Saturday, July 13, 2013

A634.7.4.RB_LarsonKurt, Ethics and Behaviors


Watch the two videos from business ethics speakers and discuss how your organization portrays its values. Share any examples where behaviors were portrayed positively by your leaders or an instance where someone was unethical in your work environment.

The organization portrays its core values through its Strategic Plan and Mission Statement. Which include the organization plan for the future with associated goals, milestones and timelines. The one critical and common denominator identified are its people, and the inability to complete its critical mission for the nation with state of the art equipment and national assets without the dedication, experience, and can-do mindset of the whole organization.

Through respect, good moral, working in unison (not stove piping) and mutual understanding by management to provide the tools equipment and resources necessary that allow individuals the ability to preform all aspects of their professions in the least intrusive manner, and to complete these duties in a most safe and efficient manner possible.

An example of positive portrayal of behavior would be when an individual was being treated most unfairly, simply for accomplishing the duties of his position by auditing and recommending a change to past practices that were shown to be outdated and in some cases against policy. The leader prepared an email citing the negligent and hurtful out lashes that were directed toward the individual and the consequences of continuing in an unprofessional and inappropriate manner.

An instance of unethical behavior in the work place would be by an officer, who will stop at nothing to further his career at the expense of others. One might say he has a narcissistic version of the Neapolitan complex. The methods employed are from “his way or the highway” to always being correct and if nobody argues or debates with him, he is then in his mind “RIGHT”. His bias toward pilots and against mechanics is astounding. Pilots can do no wrong, whereby mechanics that may have made an error are judged, tried and hung by him before an investigation has been completed.

The display of bravado and arrogance this officer displays to dare anybody to ever find he has made a mistake while flying is to say the very least unethical, unsafe and unprofessional, especially from the position as a manager and supposed leader.

In 1977 the worst disaster involving aircraft on the ground occurred when a KLM jumbo preparing for take-off is understood to have clipped the Pan-Am plane, which was taxiing, across the runway. In total 583 people died in the blaze that followed the collision and the incident remains the world's worst aviation accident in history.
Ultimately, the crash was blamed on the KLM pilot who had not checked if he was clear for take-off and sped down the foggy runway. The KLM pilot was the company poster child and chief pilot who could do no wrong.
Junior officers would not dare to challenge his bravado or arrogance to the point of witnessing the impending disaster that would take their very lives vs. speaking-up and possibly saving the 583 people and themselves.
Why address the worst air disaster in history, simply because it is unprofessional, unethical and immoral to not address an unknown or impending problem that can affect those who have entrusted their lives in the air and on the ground to seasoned, professionally licensed and trained pilots. And the organization that accepts and declines to not address this level of bravado, arrogance and unprofessional conduct is guilty of unethical and immoral behavior itself.   

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