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Got Ethics?
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Article 4: Identify Your Ethical Measurements
Most business people think
they are ethical.
How do they know? How do you measure goodness,
honesty or systematically doing the right thing?
Anyone who doesn’t believe in the existence of
an absolute standard of right and wrong—who
thinks a certain behavior is moral in one
circumstance and not in another—will have
difficulty setting standards by which to measure
ethical behavior.
Here’s a measurement that Kenneth Blanchard,
management consultant and author of The
One-Minute Manager (Penguin Putnam Inc, 1983)
has suggested: Would you go home and brag to
your spouse, children and mom about what you are
doing?
One study found that about 10 percent of workers
leave their jobs because of their employer’s
unethical business practices. Study the
employees, vendors and advisers who have stopped
doing business with your firm. Was lack of
ethics a reason?
Another study reported that 65 percent of
employees know about an ethical violation at
their workplace but don’t report it. What
percentage of your employees would do the same?
One in eight employees feel pressure at work to
make ethical compromises. Are your workers among
them?
Six in 10 employees say their organization is
highly ethical. What would your employees say?
How about your vendors? Your customers?
These and similar questions will help you
measure what your company’s ethical standards
really are, not just what you think they are or
hope they will be perceived to be.
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