You are the manager of a spare parts company A and you have to negotiate a deal with the manager of a large manufacturing company B. The deal is highly competitive and sealing the deal is critical for your company. The deal is being worked out over a dinner. After dinner the manager of manufacturing company B offered to drop you to the hotel in his car. On the way to hotel he happens to hit motorcycle injuring the motorcyclist badly. You know the manager was driving fast and thus lost control. The law enforcement officer comes to investigate the issue and you are the sole eyewitness to it. Knowing the strict laws pertaining to road accidents you are aware that your honest account of the incident would lead to the prosecution of the manager and as a consequence the deal is likely to be jeopardised, which is of immense importance to your company.
What are the dilemmas you face? What will be your response to the situation?
Introduction
This case presents a profound ethical dilemma for a manager caught between professional obligations and personal integrity. A critical business deal, a severe road accident, and the manager as the sole eyewitness create a situation where honest testimony could jeopardize the company's future.
Ethical Dilemmas Faced
- Personal Integrity vs. Professional Loyalty: The conflict between my duty to uphold truth and justice as a citizen, and my loyalty to Company A, which relies on securing the critical business deal.
- Short-term Gain vs. Long-term Reputation: Sacrificing ethical conduct for immediate business success versus maintaining a strong ethical foundation for sustainable growth and public trust.
- Rule of Law vs. Company Interest: The imperative to ensure justice for the injured party and uphold legal principles versus protecting the company's financial interests.
Stakeholders Involved
- Myself (Manager, Company A)
- Manager of Company B (the driver)
- Injured Motorcyclist
- Company A (my employer)
- Company B (potential client)
- Law Enforcement & Judiciary
- Society at Large (upholding the rule of law)
Ethical Principles/Frameworks at Play
- Deontological Ethics: Emphasizes duty and moral rules, dictating that truth and justice must be upheld irrespective of consequences.
- Virtue Ethics: Focuses on character, promoting virtues like honesty, integrity, courage, and fairness.
- Consequentialism/Utilitarianism: While immediate business loss is possible, the long-term societal benefit of upholding justice and ethical conduct outweighs short-term gains.
My Response/Course of Action
I will provide a complete, honest, and truthful account of the incident to the law enforcement officer, stating that the manager of Company B was driving fast and lost control, causing the accident.
Justification and Long-term Implications
My decision prioritizes ethical conduct as non-negotiable. Upholding justice and the rule of law is a moral and legal obligation to assist the injured party. Compromising truth undermines the justice system and my integrity. Lying erodes personal integrity and sets a detrimental precedent for my professional conduct and Company A's ethical culture. Sacrificing ethics for short-term gain severely damages Company A's reputation, trust, and brand image in the long run; ethical companies attract better talent and clients. This situation demands moral courage to prioritize universal ethical values over immediate self-interest or corporate benefit. Company A must explore alternative strategies to secure business and mitigate the potential loss of this deal, focusing on ethical growth and diversifying clients.
357 words · target ~350
The question demands identification of ethical dilemmas and a justified course of action.
Suggested structure
Introduction: Context and gravity of the situation
Ethical Dilemmas Faced
Stakeholders Involved
Ethical Principles/Frameworks at Play
My Response/Course of Action
Justification and Long-term Implications
Key points
Dilemma: Personal integrity and duty to justice vs. professional loyalty and company interest.
Dilemma: Short-term business gain (securing the deal) vs. long-term ethical reputation and rule of law.
Response: Provide an honest and truthful account of the incident to law enforcement.
Justification: Upholding truth, justice, rule of law, and personal/professional integrity.
Acknowledge the potential business loss but emphasize that ethical conduct is paramount.
Suggest exploring alternative strategies for company A to mitigate the business impact.
Common mistakes
Prioritizing company profit and the deal over ethical conduct and justice for the injured.
Failing to identify the full spectrum of ethical dilemmas involved.
Not providing a clear, actionable, and well-justified response.
Ignoring the legal ramifications for the manager and the rights of the injured motorcyclist.
Difficulty: Medium — Involves a clear conflict between personal integrity/justice and professional loyalty/company interest, requiring a nuanced and well-justified ethical decision under pressure.