Sales Ethics: It - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Sales Ethics: It

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Title: Sales Ethics: It s Not An Oxymoron Author: Charles Warner Last modified by: Charles Warner Created Date: 3/9/2002 6:43:40 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sales Ethics: It


1
Sales Ethics Its Not An Oxymoron
2
Corporations Today
  • Corporations, by charter, are immortal
  • Corporations have multiple relationships that
    they are unlikely to keep secret very long
  • www.sec.gov/edgar.shtml
  • Magnified for media companies, because revenue
    depends on
  • Advertisers
  • Size of the audience
  • Subscribers

3
Advertising
  • Large advertisers such as Verizon, PG, GM, and
    Coca-Cola will be around for decades.
  • Its not smart business to bite the hands that
    will feed your company for the next several
    decades.
  • Dont lie to them or cheat them.
  • Customers dont buy from people or companies they
    dont trust.

4
Current Headlines
  • The press loves stories about corporate
    dishonesty
  • Enron scandal
  • WorldCom
  • Ogilvy Mather over-billing the governments
    Office of National Drug Control
  • Bear Stearns hedge fund managers lying to
    investors
  • Goldman Sachs cheating customers

5
Whats Going On?
  • Greed
  • Wrong incentives
  • People go along with unethical behavior because
  • No one will know.
  • If I dont take their money someone else will.

6
Rationalization
  • Criminals and other sociopaths typically
    rationalize their behavior with the last one (If
    I dont take their money, someone else will.)
  • A salesperson for a major media company forged a
    clients name on a contract so revenue would be
    recognized, but got caught when the client got a
    bill and said, We didnt sign anything!
  • I wont get caught.

7
Three Reasons
  • There are many reasons for unethical behavior,
    but three common ones are
  • Strong tendency to bow to authority and follow
    orders Just following orders.
  • Strong tendency to do what peer group doessocial
    pressure and conformity Everyone does it.
  • An absence of clearly defined and communicated
    standards Nobody told me.

8
  • Bow to authority
  • Give up their individual free will and autonomy
    and turn their conscience over to someone else.
  • Wont work Nazis at Nuremburg trials.
  • Cave in to peer pressure in order to conform
  • Negate their free will and autonomy and hand over
    individuality to the crowd.
  • Wont work you have a conscience, the crowd
    doesnt.
  • Absence of standards
  • Organizations must create and communicate ethical
    standards to trump the nobody told me copout.
  • Copout wont work we all know what were
    supposed to do.

9
Why?
  • Sociopath, narcissist, excessive greed, or other
    personality defects?
  • Perhaps due to extreme pressure from management.
  • Perhaps because of an absence of clearly defined
    and communicated standards or a code of ethics.

10
Ethics Vs. Morals
  • Ethics are clearly defined standards of right and
    wrong set out by written codes or standards set
    by an organization or profession.
  • Morals are individual standards of right and
    wrong based on
  • Deep-seated personal values
  • Accepted beliefs and modes of conduct by groups
    in which people choose to work and play

11
  • Morals are related to personal character and
    belief as to what is right and wrong (internal).
  • Ethics are the proper behavior regarding the
    social system where morals are applied
    (external).

12
Ethics
  • With heightened press coverage of business
    scandals
  • The public has become increasingly concerned
    about ethical behavior
  • Now, more than ever is the time to follow Peter
    Druckers sage advice
  • It is more important to do the right thing than
    to do things right.

13
Salespersons Five Areas of Ethical Responsibility
  • To consumers
  • Customers buy a product or service.
  • Consumers use a product
  • In some businesses (retail, utilities,
    transportation, e.g.) the customer and the
    consumer are the same
  • In other businesses (CPG, media, e.g.) they are
    different
  • Audience/readers/subscribers consumers
  • Advertisers customers

14
Salespersons Five Areas of Ethical Responsibility
  • To consumers (audience/subscribers)
  • Put consumers first.
  • Dont lie to them.
  • Dont sell them shoddy products.
  • Dont sell unsafe products.
  • Dont accept advertising for products you
    wouldnt recommend to a relative.

15
  • To your conscience
  • Doing whats right according to ones own moral
    standards
  • There is no pillow as soft as a clear
    conscience.
  • Doing the right thing increases self-esteem,
    self-image and self-confidence.
  • Greed is a cancer that will kill a persons and a
    companys reputation and eventually kill the
    organism.

16
  • Some people are unethical because they believe
    they wont get caught.
  • But they are playing an ethical lottery with the
    odds of losing extremely high.
  • Doing the right thing every business day is the
    only sure way of not getting caught and of
    maintaining a reputation and the self-esteem that
    goes along with an excellent reputation.

17
  • To customers
  • Customers (advertisers) dont buy from people and
    companies they dont trust.
  • Under-promise and over-deliver.
  • Dont sell customers
  • Something they dont need
  • Something they cant afford
  • Something that doesnt work

18
  • Dont accept advertising
  • That is in bad taste.
  • That hurts a customers image.
  • That is misleading.
  • Native advertising?
  • Salespeople shouldnt
  • Give kickbacks.
  • Use bait-and-switch tactics
  • Let customers feel like they lost a negotiation.
  • Reveal information before a campaign runs or
    reveal competitive information.

19
  • Salespeople shouldnt
  • Promise what advertising itself cannot deliver.
  • The media can deliver potential exposure to an
    audience.
  • Cant promise results--too many uncontrollable
    factors.
  • Promise something they cant realistically
    deliver
  • Promotions
  • Merchandising
  • Tickets
  • Position
  • Placements
  • Completion of schedules

20
  • To the community
  • The global community
  • The world community, society
  • Do no harm.
  • Suppose everybody in the world did this?
  • The business community
  • To maintain faith in the free-market system
  • Investors, regulators, general public
  • Suppose everybody in business did this?

21
  • The industry community
  • The advertising-supported media
  • Americans get their news and often their values,
    beliefs, and attitudes from the media.
  • The media can alter peoples view of the world
    and their prejudices.
  • Salespeople have a responsibility to keep the
    media free by fueling it with advertising.
  • Protecting democracy
  • The local community
  • Dont foul your nest or cheat your neighbor.
  • Broadcasters get licenses to serve the community.

22
  • To your company
  • Salespeople represent their company to customers.
  • Especially with intangible products, a
    salesperson is the surrogate for the product.
  • The salesperson is the company in the eyes of a
    customer.
  • Therefore, a companys credibility depends on the
    salespersons credibility.

23
  • Rewards to salespeople often unwittingly
    reinforce doing the wrong thing
  • Compensation systems often reward getting orders
    regardless of what is best for customers.
  • Contests often reward non-customer-centric
    behavior.
  • Bonuses for making budgets regardless of what is
    reasonable can cause unethical sales practices.

24
  • CFOs or top management sometimes recommend
    accounting practices that preserve a companys
    assets.
  • Too often they have the wrong assets in mind.
  • A companys and a salespersons most precious
    asset is an excellent reputation.
  • Protect this reputation by always doing the right
    thing.

25
The Ethical Hierarchy
  • The Five Cs
  • Consumers
  • Conscience
  • Community
  • Customers
  • Company

26
Ethics Check
  • Is it legal?
  • Laws
  • Regulations
  • Company policy
  • Is it fair?
  • To both sides
  • To all stakeholders
  • What does my conscience say?

27
Ethics
  • The New Golden Rule
  • Do unto customers as they would have others do
    unto them (not you).
  • Kants Categorical Imperative
  • Act on the premise that the choices you make will
    become universal law for all people for all
    time.
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