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Right and wrong in a for-profit world

Lessons of an Ethics Writer

June 17th, 2008 @ 8:48 am

6 Comments

Categories: Ethics, General, Personal Conduct

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

A year-and-a-half ago, when I was asked to write this ethics blog, I wrote out a short introductory post. So today, my last day writing this blog, I took a quick look at it.

Everything you need to survive in today’s business world you probably learned in the schoolyard. How to choose your fights; when to stand up to the big kids; when to just take your ball and go home.

I’ve learned a lot in these past 18 months. But looking at that first post, I realize that while my ethics have sharpened from writing about them almost every day, my core beliefs remain the same. Everything you need to survive in the ethical minefield of business is schoolyard stuff, the things you learned back when you were learning how to navigate through the “rights” and “wrongs” of this world. The playground is bigger, but the rules are the same.

My favorite part of writing this blog was finding those ethics dilemmas that have no clear right or wrong answer, and posing them to you. Because in these uncomfortable spaces, learning occurs. We teach ourselves.

I’m not one to sit down and write out “rules to live by” or “top 10 maxims” or whatever it is that they display in Powerpoints at seminars. But within these tricky dilemmas, there are things I learned myself, things that sprang up again and again in my mind as I weighed a situation, and I will share them here:

  • Profit never outweighs wrong.
  • The solution to a tricky ethical dilemma is often to just say “no.”
  • The best way to deal with a bad idea it to come up with a better one.
  • If your gut tells you something is wrong, it probably is. Listen to your instincts.
  • There are some work environments that you can’t fix, so dust off your resume.
  • You can’t blame anyone else if you get caught up in ethically questionable behavior. There are no victims when “no” is available.
  • Tolerating poor ethical behavior is just as bad as doing it yourself.
  • The ethical character of an organization is dictated from the top down. Establish an environment where employees know that cutting corners will not be tolerated, and they won’t.
  • Your own ethical character is tied in with the companies you do business with. Not all clients are good clients.
  • You are a citizen of humanity. Selfish goals cannot outweigh the greater good.
  • Writing down a code of conduct is a good thing. Establishing it by example is even better.
 
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  •  
    1

    BP2008

    06/18/08 | Report as spam

    Good Post and Good Blog

    Funny, I just came across your blog today..on the same day that you're closing shop it looks like. I really enjoyed this post and the "lessons learned" that you passed on, right on the mark in my view. Just curious why you're closing down the blog? Simply, time to move on? Low readership?

    Sorry I didn't find you sooner!

  •  
    2

    mjs010

    06/18/08 | Report as spam

    Always thought the term "business ethics" was

    ...an oxymoron. However, reading your blog gave me hope that someone was bringing the issue into the light. Some good discussion came out as result of this blog.

    Thanks, I will miss your discussions.

  •  
    3

    joesmum

    06/18/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Lessons of an Ethics Writer

    As a teacher of Ethics in IT I've found your blogs invaluable - nice and short, to the point and always highlighting an important issue. We (the students and I) will miss these posts)

  •  
    4

    ingoodcompany

    06/18/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Lessons of an Ethics Writer

    I don't usually often refer to Scripture in business blog posts. But in this case, at the end of this blog on "Ethics", it seems appropriate to close it out with a Biblical quote from the Apostle Paul who was writing to Timothy about what men's personalities and behaviours would eventually become. Well, "eventually" has arrived. Bad (thoughtless) choices create ethical challenges, and subsequent ethics choices then often boil down to picking the lesser of two or more evils. By this I do not fanatically imply that 'business is intrinsically bad' or that people engaged in business are likewise evil. That would be silly. But our inability to think things through completely to their logical end, and our willingness to implement for short term gain all too often wreak havoc on our families, neighbors, coworkers and communities...and even society as a whole. From Henry Ford's well-meaning invention leading to today's crippling dependence on oil and pollution, to to the decisions of the Dutch to engage in African slave trade to the Americas leading to today's myriad social ills, it all boils down to one simple poem by Piet Hein,

    "For every problem
    there are solutions galore.
    But each problem we solve
    creates ten problems more."

    Thank you Mr. Hein.
    And thanks to the Apostle Paul for recording the following:

    (2 Timothy 3:1-10) "But know this, that in the last days critical times hard to deal with will be here. 2??For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, self-assuming, haughty, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, disloyal, 3??having no natural affection, not open to any agreement, slanderers, without self-control, fierce, without love of goodness, 4??betrayers, headstrong, puffed up [with pride], lovers of pleasures rather than lovers of God, 5??having a form of godly devotion but proving false to its power; and from these turn away. 6??For from these arise those men who slyly work their way into households and lead as their captives weak women loaded down with sins, led by various desires, 7??always learning and yet never able to come to an accurate knowledge of truth...."

  •  
    5

    IndraniBose

    06/18/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Lessons of an Ethics Writer

    I think this is a brilliant piece of short post which cleverly defines the do's and dont's!

  •  
    6

    rkendall2

    10/08/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Lessons of an Ethics Writer

    I, too, just stumbled across your blog, and sadly, it is your last posting. You have provided much fodder to chew over and over.

    Thank you

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