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I
was present at a holiday dinner during the
1970s, also attended by my companys
Director of Manufacturing and Director of
Engineering, their wives, and hosted by the
owner of an international business partner
company also accompanied by his wife. We had
just initiated a significant joint venture
with this company, and the dinner was a type
of celebration for the new partnership.
I was the highest ranking official representing
the company in the room. At the beginning
of dinner, the host walked into the room with
a flourish, and produced a beautiful set of
earrings, offering them to the wife of the
Director of Engineering. She was clearly delighted.
Next, he produced a beautiful amulet, which
he placed around the neck of the wife of the
Director of Manufacturing. She also thanked
him profusely, and accepted the gift. Next,
he walked over and opened a box, which contained
an exquisite diamond necklace, that must have
cost tens of thousands of dollars, and placed
it around my wifes neck. She politely
thanked him, held her hand to her throat and
stated that she could not accept the gift.
He insisted, saying that it was his
birthday, and for that reason, she must
accept it as a gift to him. I intervened,
and noted with some firmness that we definitely
could not accept the gift. The dinner was
taking place in a large public restaurant.
The discourse had attracted some attention
for nearby diners. Later at dinner, he tried
again to present the necklace, and did so
again at dessert. Each time, I politely declined.
Finally, as we were leaving, he stated that
if we were not going to accept the necklace,
then he would leave it on the floor, which
he did. We left shortly thereafter.
Was this inappropriate behavior on my part?
We clearly had insulted a business partner
yet did I act with integrity? Was it
the right decision?
To answer this question, consider the following
context...
I reported to our CEO for 10 years, having
been promoted to VP at age 34. During this
time I had accountability for purchasing,
traffic and logistics for the entire organization.
Depending upon the time period within the
10 years my additional responsibilities included:
R&D, formation of a new division with
P&L, management of a self contained process
control computer manufacturing division, energy
management, real estate management and management
of the corporate office building including
a relocation of 300 people to a new office.
Numerous other issues of ethics, internal
policy interpretation, social responsibility
and inter-company turf were encountered. The
single best complimentary letter that I ever
received came in a year ago from my former
CEO as I began a new business venture: The
note included this line: "Your reputation
for integrity will serve you well".
During my years as VP and CPO, my President
and Chairman were each quite active in the
civic and business community. My Chairman
was one of the founders of the newly formed
National Minority Purchasing Council, the
fore-runner of today's NMSDC, and was a social
responsibility advocate by word and deed,
and served several other local city boards
in our corporate home city. My President and
CEO had an armful of outside activities. He
had served as a Campaign Finance Chairman
for a US Congressman, chaired the State Industrial
Development Commission for the Governor, was
president of the local Chamber of Commerce,
served on several corporate boards, was chairman
of the industry trade association, and was
often on the phone with high profile politicians
who would ask his opinion or seek input and
support on economic and policical issues.
The point of all of this foundation building
is this. Both men were in constant communication
and meetings with others who were seeking
to do business with our company. In one of
the wisest meetings I have ever attended,
the three of us met early in my tenure. The
gist of the meeting was this.
| 1. |
We
meet people who ask how they can sell
something to our company. These are our
friends, our business associates, our
fellow club or church members and our
political allies. We need to be nice to
them. |
| 2. |
You
are in charge of buying things and determining
who we should buy from. |
| 3. |
We
will refer anyone who asks for an opportunity
to do business with the company to you. |
| 4. |
You
will ignore any implications of referral
or recommendation that you hear from these
people and make the best business decision
for the company. |
| 5. |
If
our own mother should come in to sell
pencils and her price/terms are too high,
politely "throw her out". |
| 6. |
Our
mutual job is to build relationships and
to do the best job we can for the company. |
Much
of what I see about corporate ethics is policy,
implementation, judgment and accountabilty
driven. The above scenario adds something
to the mix. There should properly be an internal
understanding and partnership that establishes
an ethics policy but also manages the policy
in a manner that, in the borrowed words of
one line of Rotary International's 4-way Test,
"Builds good will and promotes fellowship".
One can say "No" in many alternate
ways. Ethics is about avoiding the appearance
of conflict of interest, not just the conflict
itself.
Returning to the business dinner and attempted
gift of jewelry, the decision to refuse the
gift was a good one. As CPO, my personal reputation
would have been compromised by appearing to
accept such a gift in a public place even
if it were discretely returned at a later
time. The acceptance of gifts by other corporate
personnel created an uncomfortable precedent;
yet it was my job to do the right thing. Finally,
the reader should know that the business deal
later fell apart based, in part, on poor business
practice by the international partner.
In this situation, one had only a few seconds
to make a decison that must be lived
with, explained to others and support
continued business relationships. My wife
and I had thoroughly discussed issues of family
and business ethics; she was an equal partner
in making the correct decision with conviction
and grace.
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