Seth Godin
The happy theory of business ethics is this: do the
right thing and you will also maximize your long-term profit.
After all, the thinking goes, doing the right thing
builds your brand, burnishes your reputation, helps you attract better staff
and gives back to the community, the very community that will in turn buy from
you. Do all of that and of course you'll make more money. Problem solved.
The unhappy theory of business ethics is this: you
have a fiduciary responsibility to maximize profit. Period. To do anything
other than that is to cheat your investors. And in a competitive world, you
don't have much wiggle room here.
If you would like to believe in business ethics, the
unhappy theory is a huge problem.
As the world gets more complex, as it's harder to see
the long-term given the huge short-term bets that are made, as business gets
less transparent ("which company made that, exactly?") and as the web
of interactions makes it harder for any one person to stand up and take
responsibility, the happy theory begins to fall apart. After all, if the
long-term effects of a decision today can't possibly have any impact on the
profit of this project (which will end in six weeks), then it's difficult to
argue that maximizing profit and doing the right thing are aligned. The local
store gets very little long-term profit for its good behavior if it goes out of
business before the long-term arrives.
It comes down to this: only
people can have ethics. Ethics,
as in, doing the right thing for the community even though it might not benefit
you or your company financially. Pointing to the numbers (or to the boss) is an
easy refuge for someone who would like to duck the issue, but the fork in the
road is really clear. You either do work you are proud of, or you work to make
the maximum amount of money. (It would be nice if those overlapped every time,
but they rarely do).
"I just work here" is the worst sort of
ethical excuse. I'd rather work with a company filled with ethical people than
try to find a company that's ethical. In fact, companies we think of as ethical
got that way because ethical people made it so.
I worry that we absolve ourselves of responsibility
when we talk about business ethics and corporate social responsibility.
Corporations are collections of people, and we ought to insist that those
people (that would be us) do the right thing. Business is too powerful for us
to leave our humanity at the door of the office. It's not business, it's personal.
[I learned this lesson from my Dad. Every single day
he led by example, building a career and a company based on taking
personal responsibility, not on blaming the heartless, profit-focused system.]
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