Business Vision Winter 2019 - 2020

Page 89

The business of ethics, or is it the ethics of business...? SARAH Duncan is to be congratulated on producing The Ethical Business Book, a timely and important presentation of “50 ways you can help protect people, the planet, and profits”. The author makes a strong business case for taking the ethical road, and companies ignore it at their peril. She explains that traditional corporate social responsibility (aka CSR, often a bolt-on after the money has been made) is being superseded by new ethical standards for business. We are now required to live up to society’s expectations while generating profits. Business owners should be thinking about the “triple bottom line”, which measures not only profitability but also integrity and sensitivity to the environment. Duncan’s tone is never hectoring, and she is sympathetic to individuals and companies that need to take baby steps. “Don’t be afraid of the half-way house — all businesses are a work in progress,” she writes. “Companies just need to be able to legitimately say that initiatives are being set in train and this is part of an ethical journey to better things.” The reader is challenged to produce an action plan for greater employee engagement and happiness. It’s a no-brainer when you consider that, according to The Macleod Report, wellmotivated staff generate 43 percent more revenue (with 12 percent higher productivity), take far fewer sick days, and are 87 percent less likely to quit. That’s going to ease the recruitment budget somewhat. Mahatma Gandhi is credited here with having carved out the Ten Customer Commandments

(in essence “Though shalt look after them”). But looking after — and retaining — customers as consumer conscience rises will depend partly on their commitment, too. Some will be ready to switch to similar businesses that display better sustainability credentials. Marketing in this new era moves from manipulation to authentication, adding the values and proof of ethical impact that customers demand. Duncan suggests reinventing BOGOF to “Buy one GIVE one free”.

She commends Toms Shoes (a raft of support to the needy), Mindful Chef (school meals for poor children), and Hey Girls (free sanitary towels to those who could not otherwise afford them). Advertising seems to be confined to the informative (which may sadden those who consider the better commercials to be minor works of art). This guide will be useful to those who are aware they should

be doing something for the environment, but aren’t sure quite what. It’s also an admonishment to people who stuff old newspapers in with household waste when no one is looking. Never again, Sarah, I promise. In the UK, as elsewhere, teenagers’ interest in the Brexit saga is rightly giving way to concern for the welfare of the planet. Young people are worried and in five years, 75 percent of the workforce will be Millennials — who are already shunning companies with poor ethical standards. The Baby Boomers may have eased-off on their idealism, but those born in the 1980s and ‘90s appear to be in for the long haul. THE CONNECTION... The author tells us that this is the age of the eco-leader, who recognises that quality, profitability, sustainability and social responsibility are connected. So how do we lead, follow and adapt? This little book could help. Duncan writes well, wasting not a word. The layout and illustrations are superb, with plenty of room for reader response. The author invites us to consider our position in relation to the new business ethics and jot notes in the book. She is realistic about the time needed to reflect on these matters before putting pen to paper (take heed, Dr Phil) and this would seem to be a very useful exercise.

Business Vision Winter 2019-20 Issue • www.bv.world

Author Sarah Duncan looks at subjects companies ignore at their peril. Review by JOHN FOOT

The Ethical Business Book Published (2019) by LID Publishing Limited London 89


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Articles inside

Review: Ethical Business

3min
page 89

Goodr as it gets

3min
pages 100-101

World Bank forecast

11min
pages 102-112

Award highlights

20min
pages 90-99

Sustainability in focus

2min
pages 86-87

EIB fights for climate

1min
page 88

Open banking explained

5min
pages 82-84

Planting the seed

1min
page 85

Rewards of e-commerce

2min
pages 80-81

Automation hits middle-tier

2min
pages 76-77

EEX buys the future

1min
page 79

Write the right post

2min
page 78

Sunny side of 2019

4min
pages 74-75

Future disruptions

2min
pages 72-73

Reinsurance challenges

12min
pages 54-59

Export aid for UK?

3min
pages 69-70

Pupils and payment

2min
page 71

Art in the workplace

4min
pages 64-65

Something from nothing?

5min
pages 66-68

OECD climate warning

4min
pages 60-63

Lisbon: Green Capital

3min
pages 50-51

What is reneging?

2min
page 52

SMEs missing out

1min
page 49

Protection for execs

8min
pages 46-48

The working week examined

7min
pages 42-44

Pensions: will they last?

2min
page 45

C-suite and digitalisation

1min
page 37

Data and democracy

5min
pages 38-41

Private equity: is it for you?

4min
pages 32-33

Heart of the Matter

3min
page 16

Bushfire insurance claims

7min
pages 26-30

Are you in the club?

5min
pages 18-21

Bezos backs e-commerce

1min
page 31

Banks facing tough times

7min
pages 22-25

Infrastructure finance

6min
pages 34-36

How's your cyber hygiene?

1min
page 17
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