E in HRM
E in HRM
E in HRM
HRD 327
Claremont Graduate University
Ronald F. Smedley
Spring 2008
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Class times: 7:00 to 10:00 on Wednesday evenings from March 26 to May 7
E-mail: rfsmedley@sraonline.net
Phone: 714.993.5003 – office
714.695.1013 – home (before 9pm)
Office Hours: prior to class or as arranged
Introduction
"…a study of values and customs of a person or a group. It covers the analysis and employment of
concepts such as right and wrong, good and evil, and responsibility."
The names of the most recent corporate villains could fill this page, and now they are going to jail! The
questioning of their actions could fill a library, and their actions do imperil a nation; truly a world epoch
has been soundly shaken. Throughout the history of the United States, businessmen and, recently
women, have been called to task. As a nation we are increasingly divided about market capitalism and
free enterprise. Over the past twenty years we have seen deregulation come, and now the pendulum
swings the other direction yet again. A famous Chinese curse reads: May you live in interesting times!
No times are more challenging and interesting than the one’s we live! And within today’s business
arena, ethics are both important and vital if one is to succeed over the long haul.
The complexities of business and our human/social society makes corporate ethics a very interesting
study. To a practicing manager in the working world today, this becomes critically important, especially if
they don’t get it! And many obviously have not and still do not.
During this nation’s past, business ethics have wrought some of the most heated debates. (One could
even argue that our Civil War was in a large part due to business ethics.) No doubt free markets and
capitalism has benefited our nation. However, the cost has been great. Consider the ethics of cigarette
manufacturers, nicotine and their advertising — not to mention the false and misleading testimony of
several leading executives before congress; the Ford Motor Company and the Pinto, Bronco, and
Explorer; General Motors and its fuel tanks in its pick up trucks, Al Dunlap and Sunbeam’s sales and
marketing scandal and Sunbeam’s subsequent bankruptcy; the drop in value of Countrywide Financial
due to its sub-prime lending practices; the housing loan debacle in general; Japanese bureaucrats and
Lockheed’s bribery transgressions; and Johns Manville and its handling of asbestos. (The readers will
kindly note that this is all old news! No; the latest batch of troubled executives did not invent this stuff,
although the dollar amounts are much larger.)
What about the monopoly charges brought against Microsoft—not to mention its movement into windows
with a product remarkably similar to Apple’s operating system; Sears and its auto repairs problems; Nike
and IKEA, and their international labor issues; ValueJet’s skimping on costs involved in airline safety;
There is a point here. Bad ethics isn’t necessarily new, but there does seem to be more problems that
are even bigger today than yesterday. These issues can be national news, but they can also permeate
even small organizations, causing irreparable harm. This is where sound human resource (HR)
development and systems become important so that HR leaders can strategically support the
organization for the good of the organization itself.
Ethical issues are important, and ethical violations are not all that uncommon.
Think about your own encounters with rude sales people, telephone service sales solicitations, product
defects, and other day-to-day encounters. Much of this does not make it to the nightly news, but ethical
transgressions are quite common in today’s society. Think about your work life. Does senior
management truly respect you and your co-workers? Who gets blamed when problems arise? Are you
surprised when important decisions are announced? Are you involved in discussions about strategically
important problems, opportunities and questions? Ethics do not necessarily involve the big transgression
all of the time. They can be the result of hidden forces that many times we don’t even see. They are so
common that we often take them for granted, almost. How often do we take action and don’t even think
that there is an ethical point to consider?
Publicly there is general consensus that managers should not violate laws. After the summer of 2002, it
should be pretty clear that it makes no sense to knowingly break the law. Obviously, the executives at
Arthur Andersen were foolish to shred those documents and the chief accountants at MCI WorldCom
were wrong to book current period expenses as capitalized assets. Certainly, Enron’s income recognition
problems and off-balance sheet “Special Purpose Entities” was clearly inappropriate—as was their loans
and dealings outside the United States. The answer to those that participated was a resounding “no”. In
all cases, the managers involved made a case that they “believed” their actions and “ethics” were within
current social standards. These people share they didn’t “knowingly” cross the line. Have you
experienced people in your career and organization that would say the same?
One could argue that the fundamental mistake by the above executives was getting too close to a line
that isn’t clearly visible, even moves over time. Golden State Fence and Koch Foods may argue that they
were not aware of those people working for them were brought in without valid right-to-work documents.
However those employees at Citigroup, UPS, IBM, 24 Hour Fitness, Sears, RiteAid, Startbucks, Mervyns,
Farmers Insurance, Longs Drugs, arguing for overtime wages after finding out they were misclassified as
a “salaried” exempt employee do indeed “get it!”
Let’s recap:
• ethical violations are not new but their size and frequency seem to have escalated dramatically,
• ethical violations can be both big and small within an organization or penetrating our society, and
• ethical violations can occur without the actor even knowing that it happened as values and
standards may be unclear and because change.
And there IS much, much more: ethical issues are clearly both tenuous and complicated for all parties
involved...and with a heavy price for the now defensive HR professional, the employee victims, the
shareholders, and the organization itself.
It appears that an underlying theme in all HR-involved workplace issues is a management culture that
fosters ethical ignorance – or at the very least knowingly allows an action to happen – even when the
organization flaunts a Code of Ethics.
Ethical and moral issues are complex. Thinking through whose interest are involved and what
consequences your actions, or lack there of, might have on them—the shareholders, employees,
customers, guests, and public is not easy. As an HR professional, you might think that your decisions
and actions are appropriate if nothing is done, as many at Arthur Andersen and Enron did, and
presumably still do, but the final call isn’t any individuals to make. Ethics is both a corporate and societal
issue, easily becoming a legal and criminal one as well.
The negative effects of ethical violations within an organization can be enormous. Energy levels at work
drop, gossip and rumors abound, attendance floats, turnover excels, clients lose trust, and profits
decrease to the point of extinction.
Due to the nature of the position, the HR department is usually right in the middle. Decisions need to be
made. HR determines, with or without a strategy yet within their worldview, if they will support “what is
right” or “turn their head.” You now have to decide quite rapidly which side of the fence you are on,
knowing it could cost you both your job and professional reputation. One is forced to ask; how will you
make your decisions? What will your decisions be based upon?
Within the process someone usually gets hurt economically, but don’t overlook the physical and
psychological impacts as well. Morale can be destroyed overnight and productivity becomes non-
existent when a manager is known to have violated the company Code of Ethics or values for the sake of
selfish and personal gain. Enron’s bankruptcy has had enormous adverse affect upon its employees
and its many investors, the actions of executives within Johns Manville led to the death of many of its
hourly workers, and Pacific Gas polluted the ground water and injured its neighbors. This is so obvious
that it need not be carefully considered here. What is interesting is how the ethical violation injures, one
way or another, every person that has contact with the situation. In other words, ethical violations are
likely playing with hand grenades or worse. (dirty bomb is probably a better metaphor, as people get hurt
when it goes off and its effects last a long time.)
How the ethical violation hurts the transgressor is easy to see. Penalties are often felt immediately. One
is presumed guilty and the penalties come before the sentencing. Arthur Andersen was virtually out of
business as customers and employees started to bolt long before the judge rules that only one
executive’s actions could be grounds for finding guilt. Disney’s park attendance has been off every since
revelations surfaced about it preventing emergency care people on to the park facilities to help injured
guests. Ethical violations must be pursued, even if the actor is found guilty on a lesser charge. Think
about Al Capone. We got him for tax evasion, not murder. Arthur Andersen was found guilty, barely, for
destroying documents, not for its high risk accounting treatments and lax oversight. If you are accused of
an ethical violation, the power flush is on. Does Martha Stewart’s name come to mind?
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The final loser in the ethical mess of today’s 21 century age is no doubt society. We can think of it as
social pollution. Corporate transgressors cause enormous loss for future generations. Some issues are
small and ripples in society, others shout greatly and bring tidal waves of repercussions. Economic
systems work best when they are supported by the rule of law and customs and practices based upon
reciprocity.
To close…
Who has resting on their shoulders the role of ethics guardian and monitor for today’s enterprise? It is
the person most passionate about supporting and growing the employees’ within. Like it or not, it is the
human resource professional. And it is a responsibility that one can succeed only with a grasp and clarity
of his/her worldview, a focus on one’s beliefs, and an understanding of the role Human Resources plays
in today’s business issues and ethics.
We should be headed for a very exciting time together this spring. I expect that you will live up to the
excellent academic tradition of CGU. Have your readings done before class, take an active roll in class
discussions, and treat one another with dignity and respect. It is an honor to grow with you. I have a
great deal to learn and look forward to sharing this experience with you.
Reading Assignments
Plan on allocating at least six hours a week to read and consider the assigned materials that include texts,
presentation materials, and case readings; your “reading” time should equate to two hours for every
classroom hour. The reading assignments will prepare to actively engage in the classroom discussions.
There are two Contribution and Evaluation Components core to this class.
1. Class Participation accounts for 50% of your final grade. This means that you should, complete the
readings, attend every class, and actively participate in classroom discussion. If you attend every
class but are not prepared or do not participate the highest grade you can achieve will be a “C”.
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2. The Final Course paper accounts for 50% as well. Final papers needs to be submitted by May 14 via
e-mail to myself. The paper should be seven to ten pages in length, double spaced, 10 point Ariel
font, MS Word format, and should be written so that the student’s mastery of the course material is
clearly visible. E-mail it to ron@sraonline.net.
Within your paper you will either: a- recount a personal experience; or b- read and use one of 2 cases
listed below and, using the course and what you have learned, think through what happened, what
you and your (the) organization did, and how you (HR) might have behaved differently, listing the
various options reasons and possible outcomes.
Case Study 1 –
• The Whistle-Blower
Session VII Managing Crisis You Try to Prevent Corporate Integrity – 7
Donna Dubinsky and Apple Computer, Inc. – A
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May 7 Case Study –
• Poor communication & no one Due next week via email: Your final paper
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