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Ethical Organizational Communications Chapter 1

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Within each religion are moral and spiritual injunctions used to guide ethical behavior ie., Eternal Laws revealed in holy scriptures or readings. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethical Organizational Communications Chapter 1


1
Ethical Organizational CommunicationsChapter 1
2
A Rationale for Ethical Communications
  • Unethical behavior can have damaging
    consequences.
  • People and organizations lose credibility.
  • Unethical behavior tarnishes anyone that
    associates with the perpetrator.
  • Ethical behavior has important positive
    consequences.
  • Ethical behavior serves as a model to others.
  • Ethical behavior is intrinsically valuable.

3
Why Behave Unethically
  • Greed
  • Competition
  • Scorekeeping
  • People Are Not Perfect

4
Ethical Perspectives
  • Economic Analysis Bases ethical judgments on
    financial considerations. Holds that people
    should act to maximize revenues and minimize
    costs, thereby making the organization as
    profitable as possible. This approach ignores
    questionable practices that might improve a
    companys bottom line.
  • Legal Analysis Bases ethical judgments on legal
    rulings or the law. To make an ethical decision
    one only has to investigate the law. This
    approach can lead to an oversimplification or
    superficiality.

5
Philosophical Analysis
6
Philosophical Analysis Cont.
7
Social Responsibility
  • Refers to the relationship between organizational
    systems and their environment with the assumption
    that the organization must act responsibly in
    utilizing the resources of the community. Must
    consider the following
  • Do organizations have an ethical responsibility
    to preserve the environment?
  • Who are these organizations accountable to?

8
Employee Rights
  • The right to fair and equitable treatment Title
    VII prohibits discrimination, harassment and
    retaliation based on race, color, religion,
    national origin, or gender.
  • All policies regarding fair and equal treatment
    should be well-communicated to all employees and
    managers should have a zero tolerance policy
    toward such offenses.

9
Employee Rights Cont.
  • The Right to Privacy - While employees offices,
    lockers files, etc. typically should not be
    invaded by the employer the rules and regulations
    concerning privacy continue to be re-considered.
  • As technology has become more prominent in the
    workplace, the need for surveillance of employees
    activities has grown.
  • Some employee may be unethical in their use of
    the technology which has resulted in the
    monitoring of email and internet use.
  • To know employee rights view www.privacyrights.org
    .

10
Employee Rights Cont.
  • The Right to Conscientious Objection While
    employees need to be able to respect authority
    and refrain from any acts of insubordination,
    they do have a right to refuse orders that
    violate their principles.
  • Employees should exhaust every possible avenue
    within the company before making concerns public.

11
Multinational Business and Ethics
  • Companies conducting business abroad walk a fine
    line as they struggle to find a happy medium
    between the requirements of the Foreign Corrupt
    Practices Act and the local business culture.
  • Savvy organizations take into consideration the
    cultural values of the countries in which their
    ethics standards are to be applied. They do not
    assume the standards will be understood the same
    way in all locations.

12
Global Ethics Cont.
  • Areas for consideration are
  • Rules and definition rigid vs. flexible
  • Exempt status people - privileged vs.
    unprivileged
  • Public service norms observation of local norms
    such as excessive gratuities
  • Gifts and bribes appropriate gift giving vs.
    bribery
  • Confidentiality and group identity loyalty vs.
    confidentiality
  • Office gender roles behavior and attitudes
    toward females vary.

13
Politically Correct Speech
  • Increasingly organizations discourage employees
    from saying or doing anything that others might
    find offensive. Racial slurs are always
    offensive, sexist comments are discouraged,
    ethnic jokes are not permissible. Just kidding
    is not an acceptable defense for offensive
    remarks.

14
Mission Statements and Company Code of Ethics
  • Company ethics are conveyed through the mission
    and vision statements as well as tell employees
    and customers what the organization is all about.
  • Companies may also have a code of ethics and/ or
    a Ethics Officer to spell out the behavioral and
    attitude expectations of individuals in the
    organization.

15
Management Behaviors
  • Individual members of leadership must serve as
    role models of the code of ethics and
    organizational rewards and punishments must be
    applied to encourage compliance.
  • Ethics boils down to what is communicated in
    everyday interactions, if employees see unethical
    behaviors or tolerance for improper practices
    they will cease to believe any written code of
    ethics.
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