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I'm Donald Mayer. I teach at the University of Denver. This is lecture number 6: Ethical Traps in Business Organizations.
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Being ethical in everyday life is difficult enough, but the challenges are even greater in business settings. There are several reasons for this. One, people in business tend to focus on profits as the only true measure of "success". Two, the mistaken but commonly repeated mantra of maximizing shareholder value at all times has inclined managers of publicly held corporations to focus far too much on the short term. Three, competition for the best people, the best suppliers, for customers, the best marketing campaigns, and ultimately the greatest market share creates a mindset like that of Ray Kroc mentioned earlier to subdue the competition wherever and however possible. Four, in business and with capitalism generally, growth is presumed to be mandatory. A manager that does not grow the business is soon replaced. That is why many companies in the 1990s resorted to dubious accounting methods to make their financial numbers look like there was growth rather than decline. Five, entrepreneurs as well have a herculean task and success in starting a viable business for staying power can only be measured in profits and market share. The many obstacles to that kind of success can generate an attitude of whatever it takes. Some years ago, a columnist in the Financial Times of London claimed that an entrepreneur could not afford to be ethical while still growing the business. Only an established business, he said, could afford the luxury. That's a quote, the luxury of thinking about ethics, but starting out, you actually can't afford not to think about ethics. There's a big problem with thinking

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