Lecture 3 Relationship, Fairness, Trust and Ethics
Lecture 3 Relationship, Fairness, Trust and Ethics
Lecture 3 Relationship, Fairness, Trust and Ethics
Lecture 3
Relationships, Fairness, Trust and
Ethics
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Relationships in Organisations
• Formal • Close relationships
Determined by roles Psychological safety
• Informal Information flow
Personal relationships Learning benefits
• Poor relationships
Anxiety and stress
Reduced communication
Lower satisfaction and
performance
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Social Exchange Theories
Common basic elements include:
the exchange rules and norms that determine
interactions and
the obligations that arise from them for each
partner,
the currency of exchange (i.e., the nature of the
resources passed between the partners), and
the relationships that emerge between and
among exchange partners
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Rational Choice Theory
• Behaviour is driven by self-interest based on
hedonistic (value maximization) principles
Game theory – mathematical approaches to
describe and analyse interaction among parties
(see prisoners dilemma)
Tit-for-tat (equivalent retaliation) strategy
• Strategy to maximise one’s own outcome
• Emotions can affect strategy
• If the number of interaction rounds is small & limited
the expected utility is limited
Issues of trust
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Rational Choice Theory
• Individuals are motivated by their personal wants and
goals and are driven by personal desires.
• Since it is not possible for individuals to attain all of the
various things that they want, they must make choices
related to both their goals and the means for attaining
those goals.
• Individuals must anticipate the outcomes of alternative
courses of action and calculate which action will be best
for them.
• In the end, rational individuals choose the course of
action that is likely to give them the greatest satisfaction.
http://sociology.about.com/od/Sociological-Theory/a/Rational-Choice-Theory.htm
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Prisoner’s Dilemma
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Social Capital Theory
• Network of strong cross cutting personal
relationships developed over time that
provide the basis for trust, cooperation and
collective action
• Actual and potential resources embedded
within, available through, and derived from
the network of relationships in a social unit
Structural
Cognitive
Relational
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Managing Relationships in
Organisations
• Relationships are determined by:
Similarity to others
Maximum reward, minimum cost
Instrumentality
• Across authority levels
• Impacted by culture
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Managing Relationships in
Organisations
• Positive relationships at work are:
Supportive
Appreciative
Informative
Inclusive
Empowering
Validating
Respectful
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Managing Relationships in
Organisations
• Toxic relationships
Unproductive, counterproductive, or harmful
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Psychological Contract
• Individual beliefs about the
terms of the mutual
exchange agreement
between the individual and
their organisation
• Violations lead to profound
behavioural, cognitive and
emotional reactions
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Contract Violations
• Lead to: • Address violations by:
Higher turnover and Changing the benefits
absenteeism and working conditions
Lower job satisfaction provided by the
Increased cynicism organisation
Justifying and reframing
Lower organisational
perceived shortcomings
citizenship behaviour
Interventions aimed at
Lower perceived support
changing subjective
Reduced trust in the
expectations
organisation
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Organisational Justice
Employees’ fairness perceptions regarding their
work and conditions of employment
Distributive – concerned with individuals perceptions
of fairness outcomes
Procedural – concerned with perceived fairness of the
processes by which decisions about outcomes are
made
Interactional – concerned with fairness perceptions of
the quality of interpersonal treatment
Informational - concerned with fairness perceptions
of information received
Colquitt et al., 2001 15
Areas Affected by Experienced Injustice
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Leventhal’s Criteria of Procedural Fairness
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Trust in Organisations
• Degree to which a person is prepared to make
themselves vulnerable to another person despite
uncertainty about the other’s possible actions
• Three-stages of development
Deterrence-based – e.g. threat of punishments control
based
Knowledge-based – knowledge of others dispositions,
intentions and behaviour patterns
Identification-based – one’s own needs and desires as
personal goals which will act in ways that consider
joint gains
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Determinates of Trust
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Can Broken Trust Be Repaired?
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5 step process of establishing trust
• Identify core values
• Bring core values to life
• Spell out the do’s and don’ts aspects of
values
• Weave values into fabric of organisation
• Ensure accountability and model the way
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Process for Repairing Trust
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Ethics at work
• Business leaders should voluntarily self regulate.
• Scandals, disasters and frauds? People now
question negative effects of business practices.
• To regain public trust and to avoid more
regulations businesses had to reassure through
“ethics”.
Ethics of action
Ethics effect on society
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Problems in Business Ethics
• Problem of Relevance – should businesses
only make money? Ethics has no place in the
business world – Milton Friedman.
• Problem of conscience – who decides it is
relevant and how to enforce? Who is the
ethical authority?
• Problem of translation – ethics is
philosophical; abstract. Business is practical &
rational:- efficiency, outputs, products &
costs.
(refer to Knights and Wilmott: Introducing OB & Management, 2007. Chapter 14 on Ethics) 27
Overcoming problems in Ethics
• Overcoming the ‘relevance’ problem:
Stakeholder theory – other stakeholders have
valid demands for business to ethical.
• Overcoming the ‘conscience’ problem – the
management.
• Overcoming the ‘translation’ problem –
putting in place process where management
formulates and disseminate organisation-wide
ethical and/or policies. Series of rules.
(refer to Knights and Wilmott: Introducing OB & Management, 2007. Chapter 14 on Ethics)
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Frameworks on Business Ethics
• Utilitarianism
ethical value of an act is based on its consequences
Acts that give greatest good for greatest number of
people are deemed to be morally right.
But what constitutes ‘good outcome’ – debatable?
• Stakeholder theory
Responsibility of mgmt is not just towards demand
of shareholders but to recognise OB affects other
stakeholders:- inside & outside.
To consider the ethical consequences of particular
organisational actions.
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Frameworks on Business Ethics
• Deontology
Ethics is not about fulfilling a particular end.
It is a “an end itself”. It is not about consequences.
It should be part of human behaviour to be ethical. It is
an ethical duty to be ethical.
It should be a ‘universalizable’ moral duty.
• Justice & Virtue
Based on emotive issue of fairness.
Focuses on moral education and character of managers
or the person who acts.
(refer to Knights and Wilmott: Introducing OB & Management, 2007. Chapter 14 on Ethics)
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Objections to Business Ethics
• Psychological egotism
Acting morally is only justified if it promotes the
manager’s or organisation’s best interest; taking
other people’s interest into account runs contrary
to good business.
• Machivellian concerns
‘The means justify the ends’, even if you have to be
the arch ‘political animal’ to avoid being a
corporate or organization ‘loser’.
(refer to Linstead, Fulop and Lilley: Management and Organization, 2009. Chapter 8 on Managing Ethically)
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Objections to Business Ethics
• Legal-moral
Implies if it is legal, then that’s all you have to
worry about and the rest will look after itself. So
long as you comply with the ‘spirit of the law’,
organisations need not worry about ethical codes.
• Agency arguments
Profit maximization is the rule of business and
market is the key arbitrator of what is ‘right’ good
(refer to Linstead, Fulop and Lilley: Management and Organization, 2009. Chapter 8 on Managing Ethically)
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How to Make Ethical Choices
Summary
• Behaviour is influenced by rational
considerations such as:
rewards and costs, and by
principles of rewards and punishment
over time many interactions within relationships
become ritualistic and often automatic
• Organisation Justice – is employees’ fairness
perceptions regarding their work and conditions of
employment and their behavioural reactions to
this.
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Summary
• Trust is when a person is prepared to make themselves
vulnerable to another person despite uncertainty about
the other’s possible actions.
According to Institute of Business Ethics, UK:
• “Business ethics is the application of ethical values to business
behavior”.
• “Ethics goes beyond the legal requirements for a company and
is, therefore, about discretionary decisions and behaviour
guided by values”.
• “Stakeholders want to be associated with responsible
organisations. Being treated fairly, honestly and consistently is
of value to a business’s customers, suppliers, investors and
employees. It builds trust”.
Source: http://www.ibe.org.uk/frequently-asked-questions/3#faq273 35
Reference
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