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Business Ethics Fundamentals

Business Ethics Fundamentals. 1. grey area. Ethical Dilemma. Ethics. Law. Asking Key Questions. What are my core values and beliefs? What are the core values and beliefs of my organization? Whose values, beliefs and interests may be at risk in this decision, and Why?

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Business Ethics Fundamentals

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  1. Business Ethics Fundamentals 1

  2. grey area Ethical Dilemma Ethics Law

  3. Asking Key Questions • What are my core values and beliefs? • What are the core values and beliefs of my organization? • Whose values, beliefs and interests may be at risk in this decision, and Why? • Who will be harmed or helped by my decision or the decision of the organization? • How will I, and my organization be affected by the decision?

  4. Why use Ethical reasoning in business? • Many times laws do not cover all aspects or “grey areas” of a problem • EXAMPLES • Free-market and regulated-market mechanisms do not inform owners/ managers how to respond to far reaching ethical consequences. • EXAMPLES • Many complex moral problems require an “intuitive/ learned understanding of fairness, justice to the community. • EXAMPLES

  5. Inventory of Ethical Issues in Business • Employer-Employee Relations • Company-Customer Relations • Company-Shareholder Relations • Company-Community/Public Interest

  6. Business Ethics: What Does It Really Mean? Business Ethics:Today vs. Earlier Period Society’s Expectations of Business Ethics Expected and Actual Levelsof Business Ethics Ethical Problem Actual Business Ethics Ethical Problem 1950s Time Early 2000s

  7. Business Ethics: What Does It Really Mean? Definitions • Ethics involves a discipline that examines good or bad practices within the context of a moral duty • Moral conduct is behavior that is right or wrong • Business ethics include practices and behaviors that are good or bad

  8. Business Ethics: What Does It Really Mean? Two Key Branches of Ethics • Descriptive ethics • How people behave and what sort of moral standards they claim to follow. “What is” true and factual. • Normative ethics involves supplying and justifying moral systems • “What should be”

  9. Conventional Approach to Business Ethics • Conventional approach to business ethics involves a comparison of a decision or practice to prevailing societal norms • Pitfall: ethical relativism Decision or Practice Prevailing Norms

  10. Fellow Workers Fellow Workers Regions of Country Family Profession The Individual Conscience Friends Employer The Law Religious Beliefs Society at Large Sources of Ethical Norms

  11. Ethics, Economics, and Law 6-14

  12. Four Important Ethical Questions • What is? • What ought to be? • How do we get from what is to what ought to be? • What is our motivation for acting ethically?

  13. 3 Models of Management Ethics • Immoral Management—A style devoid of ethical principles and active opposition to what is ethical. • Moral Management—Conforms to high standards of ethical behavior. • Amoral Management • Intentional - does not consider ethical factors • Unintentional - casual or careless about ethical considerations in business

  14. 3 Models of Management Ethics Three Types Of Management Ethics Moral Amoral Immoral

  15. Three Approaches to Management Ethics 6-18

  16. Moral Management Models and Acceptable Stakeholder Thinking 6-20

  17. Developing Moral Judgment 6-22

  18. Developing Moral Judgment 6-23

  19. Developing Moral Judgment External Sources of a Manager’s Values • Religious values • Philosophical values • Cultural values • Legal values • Professional values

  20. Developing Moral Judgment Internal Sources of a Manager’s Values • Respect for the authority structure • Loyalty • Conformity • Performance • Results

  21. Elements of Moral Judgment • Moral imagination • Moral identification and ordering • Moral evaluation • Tolerance of moral disagreement and ambiguity • Integration of managerial and moral competence • A sense of moral obligation

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