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Consumers and Business Ethics

Consumers and Business Ethics. Consumers as stakeholders (I). Commonplace argument that businesses are best served by treating their customers well So why continued ethical abuses of consumers and poor reputation of marketing and sales professions?

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Consumers and Business Ethics

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  1. Consumers and Business Ethics

  2. Consumers as stakeholders (I) • Commonplace argument that businesses are best served by treating their customers well • So why continued ethical abuses of consumers and poor reputation of marketing and sales professions? • Examples of organizations accused of treating customers in a questionable manner: • Multinational drug companies • Fast food and soft drink companies • Banks and credit card companies • Mobile phone companies • Technology companies • Schools

  3. Consumers as stakeholders (II) Consumer rights can be seen as: • inalienable entitlements to fair treatment when entering into exchanges with sellers. They rest upon the assumption that consumer dignity should be respected, and that sellers have a duty to treat consumers as ends in themselves, and not only as means to the end of the seller. • Debate over what constitutes fair treatment • In the past, consumer rights based on caveat emptor • But Caveat emptor eroded by changing expectations & consumer laws

  4. Ethical issues and the consumer

  5. Ethical issues, marketing and the consumer

  6. Ethical issues in marketing management – product policy • At the most basic level, consumers have a right to products and services which are safe, efficacious, and fit for the purpose for which they are intended • Manufacturers ought to exercise due care in establishing that all reasonable steps are taken to ensure that their products are free from defects and safe to use(Boatright, 2009: 295) • Consumers’ right to a safe product is not an unlimited right • Safety also a function of the consumer and their actions and precautions

  7. Ethical issues in marketing management – marketing communications (I) Criticisms of advertising broken down into two levels • Individual • Concerned with misleading or deceptive practices that seek to create false beliefs about specific products or companies in the individual’s consumers’ mind • Social • Concerned with the aggregate social and cultural impacts, such as promoting materialism

  8. Ethical issues in marketing management – marketing communications (II) Misleading and deceptive practices • Marketing communications aimed to: • Inform consumers about goods and services • Persuade consumers to purchase • “Deception occurs when a marketing communication either creates, or takes advantage of, a false belief that substantially interferes with the ability of people to make rational consumer choices” (Boatright, 2009: 285) • The UK’s Advertising Standards Authority says ads should be “legal, decent, honest and truthful”

  9. Ethical issues in marketing management – marketing communications (III) Social and cultural impact on society • Objections that marketing communications: • Are intrusive and unavoidable • Create artificial wants • Reinforce consumerism and materialism • Create insecurity and perpetual dissatisfaction • Perpetuate social stereotypes • Such criticisms have been common for at least the last 30 years

  10. Ethical issues in marketing management – pricing • Pricing issues are central to the notion of a fair exchange between the two parties, and the right to a fair price - key rights of consumers as stakeholders • 4 types of pricing practices where ethical problems may arise: • Excessive pricing • Price fixing • Predatory pricing • Deceptive pricing

  11. Ethical issues in marketing management – distribution • Concerned with relations between manufacturers and firms, and firms and market • Primary concern is product supply chain • Example: retailers demanding ‘slotting fees’ from manufacturers in order to stock their products • Dealt with in detail next chapter

  12. Ethical issues in marketing strategy – vulnerable customers • Criticisms when there is a perceived violation of the consumers right to be treated fairly (duty of care): • Targeting vulnerable consumers • Consumers may be vulnerable because; • Lack sufficient education or information • Easily confused or manipulated due to old age and senility • Are in exceptional physical or emotional need • Lack the necessary income • Too young • Perceived harmfulness of the product • Examples: cigarettes and alcohol • Here, the focus shifts from rights/duties to consequences

  13. Ethical issues in marketing strategy –customer exclusion • Takes variety of forms • Access exclusion • Condition exclusion • Price exclusion • Marketing exclusion • Self-exclusion

  14. Ethical issues in market research • Main issue is possible threats posed to the consumer’s right to privacy • Recent areas of concern: • Personal information available online • Example: Phorm’s advertising targeting service, which British Telecom trialled without consent • Use of genetic testing results by insurance companies • Predict likelihood of an individual’s genetic predisposition to certain conditions and illnesses • ‘genetic discrimination’?

  15. Globalisation and consumers The ethical challenges of the global marketplace

  16. Issues around marketing in a global marketplace Globalization has brought a new set of problems and issues relevant to consumer stakeholders • Different standards of consumer protection • Consumer protection varies widely in terms of government regulation and company standards • Example of tobacco • Exporting consumerism and cultural homogenization • Global brands’ huge success has led to increasing concerns over standardization and uniformity • Considerable debate around role of advertising in promoting consumerism in emerging and transitional economies

  17. The role of markets in addressing poverty and development Globalization also raises prospect of firms targeting products to low income consumers • ‘Bottom of the pyramid’ concept • Examples of successful initiatives: • Microcredit institutions (e.g. Brazil) • High nutrition yoghurt company (Bangladesh) • One Laptop Per Child • Criticism • Bottom of the pyramid is a mirage: profit opportunities limited • Social purpose and CSR probably more important than profit motive in developing inclusive markets

  18. Consumers and corporate citizenship Consumer sovereignty and the politics of purchasing

  19. Consumer sovereignty • Concept suggests that under perfect competition, consumers drive market • Two ethical limitations based on fairness • Consumer sovereignty – customer is king • Consumer sovereignty has three elements (Smith, 1995) • Consumer capability • Information • Choice • How is consumer sovereignty to be assessed? Consumer sovereignty test

  20. Consumer sovereignty test Source: Derived from Smith (1995)

  21. Ethical consumption Ethical consumption is the conscious and deliberate decision to make certain consumption choices due to personal moral beliefs and values • Recent 51-market survey on consumer attitudes: • 70% of global consumers said their purchase decision could be influenced by a product supporting a worthy cause • But socially-desirable answers may not correspond to behaviour • Consumer activism on increase – positive • Downside of ethical consumption • Motives of corporations will be primarily economic rather than moral • Consumers may decide they no longer want to or can afford to pay extra for these ethical ‘accessories’ • If purchases are ‘votes’ then rich get more power than poor

  22. Sustainable consumption

  23. What is sustainable consumption? • Sustainable consumption is: ‘the use of goods and services that respond to basic needs and bring a better quality of life, while minimising the use of natural resources, toxic materials and emissions of waste and pollutants over the life-cycle, so as not to jeopardise the needs of future generations’ (European Environment Agency definition)

  24. The challenge of sustainable consumption Source: derived from Buchholz (1998)

  25. Steps towards sustainable consumption • Producing environmentally responsible products • e.g. Eco-labels are important • Product recapture • See Figure, next slide • Service replacements for products • Selling (e.g.) mobility rather than cars, or leasing photocopiers • Product sharing • Examples: car-sharing, washing-machine-pooling • Reducing demand • Example of China’s ban on free plastic bags • Implementing the polluter pays principle to create financial incentive for lower consumption

  26. Extraction Manufacture Distribution Consumption Disposal Product recaptureFrom a linear to a circular flow of resources (a) Linear flow of resources (b) Circular flow of resources Extraction Manufacture Product recapture Distribution Consumption Disposal

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