Chapter 1 & 2
Ethical Culture
Organizational principles, values, and norms that are adhered to by the company and its personnel
Business Ethics
Organizational principles, values, and norms that may originate from individuals, organizational statements, or form the legal system that primarily guide individual and group behavior in business
Sustainability
Relates specifically to the environment (air, land, and water)
What does the Stakeholder Framework identify?
The internal and external stakeholders who agree, collaborate, and engage in confrontations on ethical issues; it allows organizations to identify, monitor, and respond to the needs and expectations of stakeholder groups
Business exist because of ...
organizational relationships between employees, customers, shareholders, and the comunity
Other Stakeholders
others who have a "stake" or claim in some aspect of a company's products, operations, markets, industry, and outcomes are known as stakeholders
Morals
personal philosophies that define right and wrong
Corporate Citizenship
the extent to which businesses strategically meet the legal, ethical, economic, and philanthropic responsibilities placed on them by their stakeholders
3 Approaches to Stakeholder Theory
1. Normative 2. Descriptive 3. Instrumental
Instrumental Theory
Describes what happens if firms behave in a particular way
Four Levels of Social Responsibility
Economic, Legal, Ethical, Philanthropic
Values
Enduring beliefs and ideals that are socially enforced (i.e. trust and integrity)
Bottom Line for Business Ethics
Firm survival; Profitability, revenues, sales; Stakeholders: customers, employees, channel members (manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers); Contribute to societal goals: community, country, world
Descriptive Theory
Focuses on firms behavior; addresses how decisions are made for stakeholder relationships
Normative Theory
Identifies ethical guidelines that dictate how firms should treat stakeholders
Corporate Social Responsibility
Actions associated by firms with various stakeholder interests as a priority
Social Responsibility
An organization's obligation to maximize its positive impact on stakeholders and minimize its negative impact on society
Principles
Specific boundaries for behavior that often become the basis for rules (i.e. human rights, freedom of speech)
Value Dilemma
Two or more beliefs/ideals in conflict with one another
Moral Dilemma
Two or more morals in conflict with one another
Relationships are associated with ...
both organizational success and misconduct
Secondary Stakeholders
those who are not typically engaged directly in transactions with a company and are therefore not essential to its survival (i.e. government agencies and communities)
Primary Stakeholders
those whose continued association and resources are absolutely necessary for a firm's survival (customers, shareholders, employees, suppliers)