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Business 303 Sheppard

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Organizational Ethics ... The effort (& cost) of lying The diminishing of trust The duty not to lie Do you really expect politicians to tell the truth. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Business 303 Sheppard


1
Business 303 Sheppard
  • Business Society Ethics, Week 8
  • Organizational Ethics

2
BUSINESS ETHICS WEEK 8 MAIN QUESTIONS
  1. What are the individual failures that lead to
    organizational problems with the truth?
  2. What is a lie?
  3. What would make lying acceptable?
  4. Is business a special case?
  5. Does it pay to lie?
  6. Are privacy secrecy a special case?

3
1a. Autocracy Symptoms / Side-effects (1 of 6)
  • Workaholism
  • Not just a work ethic
  • Relations to others
  • Business schools?
  • Physical psychological harm
  • Ethics
  • Fixed focus on work lends itself to faulty moral
    decision making. A success at any cost!
    attitude prevails. Others are seen as means to a
    desired end.
  • The obsession is justified by pointing out
    how success at work makes the individual a major
    contributor to the greater good.

4
1b. Autocracy Symptoms / Side-effects (2 of 6)
  • Groupthink (1/2)
  • Grandiosity
  • Management will solve it
  • Scapegoating
  • Ethics Loyalty
  • Over-conforming nature the groupthink process
    lowers the quality of moral decision making.
  • The groupthink process internalizes its own
    expertise and fails to assess its own moral
    position from outsiders perspective.

5
Groupthink (2/2) Principles to reduce it
1b. Autocracy Symptoms / Side-effects (3 of 6)
  • Foster critical thinking in members
  • Dont proselytize about a preferred outcome
  • Assign the devil's advocate role to 1 or 2
    (Their duty challenge assumptions reveal
    costs)
  • Insist upon full open participation by all
  • Emphasize reality testing over consensus as a
    test of the solution to be implemented
  • Have a second-look meeting
  • Foster, at set times, the groups examination of
    its problem-solving processes

6
1c. Autocracy Symptoms / Side-effects (4 of 6)
  • Escalation (1/2)
  • Love of conflict
  • Self-destructiveness
  • Denial
  • Ethics
  • An entrapped administrator in an escalation
    processes fails to deal with threatening
    situations since these will prove that a previous
    decision by the decision maker was wrong.
  • In covering up, decision maker plays loose
    with the facts

7
1c. Autocracy Symptoms / Side-effects (5 of 6)
Escalation (2/2) results from
  • Situational behavioral entrapment traits
  • A prior investment in the pursuit of the goal
  • A choice between, getting into or out of a
    situation
  • Conditions of uncertainty surrounding the
    decision
  • A repeated series of investment decisions.
  • The behavioral or response components
  • At each decision, continue debate over future
    steps increases / highlights avoid attract
    features
  • Trapped administrators will shift from rational
    econ. to social psych. involvement in the
    situation
  • Behavior self-perpetuates as added investments
    increase degree of commitment ?over-commitment

8
1d. Autocracy Symptoms / Side-effects (6 of 6)
  • Diffusion of responsibility
  • Result of autocracy
  • Indifference
  • Ethics
  • Tragedy of commons
  • Case of WorldCom 615-619
  • Kitty Genovese _at_ Kew Gardens
  • Breann Voth _at_ the Coquitlam River?
  • Moral dilemmas in business are particularly
    susceptible to diffusion of responsibility.
  • Few see their prime task in the firm as
    attending to the moral portfolio. Attention often
    lapses or is taken seriously only when it becomes
    a crisis.

9
2. A Short Story (or what is a lie?) (1 of 3)
  • A certain abstemious ascetic was known for
    his probity, propriety, asceticism, and worship,
    and became famous for this.
  • He feared the tyrannical sovereign and decided
    to run away from his city.
  • The sovereigns command went out that he is to
    be searched for and arrested wherever he is
    found.
  • He could not leave from any
    one of the citys
    gates and was
    apprehensive lest he fall into
    the hands of the
    sovereigns men.

10
2. A Short Story (or what is a lie?) (2 of 3)
  • So he went and found a dress that is worn by
    vagabonds, put it on, carried a cymbal in his
    hand,
  • pretended to be drunk early at night, and
    came out to the gate of the city singing to the
    accompaniment of that cymbal.
  • The gatekeeper said to him, Who are you? I
    am so and so, the ascetic? he said in a jocular
    vein.
  • The gatekeeper thought he was
    poking fun at him and did not
    interfere with
    him. So he saved
    himself without having lied in
    what he said.
  • -Alfarabi, Platos Laws

11
2. A Short Story (or what is a lie?) (2 of 3)
  • Really, did he lie?
  • Is there a falsehood involved?
  • When does a misleading statement become a lie?

12
3. Three thinkers on Honesty 58
  • Aristotle Truth as Virtue
  • Kant Lies as a violation of the
  • Categorical Imperative
  • Mill Lying as having long term bad
  • consequences

13
4. Does it Pay to Lie? (1/3)
  • Business Bluffing?
  • Is there a special case for Business?
  • Built-in obsolescence
  • Pressure to deceive
  • The poker analogy
  • We dont make the laws
  • Cast illusions aside

14
4. Does it Pay to Lie? (2/3)
  • Adversarial Relationships 67
  • Internal and External costs 68
  • Is it ever right to lie 69-72?
  • The effort ( cost) of lying
  • The diminishing of trust
  • The duty not to lie

Do you really expect politicians to tell the
truth.
Do you really expect politicians to tell the
truth.
15
4. Does it Pay to Lie? (3/3)
  • Types of Lies 71
  • Less than the whole truth
  • The biased truth with self interest
  • Idealizing ones own product or service
  • Misleading information
  • True statements intended to be misinterpreted
  • Stating obvious falsehoods
  • Stating vicious falsehoods
  • Planned responses 85
  • The zombie image 71
  • Groupthink

16
5. The Logic of Trust
  • Game theory and the Prisoners' Dilemma
  • Transactions Cost
  • Tit for tat (Axelrod)

17
6. Privacy, Secrecy Transparency (1/2)
  • Definition of privacy 73
  • Deception versus
    Secrecy 75, 77
  • Equality
  • Partial individual control
  • Full control

18
6. Privacy, Secrecy Transparency (2/2)
  • Working on transparency
  • 3 types of feedback 79
  • Evaluative
  • Interpretive
  • Descriptive
  • What makes feedback effective 79-81
  • The Potemkin village problem
  • Potemkin village as any hollow or false
    construct, physical or figurative, meant to hide
    an undesirable or potentially damaging situation
  • Transparency International 88
  • The need for mutual trust beyond law 65
  • ISO to the Rescue?

19
7a. Problems (1 of 2) Why Lies Fail 85-91
  • Betrayal by clues
  • Lack a practiced lie / Poor lie / Body lang.
  • Detection apprehension
  • Lying about Feelings / Feelings about lying
  • Fear of punishment
  • Psychopathy
    (Should we train em?)
  • Shame versus guilt

20
7b. Problems (2 of 2) Can there be too much
trust?
  • Types of trust 91-93
  • Simple Trust
  • Blind Trust
  • Authentic Trust
  • Dialogue that creates trust 94
  • Case 3.3 96 Blindsided by Bankruptcy

21
8. Management Gurus Liars?
  • The Japan craze of the 1980s
  • And the Hollowing out of the Corporation
  • Science or a quick fix? 83
  • Risk awareness

22
9. Solomon on Business Ethics (1 of 2)
  • Myth of Amoral (not Immoral) Business
  • Business and Ethics dont mix
  • Morals are out of place in a profit making world
  • Ethical Businesses are successful
  • Ethics as a good business practice
  • The practice of business ethics for long term
    survival (a professional way of life)
  • Be aware of the 3 Cs of Business Ethics
  • Compliance with the rules
  • Contributions bus. can make to society
  • Consequences of business activity

23
9. Solomon on Business Ethics (2 of 2)
  • Thinking of Ethics as rules of the game
  • Consider other peoples well being
  • Think as a member of the business community (not
    as an isolated individual)
  • Obey, but dont depend solely on the law
  • Think of you your corp. as part of society
  • Obey moral rules
  • Think Objectively (from others perspectives)
  • Ask What sort of person would do such a thing
  • Respect the customs of others but not at the
    expense of your own ethics

24
B y e B y e
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