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Credit Unions with a Conscience: Creating an Ethical Work Environment. Presented for the Michigan Credit Union League by Barbara A. Loescher Loescher & Associates. Session Objectives. Discuss the current state of business ethics
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Credit Unions with a Conscience:Creating an Ethical Work Environment Presented for the Michigan Credit Union League by Barbara A. Loescher Loescher & Associates
Session Objectives • Discuss the current state of business ethics • Discuss the importance of a code of ethics and how it differs from a code of conduct • Discuss situations that can occur and appropriate responses • Discuss how to develop and implement an ethics program • Discuss the role of the Board in shaping a credit union’s culture
A Renewed Emphasis on Ethics • Factors • Number of high-profile ethical scandals & trials • Sarbanes-Oxley legislation • New federal sentencing guidelines
What Are Ethics? • Basic definition: • Learning what is right and wrong • Doing the “right thing” • Are based on values which guide how we ought to behave • Respect, honesty, fairness, social responsibility • Ethical principles are statements on how values are applied
What Are Business Ethics? • Basic definition • Knowing what is right or wrong in the workplace • Doing what’s right • Proper behavior may be translated to law • Includes • How services and products are delivered • Relationships with internal & external entities (stakeholders)
Areas of Business Ethics • Managerial mischief • Illegal acts • Unethical practices • Questionable behavior • Mishandling of ethical situations when they arise • Moral mazes • “Gray areas” • Includes: • Conflict of interest • Kickbacks • Personal use of resources
Myths About Business Ethics • Ethics is a matter of religion, not management • Our employees are ethical so we don’t need an ethics policy • Ethics is better handled by philosophers and theologians than MBAs • An ethics policy is redundant – we all know that we should do what’s right! • Ethics is no more than good guys preaching to the bad guys
Myths About Business Ethics • Ethics is just the latest fad – the latest policeman on the block • Ethics can’t be managed • Ethics and social responsibility are the same thing • Our credit union is not in trouble, so we must be ethical • Managing ethics has no practical value
Benefits of Managing Ethics • Business ethics have substantially improved society • Ethics programs help maintain a moral compass in turbulent times • Ethics programs promote strong teamwork and productivity • Ethics programs support employee growth and meaning • Ethics programs ensure that policies are legal
Benefits of Managing Ethics • Ethics programs help avoid criminal acts and can lower fines or damages • Ethics programs help manage values • Ethics programs promote a strong public image • Ethics programs can ultimately impact the bottom line • Ethics programs are the right thing to do!
Board Responsibility • An ethics programs starts at the top • Board commitment sets the tone for the entire credit union • Board involvement makes it more likely that other employees will commit • Board sets an example
Management Responsibility • The CEO must fully support the program • Announcement • Development • Implementation • Monitoring • The CEO must lead by ethical example
Employee Responsibility • Support the policies and guidelines • Participate in developing and operating the program • Report violations if noted
Managing Ethics in the Workplace • Recognize that managing ethics is a process • The most important outcome is achieving desired behaviors • The best way to handle ethics problems is to avoid their occurrence in the first place • Make ethics decision in groups and publicize them, as appropriate
Managing Ethics in the Workplace • Integrate ethics management with other management practices • Use cross-functional teams to develop and implement the program • Value forgiveness • Remember that trying to operate ethically and making a few mistakes is better than not trying at all
Components of an Ethics Program • Ethics codes • Codes of conduct • Ethics officers • Ethics committees • Policies and procedures • Guidelines and decision models for handling ethical situations • Employee training
Code of Ethics • Definition: • A code of ethics specifies the ethical rules of operation • It includes a list of “thou shalt nots” • Codes should be developed by top-level management with involvement from staff • A large organization may develop codes for specific areas of operations
Steps in Developing A Code of Ethics • Identify areas subject to laws & regs • Identify values that produce the top three or four traits important to the success of your credit union • Identify values needed to address current issues at your credit union • Consider values prized by “stakeholders” • Narrow the list down to 5-10
Steps in Developing A Code of Ethics • Compose your code, including example behaviors that reflect each value • Include wording that all employees are expected to conform • Review with key members • Review with your attorney • Announce and distribute the new code • Update at least once a year
Code of Conduct • Definition: • Specifies actions which are needed to adhere to the ethical values proclaimed in the ethics code • Includes: • Dress, drugs, insubordination, confidentiality, gifts, discrimination, conflict of interest, compliance with laws
Proper dress Avoiding drugs Following instructions Being reliable/prompt Confidentiality Not accepting gifts Avoiding discrimination Avoiding conflict of interest Compliance with laws Not using resources for personal use Not discriminating because of age, sex or race or religion Proper treatment of members Reporting illegal or questionable activity Code of Conduct
Other Considerations • Policies and procedures should also be reviewed to ensure that they don’t conflict • Appoint an ethics officer • Establish a hotline or reporting structure • Give rewards for ethical behavior and impose consequences for unethical behavior • Include a grievance procedure
Ethical Dilemmas • Dilemmas result when: • Real alternatives are equally justifiable • Value conflicts arise • There are significant consequences on the “stakeholders” • Employees should be provided with examples of complex ethical problems
Resolving Dilemmas • Appoint a committee comprised of board members, management and staff • Develop procedures for handling ethical dilemmas • Define a methodology • Checklist with weighted values • Decision-making models • Questionnaires • “The Golden Rule”
Questions to Ask • Have you defined the problem accurately? • How does it appear from the other side? • Whom could the decision injure? • Where do your loyalties lie? • Can you disclose your decision without qualms? • What is the potential if action is misunderstood? • Does it stand the test of time? • What would I tell my child to do?
Employee Training • An ethics program is useless unless all staff members are trained • Training suggestions: • Include in new employee orientation • Include in management training • Involve staff in policy and code reviews • Use real-life examples as a training tool • Include ethical performance in evaluations • The best training is the behavior of your credit union’s leaders
Ethical Warning Signs • “Well, maybe this once…” • “No one will ever know” • “It doesn’t matter how it gets done, as long as it gets done” • “This sounds too good to be true” • “What’s in it for me?” • “What they don’t know, won’t hurt them.”
More Ethical Warning Signs • “Everyone does it.” • “Shred that document.” • “We can hide it.” • “No one will get hurt.” • “This will destroy the competition.” • “We didn’t have this conversation.” • “You want me to WHAT?”
Handling Violations • Treat the employee with dignity & respect • Protect the confidentiality of the information • Allow for anonymity • Assign an investigator • Inform the person who reported the violation of the outcome
Some Final Thoughts • An ethics code is unique to each credit union. There are no boilerplate solutions. • Employees in times of crisis, confusion or change need the moral compass that an ethics policy provides
Thank You!! Barbara A. Loescher Loescher & Associates 6666 Odana Road, #136 Madison, WI 53719 Phone: (608) 278-0465Barbara@loescherandassociates.com