  • Spend a sizable amount of time surveying all
    warning signals from rival group and
    organizations.
  • After reaching a preliminary consensus on a
    decision, all residual doubts should be expressed
    and the matter reconsidered.
  • Outside experts should be included in vital
    decision making.
  • Tentative decisions should be discussed with
    trusted colleagues not in the decision-making
    group.
  • The organization should routinely follow the
    administrative practice of establishing several
    independent decision-making groups to work on the
    same critical issue or policy.

21
Questions
  • Can a firm guarantee complete product safety?
  • Based on the information presented which company
    do you think is more to blame for the deaths and
    injuries?
  • If an Explorer driver never checks the tire
    pressure and drives well above the speed limit,
    he has no one to blame but himself in an
    accidentnot the vehicle and not the tires.

22
  • Do you think the government should be blamed in
    the Explorer deaths and injuries?
  • Have you had any experience with a Ford?
  • Have you had any experience with Firestone tires?

23
What can be learned
  • A firm today must zealously guard against product
    liability suits
  • Thorough product testing
  • Suspicions and complaints about product safety
    must be thoroughly investigated
  • Health and safety of customers is entirely
    compatible with the firms well-being
  • Lose/lose scenario if customer safety is ignored
  • If you dont do it for ethical or moral reasons
    do it because it make good business sense

24
  • Salvage strategy
  • Attempt to tough it out, try to combat bad press,
    deny culpability, blame someone else, resort to
    the strongest legal defense. (this is what Ford
    did because it blamed Firestone for everything)
  • Shredded tires were obvious and hard to blame on
    somebody else
  • Conciliatory strategy
  • Full admission of problem and removal of risk
  • Both strategies can be costly Salvage puts
    potential costs in the future, Conciliatory puts
    costs now
  • Where blame is most likely shared, the solution
    of the problem lies not in confrontation but in
    cooperation

25
  • Ford and Firestone today
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