Homework Due Tomorow Evening, Can You Help.

Course Textbook

Heneman, H. G., Judge, T. A., & Kammeyer-Mueller, J. D. (2012). Staffing organizations (7th ed.). Middleton, WI: Mendota House.

 

APA Guidelines

CSU requires that students use the APA style for papers and projects. Therefore, the APA rules for formatting, quoting, paraphrasing, citing, and listing of sources are to be followed. A document titled “APA Guidelines Summary” is available for you to download from the APA Guide Link, found in the Learning Resources area of the my CSU Student Portal. It may also be accessed from the Student Resources link on the Course Menu. This document provides links to several internet sites that provide comprehensive information on APA formatting, including examples and sample papers.

 

Applications 2

Read the Applications case study, Assessment Methods for the Job of Human Resources Director found on page 487-490 in your textbook. Answer the questions that fall after the case description; these are the seven questions found in the lower half of page 488. Each question should be numbered, answered separately, and be at least 100 words in length but should be submitted as one file.

 

The firm is considering numerous selection techniques for possible use. For each method listed below decide whether you would or would not use it in the selection process and state why.

 

1. A job knowledge test specifically designed for HR professionals that focus on an applicant’s general knowledge of HR management?

2. A medical examination and drug test at the beginning of the selection process in order to determine if applicant are able to cope with the high level of stress and frequent travel requirements of the job and are drug free?

3. A paper and pencil integrity test?

4. A structure behavior interview that would be specially designed for use in filling only this jog?

5. A general cognitive ability test?

6. Personal Characteristic Inventory?

7. A set of interview questions that the firm typically uses for filling my position?

 

Applications 2

Read the Applications problem, Managerial Turnover: A Problem?, found on page 731-732 in your textbook. Answer the questions that fall after the case description; these are the five questions found in the middle of page 732. Each question should be numbered, answered separately, and be at least 200 words in length but should be submitted as one file.

 

1. Is the loss of 30 manages out of 120 in one year cause or concern?

2. What additional data should be gathered to learn more about managerial turnover?

3. What is the cost of this turnover? Might there be any benefits?

4. Are there any lurking problems

5. If retention is a serious problem for HCLC, what are the main ways we might address it?

 
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Human Resource Management (Case Study)

Case Study General Guidelines

If you are new enough to business school that you have not experienced many written case studies, let me provide a simple introduction and approach.

What are Case Studies?

Case studies are basically just business stories. As such, they are about realistic, often complex situations that often involve a conflict, choice or challenge that one or more of the characters in the case must negotiate.

Why Case Studies?

Case studies “bridge the gap between theory and practice and between the academy and the workplace” (Barkley, Cross, and Major 2005, p.182). They also give students practice identifying the parameters of a problem, recognizing and articulating positions, evaluating courses of action, and arguing different points of view.

When designing the class, I consulted with a number of HR colleagues to find out what they thought was most important to cover in a course of this type. If you know HR people, it probably will not surprise you to learn they disagreed on many things, and gave me a list of course topics that would take three years to cover. What they all agreed on was that case studies were the best (two said “only”) way to teach this material.

Professional management experience usually exhibits itself through the identification of alternatives. Think of a time when someone (maybe you) saw a workplace problem through a different lens than others, and was able to provide a solution the rest of the stakeholders hadn’t thought of. In case studies we put you in a variety of circumstances as a decision maker. This provides an opportunity for you to research better approaches to those problems when you aren’t personally involved, and then when a similar circumstance arises in real life, you have an “alternative” to fall back on.

What is a good approach to use when answering a case study?

The following is not the only method to answer a case study, but is a one several colleagues have recommended, and it is a great way to begin if your experience is limited with cases.

1. Read, analyze and examine the case thoroughly- take notes on your reading, use a highlighter and search for details not easily noticed on a quick read-through.

2. Focus your analysis a. Identify at least 2-3 key problems that you have to cover in the case study. You may see

more than that, but recognize that it is almost never a single problem. b. Try to understand why these problems exist – Think in terms of a root cause. For

instance, if the case deals with low morale among all employees, “low wages” may be a contributor, but it probably isn’t the root cause of the problem.

c. What is the impact of these problems on the organization? – What is likely to happen next if nothing changes? This is your impetus for change.

d. Who and what is responsible for these problems? Is it cultural, financial, structural, a people problem, etc.?

 

3. Uncover possible solutions by reading, experience, outside research, and analysis. This is what makes it a college level course. You need to find data and solutions outside the readings provided in class. This does not mean Wikipedia, the Encyclopedia Britannica or your textbook. Search for companies that had similar issues, find a solution to the problem that has been used before in another industry, talk to someone you know who has experience, etc. Find answers to the problem that go beyond the obvious and cite every source according to APA guidelines.

4. Select the best solution by looking for its pros and cons and checking whether the solution is realistic or not. Research and latest trends are great- and they help your grade, but a solution that is practical, proven and inexpensive is usually the best approach.

What is a good outline to use when writing a case study analysis?

Try this format for your first case:

Outline:

a. Introduction – start with a summary of the case and the main issues as you see them, formulate a thesis statement and elaborate on it.

b. Findings – describe the issues identified and a brief analysis of them. Analyses should be supported by proper evidence and facts given together with relevant theory and course concepts.

c. Discussion is the main and crucial part of the case. This is the largest part of the writing. d. Alternative solutions and Implementation e. References

How long does it have to be?

Most instructors hate answering this question, and many refuse to do so. I am not one of them. APA style formatting, double spaced, some standard font size 12, it should be a minimum of three pages, excluding the cover page and the reference page(s). I am of course more interested in content than length.

 
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Two Discussion Question

Discussion question 1

 

The study of international business is fine if you are going to work in a large multinational enterprise, but it has no relevance for individuals who are going to work in small firms.”

This topic can be one that can be argued both ways. Technology has had a tremendous impact on how companies do business. An organization with a web site is able to connect with people all across the world. Understanding this, a company should take the time to both invest and learn advances in technology. This is not solely for large corporations, since if a small business doesn’t take advantage of these strategies, they will be left out of the competition. The days of the paperback phone book are gone. Without information technology, most businesses wouldn’t even exist.

Information technology is infiltrating all aspects of business, both large and small. Without it, a company will not be able to keep up with their competition. On the flip side of this theory however is the fact that information technology is cheap, therefore everyone had access to it. This in turn allows all the competition to have the same edge. This may work for a smaller company that has a good marketing campaign. Larger companies have always been able to succeed in the competitive market due to their ability to gain a foothold in the stock market and obtain funding that a smaller company may not be able to do. The ability to advertise allows these smaller organizations to become more lucrative simply by being recognized. A retail company that is willing to ship their products globally is in a position to increase their sales exponentially.

These smaller companies may also expand once they are recognized as a company that is able to maintain a good service or product across the country or across the world. Rather than shipping their product, they may choose to employ people from a country that buys heir goods or services, thereby increasing availability and allowing those from the host country to be a part of the company. Certain countries, such as India, may provide services at a much lower cost than in the United States, thereby creating a greater profit for the company conducting the business. Starbucks is a prime example of this type of business. Twenty-five years ago, Starbucks was hardly known. They had a small number of stores in the United States. They are now one of the most popular brands in the world, with almost 17,000 stores in 50 countries (Hill, 2012).

Vizio also is a success story for small business. They are a company that produces flat screen televisions, are known worldwide and have less than 100 employees. They outsource most of their engineering, all manufacturing and a great deal of logistics. Because it is able to outsource so much at reduced rates, the company is able to sell at discount retailers. They are also able to sell in volume. This gives the company a competitive edge against other retailers with more overhead (Hill, 2012).

With all of these things taken into consideration, it would appear that small business could benefit from globalization if properly managed.

Geraldine

 

Discussion 2

Prior to taking this class, I would probably have said a similar statement. It can be common for a common person to think of large corporations such as Walmart, Coca-Cola, or Samsung when the term international business is used. However, globalization is becoming more of the normal course of business as we progress through time and technology improves.

A portion of doing business internationally is exporting goods. In the United States, it is not the large companies that do most of the exporting. In fact, about 90 percent of the firms that export goods are small businesses that employ less than 100 people (Hill, 2013). Firms with less than 20 employees represent the fastest growing segment of U.S. exporting companies (Hannaher, 2010). It turns out exporting is a good fit for companies of all sizes. It makes sense, once one begins to explore the benefits of selling goods to international customers. An initial analysis can put in plain view that a company’s number of potential customers will increase dramatically once the decision is made to export. A company can go from the population of the US, to a global population. Another factor is companies can gain a market advantage by selling in a country with less competition than in the United States (Hannaher, 2010). This is especially true in developing countries or countries that are transitioning from a government controlled economy to a market driven economy (Hill, 2013). In those countries, individuals are newly able to make choices about the products they consume. Since competition had been closely regulated, there are fewer existing businesses in place. Companies that are among the first to arrive in a new market segment can enjoy a first mover advantage (Brickley, Smith, & Zimmerman, 2009). Companies can benefit by being the first to build infrastructure and be the first company that people think about when they think about their product.

Another factor that international business is for just about every business is the evolution of the internet. The internet has made international commerce extremely easy and inexpensive (Hill, 2013). Companies can build a website, and be open for business in any country in the world. It is also much more convenient to ship and transport products. In the early 1900s products were transported using trains and ships. It could take several days or weeks to ship a product from Dallas, Texas to Paris, France. Now, packages can travel to just about any destination due to air travel and overnight delivery service.

This point came to mind as I was attending a graduation party this past weekend at an old train station. Inside the train station had a map of the state of Michigan in 1910. What was striking, was the map did not have any highways! The map illustrated many train routes across the state. It was still amazing to think about that 100 years ago the only way people moved around was by train. Therefore, trips had to be well thought out. You lived and worked in your hometown, and that was about it. There was no getting in the car and travel 3 hours to a summer cottage every weekend, and there was not even travel 10 miles away because we happen to like that Costco instead of the local grocery! The same concept is true in international commerce. What was once out of reach, is now much closer, and with improving technology will surely increase international trade.

seigle

 
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Case Study: Logitech: Finding Success Through Innovation And Acquisition

Read the case study located on page 272 of the section titled Case Studies in your textbook and prepare a 3- to 4-page report in a Microsoft Word document concerning the following situation:

To consider the viability of Logitech’s future, the CEO of Logitech, has brought you in as a consultant. Your task is to use the company’s competitive analysis to predict it’s future. To do so, complete the following tasks:

  • Appraise the effect of Logitech’s size upon its ability to sustain its global positioning.
  • Appraise Logitech’s speed of strategic decision making and implementation upon its ability to maintain or increase its market position.
  • Determine whether Logitech’s past ability to innovate can be translated into continued successful market positioning.  If not, what competitive advantage can Logitech exploit to maintain its position as an industry leader?
  • How does Logitech’s quality standards impact its ability to be successful in the future?

Support your responses with examples.

Cite any sources in APA format.

Submission Details

 

Name your document SU_MGT4070_W2_A2_LastName_FirstInitial.doc.

 
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Chapter 9 And 10

Chapter 9

Discussion Questions

1.    Tomax Corporation has 400 employees and wishes to develop a compensation policy to correspond to its dynamic business strategy.  The company wishes to employ a high quality workforce capable of responding to a competitive business environment.  Suggest different compensation objectives to match Tomax’s business goals.

3.    What is job evaluation? Explain the differences between the major job evaluation systems, noting the advantages and disadvantages of each.

4.    Describe the basic steps in conducting a wage and salary survey.  What are some factors to consider?

6.    What is a compensation scorecard and how does it help align a company’s strategy with its compensation system?

 

Case Study 2

1.    Why is it important for pay to be externally fair?

 

2.    Why is it important for pay to be internally fair?

 

3.    What should Costa Vida’s compensation strategy look like?  Hint: what are the company objectives and how can employee pay help to achieve those objectives?

 

4.    What should the pay structure look like?  What pay mix would you recommend?

5.    How should Nathan communicate a new compensation strategy to his franchisee owners and managers?

6.    What effect will paying higher wages have on Costa Vida in the short term?  What effect will it have in the long term? Explain.

 

Chapter 10

Discussion Questions

1.    Working individually or in groups, identify the factors for a successful incentive plan.

2.    Contrast the differences between straight piecework, differential piece rate, and standard hour plans.  Explain where each plan might best be used.

3.    A frequently heard complaint about merit raises is that they do little to increase employee effort.  What are the causes of this belief?  Suggest ways in which the motivating value of merit raises may be increased.

4.    Because of competitive forces within your industry, you have decided to implement a profit sharing plan for your employees.  Discuss the advantages of profit sharing and identify specific characteristics that will ensure success for your plan.

 

Case Study 1

1.    Are CEOs and key corporate executives worth the large pay packages they receive? Explain.

2.    Do you agree with Peter Drucker that corporate executives should receive compensation packages no larger than a certain percentage of the pay of hourly workers? Explain.

3.    Will the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act giving shareholders the right to vote on executive pay influence the size of these packages in the future?  Explain.

Case Study 2

1.    Do results from the survey illustrate typical complaints about teams and specifically about team incentive rewards?  Explain.

2.    If appropriate, what changes would you recommend to improve the incentive reward program?  Be specific.

3.    Would management have benefited from employee involvement in the initial design and implementation of the program?  Explain.

 
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CASE STUDY

Using your textbook, read the case study provided on pages 305-311. Once you have completed reading the case study,

answer the questions on pages 310-311.

Your Case Study should be at least 1-2 pages in length. You are required to use at least your textbook as source material

for your response. All sources used, including the textbook, must be referenced; paraphrased and quoted material must

have accompanying citations. Include an APA format title page and reference page with the assignment. The title page

and reference page are not included in the required page length.

 

Dowling, P. J., Festing, M., & Engle, A. (2013). International human resource management (6th ed.). Boston, MA:

Cengage.

 
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Decision

Explain how everyone needs to make ethical decisions and how they have the capacity to influence more than just the decision maker.

 

Your response should be at least 200 words in length. You are required to use at least your textbook as source material for your response. All sources used, including the textbook, must be referenced; paraphrased and quoted material must have accompanying citations.

 

Hartman, L., DesJardins, J., & MacDonald, C. (2014). 1. Business ethics: decision making for personal integrity and social responsibility (3rd ed., pp. 10-12). New York: McGraw-Hill.

1 0 Chapter 1 Ethics and Business

relationship for our coun t ry . . . . Quite apart from the fact that we would have lost thousands, thousands of British jobs.'”^

Some observers may look to the choices made in late 2008 and 2009 by American International Group (AIG), the world’s largest insurer, as another example of poor role modeling. One can easily see the impact of those decisions on reputation. In September 2008, AIG was on the brink of bankruptcy. There was a realistic fear that if the company went under the stability of the U.S. markets may have been in serious jeopardy Over a five-month period, the U.S. government bailed out AIG to the tune of $152.2 billion (funded by U.S. tax dollars) in order to keep the company afloat, because AIG arguably was “too big to fail.”

While that consequence alone was unforUuiate, it certainly was not unethical. However, m decisions that damaged the reputations of many involved, among other charges, one month after AIG received the first round of bailout money, its executives headed to California for a weeklong retreat at an extremely luxurious hotel, with the company covering the nearly half a million dollar tab with the bailout money. Six months later, these same executives rewarded themselves with bonuses totaling over $100 million. Although President Obama (some say belatedly) derided the executives for their legally-awarded bonuses, many of the bonuses were paid nevertheless because they had been promised through employee contracts before AIG had received any bailout money for the purposes of “retainuig talent.”‘-‘

Wliile it did not reach full congressional hearing, the House even prepared a bill that would impose a 90 percent tax on the bonuses paid to executives by AIG and other companies that were getting assistance from the government of more than $5 million. Instead, the House passed the Grayson-Himes Pay for Performance Act in April 2009, “to amend the executive compensation provisions of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 to prohibit unreasonable and excessive compensation and compensation not based on performance stan- dards.”‘” This bill would ban future “unreasonable and excessive” compensation at companies receiving federal bailout money. Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner would have the power to define what constitutes reasonable compensation and to review how companies give their bonuses.

The case for business ethics is clear and persuasive. Business must take ethics into account and integrate ethics into its organizational structure. Students need to study business ethics. But what does this mean? What is “ethics,” and what is the objective of a class in business ethics?

Business Ethics as Ethical Decision Making As the title of this book suggests, our approach to business ethics will emphasize ethical decision making. No book can magically create ethically responsible people or change behavior in any direct way. But students can learn and practice responsible and accountable ways of thinking and deliberating. We assume that

 

 

Chapter 1 Ethics and Business 11

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So what is the point of a business ethics course? On one hand, “ethics” refers to an academic discipline with a cenmries-old history; we might expect knowledge about this history to be among the primary goals of a class in ethics. Thus, in an eth- ics course, sUidents might be expected to leam about the great ethicists of history such as Aristode, John Stuart Mill, and Inimanuel Kant. As in many other courses, this approach to ethics would focus on the informational content of the class.

Yet, according to some observers, ethical theories and the history of ethics is beside the point. These stakeholders, including some businesses looking to hire

OBJECTIVE college graduates, business students, and even some teachers themselves, expect an ethics class to address ethical behavior not just information and knowledge about ethics. After all, what good is an ethics class if it does not help prevent future Madoffs? For our purposes, ethics refers not only to an academic discipline, but to that arena of human life studied by this academic discipline, namely, how human beings should properly live their lives. An ethics course will not change yotu- capacity to think, but it could stimulate your choices of what to think about.

A caution about influencing behavior within a classroom is appropriate here. Part of the hesitation about teaching ethics involves the potential for abuse; expecting teachers to influence behavior could be viewed as pennission for teachers to impose their own views on students. To the contrary, many believe that teachers should remain value-neutral in the classroom and respect a student’s own views. Another part of this concern is that the line between motivating students and manipulating students is a narrow one. There are many ways to influence someone’s behavior, including tlu’eats, guilt, pressure, bullying, and intimidation. Some of the executives involved in the worst of the recent corporate scandals were very good at using some of these methods to motivate the people who worked for them. Presumably, none of these approaches belong in a college classroom, and certainly not in an ethical classroom.

But not aU forms of influencing behavior raise such concerns. There is a major difference between manipulating someone and persuading someone, between threatening (unethical) and reasoning (more likely ethical). This textbook resolves the tension between knowledge and behavior by emphasizing ethical judgment, ethical deliberation, and ethical decision making. In line with the Aristotelian notion that “we are what we repeatedly do,” we agree with those who believe that an ethics class should sti’ive to produce more ethical behavior among the students who enroll. But we believe that the only academically and ethically legitimate way to achieve this objective is through careful and reasoned decision making. Our fundamental assumption is that a process of rational decision making, a pro- cess that involves careful thought and deliberation, can and will result in behavior that is more reasonable, accountable, and ethical.

Perhaps this view is not surprising after all. Consider any course within a busi- ness school curriculum. Few would dispute that a management course aims to create better managers. We would judge as a failure any finance or accounting

 

 

12 Chapter 1 Ethics ami Business

course that denied a connection between the course material and financial or accounting practice. Every course in a business school assumes a connection between what is taught in the classroom and appropriate business behavior. Classes in management, accounting, finance, and marketing all aim to influence students’ behavior. We assume that the knowledge and reasoning skills learned in the classroom will lead to better decision making and, therefore, better behavior within a business context. A business ethics class follows this same approach.

While few teachers think that it is our role to tell students the right answers and to proclaim what students ought to think and how they ought to live, still fewer think that there should be no connection between biowledge and behavior. Our role should not be to preach ethical dogma to a passive audience, but instead to treat students as active learners and to engage them in an active process of think- ing, questioning, and deliberating. Taking Socrates as our model, philosophical ethics rejects the view that passive obedience to authority or the simple acceptance of customary norms is an adequate ethical perspective. Teaching ethics must, in this view, challenge students to think for themselves.

Business Ethics as Personal Integrity and Social Responsibility Another element of our environment that affects our ethical decision making and behavior involves the influence of social circumstances. An individual may have carefully thought through a situation and decided what is right, and then may be motivated to act accordingly. But the corporate or social context surrounding the individual may create serious barriers to such behavior. As individuals, we need to recognize that our social environment will greatly influence the range of options that are open to us and can significantly influence our behavior. People who are otherwise quite decent can, under the wrong circumstances, engage in unethical behavior while less ethically-motivated individuals can, in the right cir- cumstances, do the “right thing.” Business leaders, therefore, have a responsibility for the business environment that they create; we shall later refer to this environ- ment as the “corporate culture.”The environment can, therefore, strongly encour- age or discourage ethical behavior. Ethical business leadership is precisely this skill: to create the circumstances within which good people are able to do good, and bad people are prevented from doing bad.

The Enron case provides an example. Sherron Watkins, an Enron vice presi- dent, seemed to understand fully the corruption and deception that was occur- ring within the company; and she took some small steps to address the problems within the Enron environment. But when it became clear that her boss might use her concerns against her, she backed ofl̂ . The same circumstances were involved in connection with some of the Arthur Andersen auditors. When some individuals raised concerns about Enron’s accounting practices, their supervisors pointed out that the $100 million annual revenues generated by the Enron account provided good reason to back off”. The “Sherron Watkins” Decision Point exemplifies the cultiu-e present at Enron during the heat of its downfall.

 

 

(concluded) • What facts would you want to know before making a judgment about Watkins? • What ethical issues does this situation raise? • Besides Kenneth Lay, who else might have had an interest in hearing from

Watkins? Who else might have had a right to be informed? Did Watkins have a responsibility to anyone other than Lay?

• Other than her informing Lay, what other alternatives might have been open to Watkins?

• What might the consequences of each of these alternatives have been? • From this section of the memo, how would you characterize Watkins’

motivation? What factors seem to have motivated her to act? • If you were Ken Lay and had received the memo, what options for next steps

might you have perceived? Why might you have chosen one option over another?

• Do you think Watkins should have taken her concerns beyond Kenneth Lay to outside legal authorities?

At its most basic level, ethics is concerned with how we act and how we live our lives. Ethics involves what is perhaps the most monumental question any

OBJECTIVE human being can ask: How should we live? Ethics is, in this sense, practical, having to do with how we act, choose, behave, and do things. Philosophers often emphasize that ethics is normative, which means that it deals with our reasoning about how we should act. Social sciences, such as psychology and sociology, also examine human decision making and actions; but these sciences are descriptive rather than normative. When we say that they are descriptive, we refer to the fact that they provide an account of how and why people do act the way they do—they describe; as a normative discipline, ethics seeks an account of how and why people should act a certain way, rather than how they do act.

How should we live? This fundamental question of ethics can be interpreted in two ways. “We” can mean each one of us individually, or it might mean all of us collectively. In the first sense, this is a question about how I should live my life, how I should act, what I should do, and what kind of person I should be. This meaning of ethics is based on our value structures, defined by our moral systems; and, therefore, it is sometimes referred to as morality. It is the aspect of ethics that we refer to by the phrase “personal integrity.” There will be many times within a business setting where an individual will need to step back and ask: What should I do? How should I act? If morals refer to the underlying values on which our decisions are based, ethics refers to the applications of those morals to the decisions themselves. So, an individual could have a moral value of hon- esty, which, when applied to her or his decisions, results in a refusal to lie on an expense report. We shall return to this distinction in just a moment.

In the second sense, “How should we live?” refers to how we live together in a community. This is a question about how a society and social institutions, such

14

 

 

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Imagine that you are examining this chapter’s opening scenario in one of your classes on Organizational Behavior or Managerial Finance. What advice would you offer to Sodexo? What judgment would you make about this case from a financial perspective? After offering your analysis and recommendations, reflect on your own thinking and describe what values undedie those recommendations. • What facts would help you make your decision? • Does the scenario raise values that are particular to managers? • What stakeholders should be involved in your advice? • What values do you rely on in offering your advice?

as corporations, ought to be strucn.ired and about how we ought to live together. This area is sometimes referred to as social ethics and it raises questions of justice, public policy, law, civic virtues, organizational stiucture, and political phi- losophy. In this sense, business ethics is concerned with how business institutions ought to be structiu^ed, about whether they have a responsibility to the greater society (corporate social responsibility or CSR), and about making decisions that will impact many people other than the individual decision maker This aspect of business ethics asks us to examine business institutions from a social rather than fi-om an individual perspective. We refer to this broader social aspect of ethics as decision making for social responsibility.

In essence, managerial decision making will always involve both of these aspects of ethics. Each decision that a business manager makes involves not only a personal decision, but also a decision on behalf of, and in the name of, an organization that exists within a particular social, legal, and political environ- ment. Thus, our book’s tide makes reference to both aspects of business ethics. Within a business setting, individuals will constantly be asked to make decisions affecting both their own personal integrity and their social responsibilities.

Expressed in terms of how we should live, the major reason to study ethics becomes clear. Whether we explicitly examine these questions, each and every one of us ansM’ers them every day through our behaviors in the course of living our lives. Whatever decisions business managers make, they will have taken a stand on ethical issues, at least implicitly. The actions each one of us takes and the lives we lead give very practical and unavoidable answers to fundamental ethical questions. We therefore make a very real choice as to whether we answer them deliberately or unconsciously. Philosophical ethics merely asks us to step back from these implicit everyday decisions to examine and evaluate them. Thus, Socrates gave the philosophical answer to why you should study ethics more than 2,000 years ago: “The unexamined life is not worth living.”

To distinguish ethics from other practical decisions faced within business, consider two approaches to the Enbridge oil spill scenario in the Decision Point, “Ethics After an Oil Spill.” This case could just as well be examined in a

15

 

 

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(continued)

What facts would be helpful to you, as an outsider, in evaluating the company’s behavior after the spill? What values are involved in this situation? How would Enbridge answer that question, internally? How would the people of Wrigley answer that question, if asked?

• Did Enbridge have obligations that went beyond cleaning up the area directly affected by the spill from the company’s pipeline? Was it obligated to offer the $5,000? Consider the suggestion made by a member of the community, that Enbridge should donate money to build a swimming pool or hockey arena for local kids. Would a donation of this kind help to satisfy the company’s obliga- tions to the community?

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management, human resources, or organizational behavior class as in an ethics class. The more social-scientific approach common in management or business administration classes would examine the situation and the decision by explor- ing the factors that led to one decision rather than another or by asking why the manager acted in the way that he did.

A second approach to Enbridge, from the perspective of ethics, steps back from the facts of the situation to ask what should the manager do, what lights and fesponsihilities are involved? What good will come from this situation? Is Enbridge being fait; just, virtuous, kind, loyal, trustworthy? This normative approach to business is at the center of business ethics. Ethical decision making involves the basic categories, concepts, and language of ethics: shoulds, oughts, rights and responsibilities, goodness, fairness, justice, virtue, kindness, loyalty, trustworthiness, and honesty.

To say that ethics is a normative discipline is to say that it deals with norms: those standards of appropriate and proper (or “normal”) behavior. Norms estab- lish the guidelines or standards for determining what we should do, how we should act, what type of person we should be. Another way of expressing this point is to say that norms appeal to certain values that would be promoted or attained by acting in a certain way. Normative disciplines presuppose some underlying values.

To say that ethics is a normative discipline is not to say that all normative dis- ciplines involve the study or discipline of ethics. After all, business management

OBJECTIVE and business administration are also normative, are they not? Are there not norms for business managers that presuppose a set of business values? One could add accounting and auditing to this list, as well as economics, finance, politics, and the law. Each of these disciplines appeals to a set of values to establish the norms of appropriate behavior within each field.

These examples suggest that there are many different types of norms and values. Returning to our distinction between values and ethics, we can think of values as the underlying beliefs that cause us to act or to decide one way rather than another Thus, the value that I place on an education leads me to make the

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1 8 Chapter 1 Ethics and Business

decision to shady rather than play video games. I believe that education is more Etllics worthy, or valuable, than playing games. 1 make the decision to spend my money : on groceries rather than on a vacation because 1 value food more than relaxation. A company’s core values, for example, are those beliefs and principles that provide the ultimate guide to its decision making.

Understood in this way, many different types of values can be recognized: financial, religious, legal, historical, nutritional, political, scientific, and aesthetic. Individuals can have their own personal values and, importantly, institutions also have values. Talk of a corporation’s “culture” is a way of saying that a corporation has a set of identifiable values that establish the expectations for what is “normal” within that firm. These norms guide employees, implicitly more often than not, to behave in ways that the firm values and finds worthy. One important implication of this guidance, of course, is that an individual’s or a corporation’s set of values may lead to either ethiccd or unethiccd results. The corporate culture at Enron, for example, seems to have been committed to pushing the envelope of legality as far as possible in order to get away with as much as possible in puisuit of as much money as possible. Values? Yes. Ethical values? No.

One way to distinguish these various types of values is in terms of the ends they serve. Financial values serve monetary ends; religious values serve spiritual ends; aesthetic values serve the end of beauty; legal values serve law, order, and justice, and so forth. Different types of values are distinguished by the various ends served by those acts and choices. How are ethical values to be distinguished ; from these other types of values? What ends do ethics serve?

Values, in general, were earlier described as those beliefs that incline us to act or choose in one way rather than another Consider again the harms attributed to the ethical failures of Bernie Madoff~and those who abetted his fraudulent activ- ity. Thousands of iimocent people were hurt by the decisions made by some indi- viduals seeking their own financial and egotistical aggrandizement. This example i reveals two important elements of ethical values. First, ethical values serve the ends of human well-being. Acts and decisions that seek to promote human wel- fare are acts and decisions based on ethical values. Controversy may arise when we try to define human well-being, but we can start with some general obser- vations. Happiness certainly is a part of it, as are respect, dignity, integrity, and meaning. Freedom and autonomy surely seem to be necessary elements of human well-being, as are companionship and health.

Second, the well-being promoted by ethical values is not a personal and self- ish well-being. After all, the Enron and Madoff scandals resulted from many individuals seeking to promote their own well-being. Ethics requires that the promotion of human well-being be done impartially. From the perspective of ethics, no one person’s welfare is more worthy than any other’s. Ethical acts and choices should be acceptable and reasonable from all relevant points of view. Thus, we can offer an initial characterization of ethics and ethical values. Ethical values are those beliefs and principles that impartially promote human well-being. i

i

 
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Case Study About Forest 2 Pages

ASSIGNMENT #2

Refer to the Arbrecorp Ltée case and answer the question.

1. What symptoms exist to suggest that something has gone wrong?

Case Study Guidelines

The purpose of case studies is to help develop your analytical skills.

To answer the question, you need to consider the symptoms of the case. In

other words, what are the observable signs that things have gone wrong? What are the “red flags”?

It is valuable to remember that the responses to case studies are somewhat subjective. It is more important to provide your reasoning and ideas in a concise and thoughtful way than to be absolutely correct.

Your assignment should be approximately 2 pages single spaced in length. Consider the use of formatting such as point form, subheadings, etc to ensure your case is easy to read.

Case Study: ARBRECORP LTÉE

Steven L. McShane, The University of Western Australia, and David Lebeter

ArbreCorp Ltée is a sawmill operation in Québec, Canada, that is owned by a major forest products company, but operates independently of the parent company. It was built 30 years ago, and completely updated with new machinery five years ago. ArbreCorp receives raw logs from the area for cutting and planing into building-grade lumber, mostly 2-by-4 and 2-by-6 pieces of standard lengths. Higher grade logs leave ArbreCorp’s sawmill department in finished form and are sent directly to the packaging department. The remaining 40 percent of sawmill output are cuts from lower grade logs, requiring further work by the planing department.

ArbreCorp has one general manager, 16 supervisors and support staff, and 180 unionized employees. The unionized employees are paid an hourly rate specified in the collective agreement, whereas management and support staff are paid a monthly salary. The mill is divided into six operating departments: boom, sawmill, planer, packaging, shipping, and maintenance. The sawmill, boom, and packaging departments operate a morning shift starting at 6:00 a.m. and an afternoon shift starting at 2:00 p.m. Employees in these departments rotate shifts every two weeks. The planer and shipping departments operate only morning shifts. Maintenance employees work the night shift (starting at 10:00 p.m.).

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Each department, except for packaging, has a supervisor on every work shift. The planer supervisor is responsible for the packaging department on the morning shift, and the sawmill supervisor is responsible for the packaging department on the afternoon shift. However, the packaging operation is housed in a separate building from the other departments, so supervisors seldom visit the packaging department. This is particularly true for the afternoon shift, because the sawmill supervisor is the furthest distance from the packaging building.

PACKAGING QUALITY

Ninety percent of ArbreCorp’s product is sold on the international market through Boismarché Ltée, a large marketing agency. Boismarché represents all forest products mills owned by ArbreCorp’s parent company as well as several other clients in the region. The market for building-grade lumber is very price competitive, because there are numerous mills selling a relatively undifferentiated product. However, some differentiation does occur in product packaging and presentation. Buyers will look closely at the packaging when deciding whether to buy from ArbreCorp or another mill.

To encourage its clients to package their products better, Boismarché sponsors a monthly package quality award. The marketing agency samples and rates its clients’ packages daily, and the sawmill with the highest score at the end of the month is awarded a framed certificate of excellence. Package quality is a combination of how the lumber is piled (e.g., defects turned in), where the bands and dunnage are placed, how neatly the stencil and seal are applied, the stencil’s accuracy, and how neatly and tightly the plastic wrap is attached.

ArbreCorp won Boismarché’s packaging quality award several times over the past five years, and received high ratings in the months that it didn’t win. However, the mill’s ratings have started to decline over the past year or two, and several clients have complained about the appearance of the finished product. A few large customers switched to competitors’ lumber, saying that the decision was based on the substandard appearance of ArbreCorp’s packaging when it arrived in their lumberyard.

BOTTLENECK IN PACKAGING

The planing and sawmilling departments have significantly increased productivity over the past couple of years. The sawmill operation recently set a new productivity record on a single day. The planer operation has increased productivity to the point where last year it reduced operations to just one (rather than two) shifts per day. These productivity improvements are due to better operator training, fewer machine breakdowns, and better selection of raw logs. (Sawmill cuts from high-quality logs usually do not require planing work.)

Productivity levels in the boom, shipping, and maintenance departments have remained constant. However, the packaging department has recorded decreasing productivity over the past couple of years, with the result that a large backlog of finished product is typically stockpiled outside the packaging building. The morning shift of the packaging department is unable to keep up with the combined production of the sawmill and planer departments, so the unpackaged output is left for the afternoon shift. Unfortunately, the afternoon shift packages even less product than the morning shift, so the backlog continues to build. The backlog adds to ArbreCorp’s inventory costs and increases the risk of damaged stock.

ArbreCorp has added Saturday overtime shifts as well as extra hours before and after the regular shifts for the packaging department employees to process this backlog. Last month, the packaging department employed 10 percent of the workforce but accounted for 85 percent of the overtime. This is frustrating to ArbreCorp’s management, because time and motion studies recently confirmed that the packaging department is capable of processing all of the daily sawmill and planer production without overtime. With employees earning one and a half or two times their regular pay on overtime, ArbreCorp’s cost competitiveness suffers.

Employees and supervisors at ArbreCorp are aware that people in the packaging department tend to extend lunch by 10 minutes and coffee breaks by 5 minutes. They also typically leave work a few minutes before the end of shift. This abuse has worsened recently, particularly on the afternoon shift. Employees who are temporarily assigned to the packaging department also seem to participate in this time loss pattern after a few days. Although they are punctual and productive in other departments, these temporary employees soon adopt the packaging crew’s informal schedule when assigned to that department.

 
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Read The Case Study 6-1, Enterprise Architecture At American Express. Answer The Following Questions: What Are The Key Components Of The Architecture American Express Has Created? Why Was It Important To Standardize So Much Of The Archi

Read Case Study 6-1, Enterprise Architecture, at American Express. Answer the following questions:

  • What are the key components of the architecture that American Express has created?
  • Why was it important to standardize so much of the architecture? What are the advantages and disadvantages of a standard EA for American Express?
  • Describe how the new architecture supports the goals and strategy of American Express.
  • What types of future payment products and services should be anticipated and prepared for by the EA group? What is your vision of how payments might work?
  • If you were to advise the CIO of American Express, what would you suggest his group prepare for?

 

CASE STUDY 6-1: Enterprise Architecture at American Express 

Enterprise architecture (EA) at American Express was the framework the organization used to align IT and the business. EA provided a common language for leaders to use to collaborate and transform the business. At American Express, enterprise architects were the change agents who streamlined processes and designed ways to more effectively do business using IT resources. In 2011, American Express was named an InfoWorld/Forrester Enterprise Architecture Award recipient for its EA practices. As American Express leaders considered new payment methods using mobile devices, the EA guided their progress. Mobile payments were forcing the payments industry to review their practices and significantly transform the way business was done. The new business environment introduced additional complexity with the addition of new delivery channels and the need for shorter time-to-market of payment products and services. American Express’s business strategy for its payments products focused on delivering a “consistent, global, integrated customer experience based on services running on a common application platform.” To achieve this goal, the EA team created reference architectures and road maps for standardized applications across the firm. This team then worked with multiple business solution delivery teams to create and manage the common application architecture and create strategies that facilitated each business’s objectives. Each strategy included a road map of initiatives that included a set of actions, the metrics to evaluate the success of these actions, and the commitments IT and the businesses made to make it happen. The road map was American Express’s way to standardize language, tools, life cycle management of the applications, and architecture and governance processes. The elements of the road map included technology, reference architecture, and capabilities for the business. The next steps for American Express were to extend the road maps to cover the maturing of SOA and to develop new reference architectures and a new taxonomy to increasingly align IT with the needs of the business. As new technologies emerged and new ways of doing business over social tools created opportunities for new payment products and services, American Express expected to continually evolve its EA.

 
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Case Study: Managing Change: Action Planning For The Vélo V Project In Lyon, France

Read the case study and then answer questions following in the format stated.

 

The city of Lyon is located in the central part of France, about two hours south of Paris via TGV. It has a long and rich history as the capital of Gaul in the Roman Empire, a worldwide center of silk production, and a stronghold of the French resistance during World War II. Today, Lyon is the third largest city in France, has a thriving high tech and pharmaceutical industry, and is considered the gastronomical capital of a country known for its cuisine and wine. Unfortunately, with size and industry came pollution, overcrowding, and traffic jams. In the mid-1990s, only 18% of its citizens had easy access to public transportation versus 30% in other towns of equivalent size.

By 2000, Lyon’s city government had constructed an above-ground light rail system to complement theexisting underground metro and bus network in an effort to extend public transportation to more people. However, the outdoor station’s stops needed shelters to protect waiting passengers from the wind, rain, and snow. In an innovative program, the marketing and advertising firm, JCDecaux, in cooperation with Lyon’s development office, created “street furniture” to house the benches, ticket vending machines, route maps, and time tables. JCDecaux constructed and maintained the sites in exchange for the revenue from advertisements placed on the shelters. The program was a win-win for both organizations.

The success of the cooperative tram and bus shelter project, and the city’s continued interest in easing pollution and traffic jams in the commercial center of the city, led them to seek out additional change. They asked JC Decaux for input. JCDecaux had been testing the idea of a self-service bicycle program inVienna, Austria and Córdobo and Gijon, Spain and they proposed adopting and implementing a “bike exchange” network in and around Lyon in mid-2002. For Lyon and its neighboring city of Villeurbanne, it was a risky and large-scale proposal.

The vision—common now in many European cities, but completely novel at the time—was that commuters and pedestrians could pick up a bicycle at installations around the city—near metro stops, businesses, or large public venues—and use it to shop, go to work, or simply get from one part of town to the other more conveniently than a car or the bus, metro, or light-rail system. The original idea was that the bike could be used for free for less than an hour and at very low prices if used for longer periods. (To get a picture of the system and its different parts today, go to www.velov.grandlyon.com.) “It is our intent to turn bicycles into a mode of daily travel for workers in the city,” said one government official.

An initial budget of €2 million per year was estimated to invest in bikes, registration systems, installations, and support operations until about 2007. To support the project, the city also envisioned construction or remodeling of several parking garages to encourage people to park their cars on the outskirts of town and then pick up a bike to finish the commute. Two parking garages in the downtown area had already begun offering free bicycles for those who parked their vehicle there.

The project—named Vélo V—was presented by the city’s mayor before the second annual “day without a car” festival. Vélo V would be managed by JCDecaux. They would own and maintain the bikes and finance operations through advertising receipts. The head of the city’s development function suggested that it was a bold attempt to “effect a radical change in the philosophy” of the urban community. At the time, less than 3% of the people in Lyon used a bicycle, against 10% in Strasbourg and other cities. The proposal was supported by Les Verts, France’s Green political party, but the president of the local nongovernmental transportation union was upset that there had been little dialogue with various concerned organizations.

The goal was to launch a 24 hours/day operation in May 2005 with 1,200 bicycles in 120 stations. According to a JCDecaux regional manager, they expected 2,000 bikes in 180 stations by October and projected 3,000 bikes in 2006 and 4,000 bikes in 2007.

Questions

  • 1. Assume you are a project manager at JCDecaux and      have been assigned to work with the city of Lyon to implement this      physical, organizational, and social change. What are the practical and      philosophical implications of this work?
  • Using the      tools, methods, and processes described in the chapter, construct a      comprehensive “action plan” for this  project.
  • Where      would you start?
  • Who are      the key stakeholders and how will you manage them?

you must have a minimum of 3 scholarly sources (peer-reviewed journal articles). Please ensure that you follow standard APA formatting. Your paper must have a title page and a reference page. You must have a minimum of five (5) in-text citations.

 
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