We should have seen it coming
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2w ago
We knew there would be a corruption scandal around the Paris Olympics when the city was selected in 2017. This is not a jab on Paris. It happens with every Olympic event. We also know that sales professionals who are paid only on commissions and required to meet unreasonable targets are almost certain to cheat and lie. We know this the minute we create the incentive program. What else is your organization doing today that clearly points to a compliance failure in the future ..read more
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Crisis and change
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
1M ago
We know that people don’t like change. Which is why employees, and often leadership, resist when a company tries to improve its ethics and compliance program. “Our learning modules have always consisted of 40-minutes videos with real actors. Don’t change that.” So meaningful change typically happens only after a crisis. A crisis that perhaps was occasioned by the prior resistance to change ..read more
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Right and wrong
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
1M ago
Socrates used to say that “nobody does wrong willingly.” He simply meant that when people do wrong, they think they are right. If they thought otherwise, they wouldn’t do it. And so it goes with those who engage in wrongdoing in the workplace. They think they are right. Because it’s funny. Because the company owes it to them. Because their family needs the money. Whatever the reason, they feel justified. This is why it is so important for management and leadership to understand why people engage in wrongdoing at work. No amount of policies and controls will stop people who believes they are ri ..read more
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Who do you serve?
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
1M ago
The ethics and compliance function exists to serve all employees in an organization. As such, it should pay more attention to the feedback it receives from the rank and file than to the demands it gets from the executive population (which is often less than five percent of all employees ..read more
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Transparency as a multiplier
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2M ago
I have visited the facilities of Ben & Jerry’s in Vermont and Heineken in Amsterdam. Both offer a tour that shows you how the product is made, and they give you a taste at the end (actually, Heineken gives you a taste in the middle and at the end). I’m convinced that the ice cream and the beer taste a little bit better because of the tour. What these companies don’t offer is a tour that shows you how decisions are made. Imagine if we could see how Heineken compensates their farmers, or how Ben & Jerry’s treats their employees. Assuming they do it fairly, their product might taste even ..read more
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Culture is systemic
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2M ago
By nature, cultural problems are systemic problems. That’s true of racism in a country, bullying in a school, or fraud in an organization. Culture is how we do things around [here]. The only way to change culture is to change the system ..read more
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Price vs. cost
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2M ago
When deciding to buy a car, too many people focus on its (sticker) price, not its long-term cost (fuel, insurance, maintenance, repairs, storage, etc.). The cost far exceeds the price. Similarly, wise leaders understand that the cost of non-compliance far exceeds the price of compliance. HT to Seth Godin, 16 Feb ..read more
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Easing the pain
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2M ago
If you have an unpleasant interaction at work today, try this: assume for a brief moment that the words you are hearing or reading are not the real message. Look for the real motivation behind the words. Assume positive intent. Perhaps there is nothing more below the surface. But very often the jab comes from a person who is suffering through no fault of your own, and they see you as a safe place to offload their pain. Looking at it this way will allow you to measure your response ..read more
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How bad do you want it?
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2M ago
Building a more ethical and compliant organization is not as complicated as leadership thinks. But it is more expensive and time consuming than they hoped for. HT to Seth Godin, Feb 8 ..read more
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Find a corner to make a difference
The Ethical Leader | Beyond ethical awareness and decision-making
by Yan Tougas
2M ago
If you are a supervisor of 8 people in your organization of 100,000+ employees, simply focus on the culture you can create with those 8 employees. Do what you can, with what you have, where you are, as Roosevelt once said. Outsiders will notice, and your microculture will spread. HT to Seth Godin, January 30 ..read more
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