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10 Steps You Can Take Now To Make Ethics Come Alive in Your Organization

10 Steps You Can Take Now To Make Ethics Come Alive in Your Organization. Kate Nelson, Ethics Alliance. Step #1 – Articulate a Vision. Everyone needs to sing from the same hymnal: Shared vision Shared mission Shared values. Step #2 – Articulate Policy. Keep it short Make it clear

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10 Steps You Can Take Now To Make Ethics Come Alive in Your Organization

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  1. 10 Steps You Can Take Now To Make Ethics Come Alive in Your Organization Kate Nelson, Ethics Alliance Barbacane Thornton

  2. Step #1 – Articulate a Vision • Everyone needs to sing from the same hymnal: • Shared vision • Shared mission • Shared values Barbacane Thornton

  3. Step #2 – Articulate Policy • Keep it short • Make it clear • Give examples • Prioritize when possible • Communicate it • Train employees Barbacane Thornton

  4. Step #3 – Know Who “You” Are • Do background checks • Check references • Ask the right questions during interviews (best predictor of future performance is past performance) Barbacane Thornton

  5. Step #4 – Identify Your Risks • Where is there most likely to be a problem? • What is measured in your organization? • How are people rewarded? • Ask your people: “What keeps you up at night? or “What could hit the fan here that would really embarrass us?” Barbacane Thornton

  6. Step #5 – Analyze Your Rewards • For what are people paid? • What incentives exist? • How are people rewarded for doing the right thing? • How are people punished for doing the wrong thing? • Are people held accountable for living values or only for results? • Who is getting promoted? Barbacane Thornton

  7. Step #6 – Create a Process for Raising Issues • Place to get advice • Protection for the messenger • Training for managers in what their role is in this process • Clear blueprint for raising issues beyond the manager level Barbacane Thornton

  8. Step #7 – Use Moral Language • Are we doing the right thing? • Is this fair? • Could anyone be harmed by this? Barbacane Thornton

  9. Step #8 – Understand Employee Needs Barbacane Thornton

  10. Step #9 – Involve Executives • Needs to come from the top • Walk talk • Understand ethical leadership Barbacane Thornton

  11. Moral Person Traits Integrity Honesty Trustworthiness Behaviors Do the right thing Concern for people Being open Personal Morality Decision-Making Hold to values Objective & fair Concern for society Follow ethical decision rules Moral Manager Role modeling through visible action Rewards and discipline Communicating about ethics and values Two Pillars of Ethical Leadership(Moral Person and Moral Manager by L. Trevino, California Management Review, Summer 2000) Barbacane Thornton

  12. Executive Reputation and Ethical Leadership(Moral Person and Moral Manager by L. Trevino, California Management Review, Summer 2000) Hypocritical leader Ethical leader Strong Moral Manager Ethically neutral leader Weak Unethical leader Weak Strong Moral Person Barbacane Thornton

  13. Step #10 – Communicate and Train • Communicate vision and values • Communicate all elements of ethics program • Hold managers and employees accountable • Create interactive training around known risks • Train regularly Barbacane Thornton

  14. Know Thy Customer One of your long-time volunteers (and contributors) is a wealthy man in his 60s who annually manages the cash collection “tent” at your largest annual fund raiser (netting over $250,000 annually) You’re very familiar with his behavior, and over several months you detect a marked change. He’s unable to concentrate, uses inappropriate words, and is increasingly forgetful. He asks you to ensure that all credit card machines and cash box are placed in his custody for the event. You express concern and say that you think the event is becoming increasingly too large for him to take on so much responsibility. He vehemently disagrees and insists that you leave him in charge. You: A) ‘give him control of the funds. He contributes large funds. B) fax a letter to him and be frank about your concerns. C) tell him you can’t give him control without Board approval D) contact his family and explain your concerns. Barbacane Thornton

  15. Know Thy Customer Scores A) -10 B) 30 C) 10 D) 20 Barbacane Thornton

  16. Diversity For over five years, Bruce has managed the family foundation of Sam Stewart, an irascible but shrewd client who has been a source of significant revenue for your organization. Bruce is moving to another job, and you’ve named Julia as his replacement. Julia has worked closely with Bruce and his clients, which is why Sam’s call comes as a surprise. “Don’t get me wrong,” Sam says. “I like Julia. But I’m not going to have some little girl managing my account. Replace her or I’m leaving.” You: A) remove Julia from Sam’s account. B) say she is best qualified to manage his account and if he can’t deal with her, your organization is probably not the best resource for him. C) ask Julia to voluntarily resign from the account. D) replace Julia with a male colleague, but ask her to manage things from behind the scenes. Barbacane Thornton

  17. Diversity Scores A) -30 B) 30 C) -20 D) -10 Barbacane Thornton

  18. Journalism Ethics As a reporter for the only newspaper in Smalltown, PA, you’ve heard rumors that Red Company is about to have a huge layoff because of the recession in the women’s apparel business. When you interview the company president, she confirms the rumors, but asks you to keep the story out of the paper for a week. She’s meeting with buyers in NYC next week, and their orders would dry up if they knew the extent of Red’s financial woes. The future of the entire company is in jeopardy. You: A) ask for an exclusive in return for holding the story. B) print the story the next day as planned. C) hold the story as she asked. D) speculate on the layoff without exact numbers; hold the details until the NYC meetings are over. Barbacane Thornton

  19. Journalism Ethics Scores A) -30 B) 30 C) -10 D) -30 Barbacane Thornton

  20. How to Fraud-Proof Your Organization Jeff Fry, Ethics Alliance Barbacane Thornton

  21. Fraud Defined “Deliberate deception in order to secure an unfair or unlawful gain.” In other words: “To gain something of value by false pretenses.” “To cheat.” Barbacane Thornton

  22. Where is Fraud Risk Highest? • Where goods are exchanged • Goods can be money, products, services, influence • High risk areas: purchasing, sales • Where there are close relationships • If nothing else, could be the appearance of a conflict • When people are being hired – credential fraud • Employees • Vendors Barbacane Thornton

  23. Preventing Fraud • Establish clear controls with effective checks and balances • Train employees around their responsibilities • Make sure your issue-raising process is robust • Check credentials carefully (on front end) • Articulate a clear conflict of interest policy and live it • Go beyond an audit – periodically analyze: “How did we make this decision?” Barbacane Thornton

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