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Abstract: The process of entrepreneurship and the importance of business ethics to entrepreneurial success, and the concept of stages of ethical consciousness and some of the reasons business ethics makes good business sense. Does not mention the Bahá'í Faith. Notes: |
Ethics and Entrepreneurship, An Oxymoron?:
A Transition to a Free Market Economy in Eastern Europe
Paris: European Bahá'í Business Forum, 1997
Experience in emerging economies has shown that the
development of the private sector of the economy is a vital part
of the restructuring needed to move from a command economy to a
social market economy. As jobs disappear in the traditional
state-owned sector, the key dynamic force in market economies,
and more generally in economic development, will be
entrepreneurs. Throughout the world - in Western Europe and the
United States as well as in Eastern Europe and other developing
economies - a large percentage of the new jobs are created in new
enterprises and in rapidly expanding firms.
If it is so evident that the creation of small and medium
sized companies is vital to the creation of jobs and wealth in
developing countries, why is it so difficult to stimulate private
enterprise in areas like Eastern Europe? One of the reasons
frequently given is the poor image of entrepreneurs in many of
these countries. They are too often seen as gangsters, villains,
and thieves rather than heroes and champions of economic
development. So there is an important link between ethics and
entrepreneurship.
In this paper I would like to explain first what
entrepreneurship is and refute some of the myths which have grown
up about entrepreneurs. The second part of this paper discusses
what may be a more controversial proposition: that business
ethics is important to entrepreneurial success.
WHAT IS ENTREPRENEURSHIP?
The entrepreneur has been variously defined as a risk taker,
manager, innovator, capitalist, inventor, implementer,
speculator, and thief. This latter definition of
"thief" reflects the negative image of entrepreneurs in
Eastern and Central Europe. A recent article in a newspaper in
Moscow described how "four thieves stole a million rubles
from society." In reality there were four computer
programmers who successfully launched a small software activity
which had sales of the equivalent of $50,000 during its first
nine months. They would be considered successful entrepreneurs in
most countries.
A more objective analysis of entrepreneurship reveals that it
can best be characterized as a multi-faceted process which
includes a vision, a high level of personal commitment and drive,
innovation, change, and the creation and building of something of
significant value over time. It also involves taking both
personal as well as financial risks, building and motivating a
team of people, and mobilizing human, material, and financial
resources.
One of these facets, innovation, deserves more explanation. In
highly developed economies, entrepreneurship often involves
technological innovation - either applying existing and known
technology to new markets or the development of new technology.
In contrast, in developing economies there is little
technological innovation involved. The innovation and opportunity
for changing the ways things are done tend to be broader in
scope, and more often involve improvising substitutes for
non-available skills and materials, adapting production
techniques and the way the work is organized, and obtaining
adequate management skills. In developing countries, introducing
elementary management practices can be a major source of
innovation.
It is important to emphasize that creating a new enterprise
involves significant risk. In studying a new venture, at least
five major risks must be evaluated. These are, first, the
product/market risk: Is it the right product or service at the
right price for an identifiable group of customers? Second, the
managerial risk: Does the entrepreneur/team possess the required
skills and experience? Third, the technical risk: Can the product
be manufactured, or can the service be provided? Fourth, the
competitive risk: What is the chance that the venture can achieve
either product differentiation or cost leadership and sustain it
over time?
Finally, the financial risk: Might the venture run out of
money, and if so, can additional money be raised? However, even
after a positive evaluation of these risks, the failure rate is
high - some estimate that more than 50% of new ventures fail
within five years.
It is obvious from this discussion of the importance and
nature of the risks involved that one of the important tasks for
an entrepreneur is to transfer some of the risk to others. You
have probably noticed, as I have, that successful entrepreneurs
are extremely clever in getting others to share in their risk.
Another characteristic of entrepreneurship is that it is a
market-driven process. It must be anchored in a product or a
service that adds value for its customers and end users. This
dimension constitutes one of the major challenges in emerging
economies which have been centrally planned with little
competition, and where meeting quotas or other goals of the
system was more important than satisfying the end user.
The Process of Entrepreneurship
The process of entrepreneurship can be divided into several
distinct phases beginning with the idea, or the seed of the
venture. This is followed by some preliminary consultations and
fact gathering to determine the opportunity for success. Some
consider this phase to be an idea which has been well massaged.
Then a more detailed definition and evaluation of the feasibility
of the venture is undertaken. The fourth phase is the start-up or
launching of the new enterprise, which can cover a period of 6
months or 2 years depending on the venture. The final phase is
the managing of the ongoing business enterprise. This process is
explained in considerable detail in a recent publication of the
European Bahá'í Business Forum, Entrepreneurship, An
Introduction.
Who are these Entrepreneurs?
A number of studies have been carried out to determine what
characterizes successful entrepreneurs. One conclusion of these
studies is that successful entrepreneurs do not fit any single
profile. Some are young, others are retired. Some are creative
geniuses, others are men or women of action.
But there are some common characteristics. They work hard,
they are driven by an intense personal commitment to the success
of the venture. They are very achievement oriented. They are able
to live and cope with uncertainty and disappointments. They tend
to be optimists. They seek excellence and strive to win. They
accept and learn from failures. They are pragmatic and action
oriented, not perfectionists. They value freedom to decide and to
act and tend to be intolerant of authority. And they believe
strongly in themselves - they are self confident.
The following seven myths about entrepreneurs are the most
prevalent:
- Myth #1: All entrepreneurs tend to be alike. Experience
shows that the majority of founders defy generalities
about their age, experience, level of education and the
like. Some experts say that in some poor countries women
are the most successful entrepreneurs.
- Myth # 2: Entrepreneurs are driven by greed, power and
lust for money. What really drives most entrepreneurs is
a deep personal need for achievement. They do not seem to
be galvanized by the sole prospect of profit. We have
found that high achievers work hard anyway provided there
is an opportunity to achieve something worthwhile and of
value.
- Myth # 3: Entrepreneurs are born to be entrepreneurs. On
the contrary, the making of an entrepreneur occurs by
accumulating relevant skills, know-how, experience, and
contacts over a period of years and includes in
particular self-development.
- Myth # 4: The most important thing is to have a good
idea. Experience has shown that only one out of a hundred
ideas results in a new business, and only five out of ten
new businesses survive more than five years. Experienced
investors generally prefer a good entrepreneur with a
mediocre idea to a new or inexperienced entrepreneur with
a good idea.
- Myth # 5: Obtaining financing for a new venture is the
most difficult step: For reasonable projects, supported
by a competent entrepreneur, raising finances can be one
of the least difficult obstacles to overcome. This may be
less true, however, in many Eastern European countries
due to the inadequacy of the banking system. Furthermore,
financing remains a major problem for women
entrepreneurs.
- Myth # 6: Entrepreneurs are reckless risk takers: Our
experience is that entrepreneurs go out of their way to
avoid high-risk situations and they are very clever in
getting others to assume a lot of the risk.
- Myth #7: Entrepreneurs sacrifice morals for profits:
Honesty and integrity are very important attributes for
entrepreneurs because they depend heavily on the trust of
their customers, suppliers, partners and bankers.
Obstacles to New Enterprise Creation
Entrepreneurs in Eastern and Central Europe face many of the
same problems and challenges as entrepreneurs in the West. They
must separate real opportunities from unrealistic ideas; they too
must put together the financial, human and technical resources
needed to get the job done; they must find ways to share many of
the risks with others such as banks, foreign partners, and
suppliers.
But in addition to these problems, entrepreneurs in emerging
economies must also overcome the handicaps of inadequate
infrastructures and weak support systems. This is even more
important when the entrepreneur is attempting to attract foreign
partners. In addition, financial resources, trained personnel,
and technology are scarce. Furthermore the illiquidity of the
whole system is a constant threat since customers tend to be
short of cash, therefore do not pay their bills on time. This in
turn creates frequent liquidity crises and not infrequently
bankruptcy.
For the above reasons, as well as the rampant inflation in
many Eastern European countries, many new enterprises are in
trading and retail shops, where the investment requirements are
lower, and profits are higher and more immediate. But the real
challenge is to encourage the creation of new manufacturing and
service enterprises.
Let us pursue some of these obstacles and problems further. My
observations are drawn to a large extent from recent experience
in several Eastern European countries.
- Bureaucracy: There are few ways to discourage
entrepreneurs more effectively than massive and detailed
regulation, long delays in obtaining permits, and complex
networks of decision makers. Entrepreneurs need to work
fast, deliver products on time, and decide quickly on
priorities. Their style conflicts with the slowness of
bureaucracy and the complexity of decision making in
command economies. Foreign investors are even less
tolerant and patient because they usually have
alternative opportunities to invest in other countries
where these unproductive delays are not present and the
investment climate and outlook are at least as favorable.
- Inadequate financial markets and institutions: Banks
provide many services that are important to
entrepreneurs: lending, mortgage financing, guarantees,
transfers, foreign exchange, and letters of credit, to
name a few. Without these services available locally, it
is difficult for entrepreneurs to operate, particularly
in carrying out their transactions abroad. Difficulties
in obtaining export financing and guarantees can cause
delays and additional costs in importing raw materials,
thus making a firm uncompetitive.
- Inadequate infrastructure: Lack of reliable
communications, transportation, and energy represent
other serious obstacles. One of the first things that
causes a potential foreign investor to turn away is the
lack of reliable telephone and fax services.
- Technology: Lack of access to modern technology is
certainly one of the major obstacles to the creation of
new enterprises, and particularly those destined for
export.
- Culture: One of the most important barriers to
entrepreneurship is the cultural barrier. After 40 years
of a centrally planned economy, it is not surprising that
people tend to be reactive and cautious rather than
innovative, assertive and risk taking. (see Table below)
- In a remarkable presentation to a recent Conference on
"Moral and Ethical Principles in a Social Market
Economy", on the subject of "Bulgarian National
Psychology", one speaker painted a rather bleak
future near-term for entrepreneurship in Bulgaria because
of this cultural dimension. He lamented that 40 years of
totalitarianism changed the strong spirit and work ethic
of the Bulgarians into a country of unenterprising,
submissive, Party-centered individuals who learned to
refrain from making decisions and to avoid
responsibility. Totalitarianism, he went on to point out,
led to the loss of the role and meaning of words. Spoken
agreements and written contracts became meaningless
because they were not upheld or honored. As a result, he
concluded that "one cannot expect a boom in the
entrepreneurial spirit among Bulgarians." Jacques
Attali, former President of the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development, shared this concern about
the transition to a market economy throughout Eastern and
Central Europe when he said "If words are robbed of
meaning, if the lie is the main unit of currency, there
can be no exchange between humans, no contracts, and thus
no basis for a maintenance of markets and
democracy."
- Business Ethics: In one recent survey in the Czech
Republic, the absence of business ethics, or at least the
public perception of the low level of ethics in business,
was mentioned very frequently as the main barrier to
people becoming an entrepreneur. Furthermore,
"disrespect for both the general welfare and the
benefit of society as a whole is a further negative
feature which can seriously impair the creation of new
enterprises." This important issue of whether
entrepreneurs are, or should be, ethical is explored
further in a later section.
CULTURE, VALUES AND PERSONAL SKILLS DIFFER
- Free Enterprise
- Command Economy
- pro active
- reactive
- innovative, risk taker
- cautious
- assumes responsibility
- avoids responsibility
- collaborates
- individualist
- trusts others
- suspicious
- delegates
- centralizes
- right to fail
- failure a disgrace
What Can Government Do ?
Experience in other countries both in the West and in the East
has shown that the development of entrepreneurship involves a
real partnership between government and business. Perhaps we
should add two other important partners: foreign investors and
the international institutions that are providing so much
assistance at this time. Success requires on the one hand wisdom
on the part of public policy makers and on the other hand the
energy of entrepreneurs.
What must governments do to encourage the creation of new
enterprises? First, of course, this goal must be publicly
recognized to be a clear national priority and favorable
government policies must be promulgated. In country after country
it has been shown that cultural and attitudinal handicaps are
overcome once government policy is clear and explicit. Three
things that government can do stand out:
- Get the macro-economicenvironment right;
- Remove administrative and regulatory barriers;
Provide necessary infrastructure and support systems.
- Creating a Stable Macro-economic Environment: A well
known economist from Harvard, Jeffrey Sacks, stated that
the single most important policy for promoting
entrepreneurship is getting the macroeconomic structure
and environment right. Of overriding importance to
entrepreneurs and to potential foreign investors are the
following:
- An explicit government policy favorable to private
initiative.
- A clear legal framework covering property rights,
transfer of ownership, and competition.
- Favorable conditions for international trade, investment,
and cooperation.
- Reasonable and simple taxes.
- Repatriation of capital and profits.
- Control of inflation.
- Economic growth.
- Convertible currency.
- Removing barriers: Cumbersome bureaucratic procedures and
detailed restrictions on what entrepreneurs can and
cannot do only add to the many problems which creators of
new enterprises face. Some very simple analyses could be
made of how long it takes and how many people are
involved to obtain various permit:
- To create a company
- To buy property
- To open an office
- To build a plant
- To import raw materials
- To export finished products
- To borrow money
- To hire and fire personnel.
These analyses would certainly bring to light some of the
problems in attracting entrepreneurs and foreign investors and
indicate the actions needed to remove these barriers.
- Providing Business Infrastructure: In addition to
removing such barriers, entrepreneurs and foreign
investors expect a minimum infrastructure to be able to
do business efficiently. Reliable transportation, energy,
and communications are a minimum. But over and above
these, some governments are increasing direct assistance
to promote the creation of new enterprises. This direct
support often takes the form of:
- Well conceived and realistic strategies and action plans
for attracting foreign investment
- Banking and financial services (short and long term
credits, guarantee funds, equity and seed capital,
leasing ..)
- Technical training
- Management and staff training (accounting, languages,
marketing, ethics)
- Professional services (legal, accounting, consulting)
- Export development assistance
- Business development centers
- Industrial parks
- Incubators
Some Lessons of Experience
What can be learned from the enterprise promotion experience
in developing countries of the world? While controversial, I
would like to conclude this first part with several observations:
- Individual enterprise is a critically important driving
force for economic and social development in developing
countries as well as for developed economies.
- Entrepreneurs know better than governments or foreign
"experts" what is good for them and the
economy. Effective support programs therefore focus on
providing access to resources not on promoting particular
forms of enterprises.
- It is both necessary and possible for enterprise
assistance programs that provide genuinely useful
services eventually to cover their costs.
- Women are creating businesses twice as fast as men in
some countries. Women are the most numerous and the most
serious entrepreneurs in many poor countries, even though
their businesses are usually very small. They repay loans
more reliably than men, and they use their earnings for
the benefit of their families and for reinvestment.
- "Minimalist" programs and micro-credit schemes
which provide small credits at reasonable interest rates
to enable poor people to start their own businesses are
usually successful. Training courses, consulting
services, industrial estates and other similar services
do not seem to provide the same lasting benefits.
- A final observation is that as an entrepreneur, the
longer you survive, the better the chances of succeeding.
Experience is very important. It is like troops in battle
- most deaths occur among newly arrived troops.
Experienced veterans know better how to survive.
THE IMPORTANCE OF BUSINESS ETHICS TO ENTREPRENEURIAL SUCCESS
Having discussed entrepreneurship, we turn now to business
ethics: What does it mean? What does it have to do with
entrepreneurship? Do good ethics make good business sense for
entrepreneurs?
There is a very widespread feeling that this is not the time
to talk about ethics in countries in Eastern and Central Europe
now experiencing what some economists have called
"cowboy" and "Mafia" capitalism. "Come
back in five years" is frequently heard in answer to queries
about the state of business ethics. Yet, as we mentioned earlier,
the public perception of a
low level of ethics in business is a major barrier to
entrepreneurship. How can entrepreneurs become models as long as
the public equates profits with theft? Is this not the moment of
greatest need to bring the ethical dimension of entrepreneurship
to the attention of the public as well as of the business
community? Let us first discuss what is meant by business ethics.
Definition of Business Ethics
Ethics, whether applied to business, law, medicine, or any
other professional practice, is derived from a set of universal
values. Some 3,000 years ago Zarathustra summed up ethics pretty
well when he called it "purity of intention, wisdom in
utterance, and goodly deeds." So ethics is not a recent fad.
Most writers on the subject agree on several universal values
which underlie ethics and which are found in the writings of the
world's great religious traditions. Among these virtues or values
we find:
- honesty and truthfulness
- trustworthiness
- fairness
- respect for others
- service
- justice
- moderation
- wisdom and prudence
But business ethics is not simply a philosophical concept - it
is concerned with decisions and what to do. It is obviously
concerned with right and wrong. But this is usually relatively
easy to sort out. We know it is wrong to steal or to kill. More
importantly, business ethics seeks answers to real life problems
which often involve conflicts of "right versus right"
and clashes of moral principles. For example, if an entrepreneur
is confronted with a choice between bribing officials to obtain
government contracts or laying off workers, what should he do? He
probably realizes that paying bribes is wrong, but is laying off
workers and depriving them of their livelihood less wrong or less
moral than paying bribes? One author defines business ethics as
"the study of how personal moral norms apply to the
activities and goals of commercial enterprise. It is not a
separate moral standard, but the study of how the business
context poses its own unique problems for the moral person who
acts as an agent of this system."She goes on to point out
that business ethics generally falls into three basic areas of
managerial decision making: choices about the law, choices about
economic and social issues that are beyond the law's domain, and
choices about the preeminence of one's own self-interest. Since
there are often no right or wrong decisions, business ethics
reflects a state of consciousness about moral and human values
and business obligations which permits sound reasoning on major
decisions.
Stages of Ethical Consciousness
There are clearly wide variations in ethical standards between
cultures and countries and probably even greater differences
among entrepreneurs in a given country. One way of analyzing
these variations is to define different levels or stages of
ethical consciousness in a business. This approach parallels that
of Lawrence Kohlberg who developed the leading theory of moral
development. One of Kohlberg's findings was that the moral
development occurs in a specific sequence of stages regardless of
culture. But to place this in a business context, the levels
might be described as follows:
- Stage 1: "Might Makes Right".
Decisions and actions in this first and lowest stage of
ethical consciousness are based on very simple physical
and material power. It is a very Darwinian existence in
which "might makes right", "survival of
the fittest", and the "law of the jungle"
prevail. Activities of the Mafia such as extortion and
price fixing enforced by physical threats could be
considered to be Stage 1 behaviour.
- Stage 2: "Anything Goes".
Actions in this stage are still very self-centered and
materialistic. Entrepreneurs in this stage seek to
maximize personal financial gain very short term by doing
anything that produces a profit as long as they do not
get caught. Producing, distributing, and selling drugs or
pornography would fall in this level, as would practices
such as false representation of products, bribes to
government officials, stealing, not paying taxes, false
declarations for customs, and failure to respect written
or oral commitments. In this stage actions are taken with
little or no consideration for other people or parties.
This stage is characterized by such expressions as
"let's make a deal", "nice guys finish
last", "we have to pay bribes", and
"anything goes as long as one does not get
caught", and 'we have to lie and cheat for the next
five year, and then we will be honest.'
- Stage 3: "Maximize profits
short-term". This stage involves greater conformity
to socially and generally accepted business practices.
Entrepreneurs seek to maximize profits within the
constraints of the law. "Whatever is good business
is good ethics", "follow the leading
crowd", and "that's the way business is done
here" best describes the reasoning of entrepreneurs
and business people operating on this level. Short-term
growth in sales and profits are the primary performance
measures. They are reassured by some leading economists
such as Milton Friedman who say that the basic
responsibility of business to society is to make profits
for themselves and their stockholders. The father of
capitalism, Adam Smith, described the free enterprise
system in The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776. He
argued that the interests of society are best served by
permitting each person to follow his or her own
self-interest in economic life. We sometimes forget
though that Adam Smith was himself a priest and that
moral behaviour and the rule of law were already accepted
bases for society when he wrote about capitalism.
- Stage 4: "Maximize profits - long
term". A significantly higher level of ethical
consciousness is the school of thought that "sound
ethics is good business in the long run."
Entrepreneurs look to rules, laws and codes for guidance.
Companies like Shell, whose Managing Director in Bulgaria
spoke last year describing why his company in Bulgaria
(and in other countries) refused to pay bribes to
contractors to complete new stations on time, exemplify
this level of behaviour. While the interests of
shareholders remains uppermost in the minds of
executives, there is equal if not greater concern for
doing what is right and what will prove most profitable
over the longer term even if other actions might produce
greater short-term profits. An increasing number of
companies in Western Europe and the United States have
codes of ethics which define what they consider to be
ethical behavior. Some companies go so far as to appoint
an 'ethics officer', provide training courses on the
ethics code, and build respect of this code into the
annual performance evaluations.
- Stage 5: "The Stakeholder
Concept". Reasoning in this stage goes beyond the
notion that the purpose of business is essentially to
make profits. Companies openly profess to have a social
as well as economic mission. Their behavior is influenced
by certain universal principles such as justice as well
as by legal codes. Profit sharing, community service
projects, and philanthropy are examples. There is
increasing recognition in the West of the interdependence
of various "stakeholders" in the business. By
stakeholder is meant any group or individual who can
affect or is affected by the achievement of the
organization's objectives. Examples of stakeholder groups
beyond stockholders and owners include: employees,
customers, suppliers, banks and other creditors, partners
whether local or foreign, governments, and communities in
which the company operates. A large number of academics
have been writing about this "stakeholder
concept" for many years, and increasing attention is
being given to it by progressive business leaders. Mr.
Heini Lippuner, Chairman of the Executive Committee of
Ciba Geigy, quotes his company's "Vision 2000
Statement" in saying that "By striking a
balance between our economic, social, and environmental
responsibilities, we want to ensure the prosperity of our
enterprise beyond the year 2000." The driving
assumption of this concept is service to all stakeholders
in the business and balancing their respective interests
to seek the greatest good for all. The focus is on
building and maintaining mutually enabling relationships,
which in turn create value for others and thus justify
profit. The measures of success are different as well:
quality, service, customer satisfaction, community
health, team welfare, employee self-realization: these
goals are considered important as well as financial
results. Some companies have gone so far as to publish
regular annual social reports similar to their annual
financial reports.
- Stage 6: "Corporate
Citizenship". A yet higher level of ethical
consciousness involves redefining the mission of business
in society. The World Business Academy and Business for
Social Responsibility, both associations and networks of
business leaders, are among the principal proponents of
this higher level of ethical consciousness. This
"social responsibility" school of thought,
present in Stage 5 but to a lesser degree, maintains that
business has a major responsibility to contribute to the
necessary transformation of what they consider to be a
very unhealthy society today. Their belief is based on
the premise that a business can be healthy only if
society around it is healthy and that no other
institution in society, including governments and
churches, has the resources or the credibility to bring
about this transformation. Entrepreneurs operating on
this level would seek to achieve certain societal
objectives such as community health, job creation,
employing handicapped people, and self realization of
employees as well as financial success. The growing
importance of networks of "social venture
entrepreneurs" illustrates how socially desirable
objectives can motivate as well as profits.
Developing Ethical Consciousness
To digress for a moment, studies and theories about the
cognitive and moral development of individuals and in particular
in children, may help us understand the process of ethical
development of entrepreneurs in Eastern Europe. Like Kohlberg,
the well known Swiss psychologist Piaget, well known for his
studies on cognitive development, found that this development
occurs in discrete stages which occur in an invariant sequence
and are age related. Piaget underscored the critical importance
of activity and experience in generating growth and change. From
this we might hypothesize that the ethical development of
entrepreneurs in countries emerging from 40 years of central
planning and totalitarianism will have to pass through stages
such as those described above and that their ethical development
also will require experience and time. By handling ethical
dilemmas and learning from the ensuing experience and feedback,
ethical consciousness will develop progressively. We can also
develop several hypotheses about entrepreneurs in Eastern Europe
from Kohlberg's conclusions on moral development:
- We can expect that most entrepreneurs in Eastern Europe
will exhibit behavior in stages I and II, but they will
progress to stages II and III during the coming five to
ten years. Individuals exhibit an underlying desire to
progress toward the next higher stage.
- There is no reason to teach or expect understanding of
levels V and VI behavior. People can understand the
reasoning and ethical systems one stage above their own,
but it is useless -- as Kohlberg found in practice with
individuals -- to expect people to understand and to
embrace systems more than one level above their own. This
is because of the experience required to move to higher
levels.
- Teaching business ethics to executives and students of
business can affect their degree of ethical maturity and
consciousness. The use of case studies about dilemmas and
discussion is generally more effective than lectures,
which are of little value. But actual results from such
courses in terms of behavioral change are likely to be
very modest.
- The environment, that is the overall ethical health of
society, plays an important role in the development
process. If corruption and self-interest prevail, it is
unlikely that entrepreneurs will develop consciousness of
business ethics where ethical behavior is not valued in
the surrounding environment.
Does Good Business Ethics Pay?
So what does all of this have to do with entrepreneurship in
Eastern Europe? Business ethics has a lot to do with profits and
survival. As borders break down, as competition increases, as the
ability to compete and survive depend increasingly upon quality,
faster and more reliable delivery, and customer service, values
such as honesty and integrity take on a new significance. Far
from accepting the commonly held theory that a period of
unscrupulous and irresponsible personal wealth creation is
essential to jump-start failing economies, I maintain that there
is an immediate need for entrepreneurs to apply the values
described above to their relationships with each of the
stakeholders in their enterprise. Several networks have missions
to promote ethical practices in business and government. Among
them are the European Business Ethics Network, the Business
Council for Sustainable Development, Transparency International,
The World Business Academy, the Social Venture Network Europe,
and EBBF. During the work of EBBF with the College of Management,
Trade & Marketing in Sofia, Bulgaria, to integrate business
ethics into the curriculum, we asked a group of professors what
are the most prevalent forms of unethical behavior in business.
Their list included: misrepresentation of products or services
(ex: false labeling), failure to respect specifications (ex:
building), lack of purity in medicines, product claims made
without testing, accounting "tricks", corruption and
bribery, stealing from the company, and pollution. So there is a
sense of what constitutes ethical conduct in Bulgaria. But the
question remains in the minds of many: "Does good business
ethics really pay?" Let's discuss a few examples of how good
ethics can make good business sense in the more competitive
environment of a free market:
- By developing a reputation for honesty, entrepreneurs can
obtain financing from commercial banks and micro-credit
facilities more easily and more quickly, and probably on
more favorable terms. While it has been perhaps more
effective in the past simply to offer a 'gift' to a
banker in return for a loan, this practice will not last
long as banking opens up to private and international
banks. One bank had at the top of its list of criteria
for making loans "honesty of the client" - even
before ability to repay the loan. Even more important,
honesty with customers in terms of performance, quality
and price will be rewarded by loyalty, repeat orders, and
positive word of mouth to introduce new customers.
Calculations made of the life-time economic contribution
of a loyal customer bear out how important customer
loyalty can be.
- Trustworthiness is a key consideration in decisions of
foreign partners whether licensing, importing or
exporting, or franchising. A local entrepreneur is
unlikely to find reliable partners abroad unless he can
convince them that he is worthy of their trust and
confidence.
- Fairness with employees and suppliers can make a real
difference in their loyalty, motivation and productivity,
as well as in the quality of products and services to
customers.
- Respect for others is quickly sensed by customers and
will make a difference once customers have a choice of
alternative suppliers. It is also very important to
demonstrate respect for employees in order to establish
an internal climate favorable for good quality and
service.
- Justice also has its place in business. For example,
suppliers can be real partners for the entrepreneur if
they feel they are being treated fairly and with justice,
that is, being given a fair price and being paid on time
rather than simply being exploited. =20During the early
years of one of the world's best managed corporations,
Hewlett Packard, its entrepreneurial president once
reprimanded a purchasing agent for negotiating a contract
which left no profit for the supplier, and called the
supplier to negotiate a fairer contract. Needless to say,
that supplier became a very loyal partner and remains
today one of the leading suppliers of HP.
Even with the forgoing arguments in favor of a higher level of
ethical conduct and consciousness, there are many sceptics both
in former socialist countries and in the West. The legacy of the
past 40 years in Eastern and Central Europe explains the large
number of sceptics as well as the unethical practices so
frequently found in business and other professions. Many of
today's entrepreneurs have lived in a corrupt business
environment where there was no competition, consumers had no
choice, and foreign partners lived under the same system and
practiced the same values. But scepticism is not limited to
former socialist economies. It exists also in more developed
economies where materialism is rampant and moral values are
underdeveloped. So why should entrepreneurs change today and
decide to climb up the ladder of ethical consciousness? Quite
simply, and in closing, entrepreneurs' behaviour and values must
change to reflect the radically different requirements for
success in the economy now emerging from the collapse of the
socialist central planning system. The trends are very clear:
moving toward a free market system, privatization of major parts
of the economy, new competition in most sectors, deregulation,
new trading partners in the West, new market and consumer
demands, new environmental constraints, and an increasing demand
by the public for more responsible behaviour on the part of
business and government alike. This change represents a
revolution in the economic and social system, a revolution which
is opening up a new world of opportunity for entrepreneurs, but a
world in which the requirements for success and the "rules
of the game" call for dramatic changes in business practices
including good business ethics. Those entrepreneurs who are able
to understand and adapt to these changes will create new wealth
for themselves and for society as well.
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