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Right and wrong in a for-profit world

The World's Most Ethical Companies

June 11th, 2008 @ 2:12 pm

2 Comments

Categories: Ethics, Office Life, Personal Conduct

Tags: Ethics, Business Ethics, Leadership, Management, William Baker

ethosphere.gifWhat does it mean to be named to Ethisphere’s list of the World’s Most Ethical Companies? Well, it’s been a week since the list was announced, and those companies who were honored followed through on a topic I discussed in a recent post — they sold their ethics. They’re doing the right thing and being recognized for it, so they’re capitalizing on this honor by letting the increasingly ethics-conscious public know about it. Smart.

What else does it mean? Profits. As I mentioned yesterday, companies that behave ethically routinely outperform their shady competitors. The companies named to the Ethisphere list are crushing the S & P 500.

So how do you get on this list? Well, you act ethically. You do the right thing. You bring about ideas that will expand the public well being. This is the no-brainer part.

But no company is an angel. All companies take a hit for bad practices at one time or another. I’ve even questioned some on the list (see Starbucks‘ tip dilemma). But what separates these companies from the rest, as Ethisphere so eloquently puts it, is that they respond to a crisis “not with a PR campaign, but with real action, such as complete transparency for the public and significant effort given to fixing the core problem.”

Everyone does the wrong thing sometimes. Responding with the right thing is how you reclaim your ethics.

 
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    1

    ptiseo

    06/12/08 | Report as spam

    Ethisphere Doesn't Know

    I have a problem.

    I work for a company that deals with a company listed on Ethisphere. From my angle, they are one of the most UNETHICAL companies, esp. with respect to the "integrity track record and reputation" category, which accounts for 20% of the weighted rank. We see evidence all the time about their disregard for their client base. Sure, they have some "green" initiatives that make for good press, but they otherwise bend almost any client over any chance they get. It's what keeps us in business.

    At our workplace, Ethisphere has become a joke because of this one ranking alone. We'd love more insight into their methodology, but that is, not suprisingly, scantily provided in their website.

    I'd take their rankings with a block of salt...

  •  
    2

    wherestheline

    06/12/08 | Report as spam

    Re: Ethisphere Doesn't Know

    Alphadogg, I think you're very right to take Ethisphere's rankings "with a block of salt..." It is simply impossible for any list of this sort to cover all the bases, dig into every corner, and all too often they are swayed by those positive initiatives that, as you say, make good press.

    The best things about such lists is that they trigger discussion and force us to make our own analysis, our own list. And within this process, learning takes place. You say you deal with one of these companies and they're unethical... I'll be you've learned a bit about your own ethics in thinking of why.

    But you did not name the company. Why not? And is that ethical or unethical?

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