On the trail of rule-benders who go too far
By Nancy Dunne
Cynicism begins early these days. Almost one-third of teenagers believe
that to be a success, they must “bend the rules”, according
to a recent poll by the Junior Achievement organisation and Deloitte & Touche,
the professional services firm.
If the poll had been taken among adults that percentage would possibly
be much higher. The endless succession of corporate scandals has put
ethics – or rather the lack of them – front and centre in
the American consciousness.
If the pressures are severe enough, anyone at any given time is capable
of committing fraud, says Carl Pergola, national director of FIRSTGlobal
Investigations, an investigations practice of BDO Seidman, the tax consulting
and professional services firm. “There are also people who are
inherently bad, who get up in the morning believing their job is to take
your money,” he says.
For both classes of fraudsters, the number of institutions, organisations
and firms devoted to combating them has been climbing. Auditors are offering
preventative anti-fraud programmes. Services, such as The Network, are
establishing hotlines so that workers can report fraud anonymously and
some companies are encouraging them to do so.
Junior Achievement, which offers free enterprise and economic education
to schoolchildren from 4th to 12th grade has expanded its offerings on
ethical behaviour. Universities and business schools, too, are stressing
ethics education.
The Ethics Officer Association, founded in 1992 by a dozen company ethics
officers, now has more than 955 members. Member companies include more
than half the Fortune 100. To spread ethical consciousness, the EOA is
developing business conduct standards with the American National Standards
Institute.
FIRSTGlobal investigates fraud and now offers a proactive programme
for preventing fraud. The demand for certified fraud investigators is “tremendous”,
says Mr Pergola, but a relatively small number of qualified applicants
exist. One colleague was hired by a corporation to build an antifraud
unit of 40-50 people. So far the colleague has been able to find only
five.
What is needed, Mr Pergola says, are people who understand the mind
of a fraudster. “They have to understand why people perform in
certain ways. If they are under undue pressure and their work is tied
to compensation, they may start thinking creatively. Some say they are
just borrowing. Some are having affairs they want to cover up, or they
are gamblers or drug users. They figure out ways to get the money.”
He says there is constant pressure on public companies to perform, and
the pressure passes down through the ranks so that individuals conceal
mistakes or bad news.
On the other hand, in the uproar over corporate scandals, there is a
risk that some people are being prosecuted unfairly, says Mr Pergola. “There
is pressure on people to name names for reduced sentences. People are
prosecuted with no evidence by some else's word. Juries can get confused,
and there are risks that the true perpetrators are getting away with
little or no punishment.”
David Gebler, an expert on business ethics, says ethics programmes took
hold well before Enron. President Ronald Reagan demanded them in the
defence industry after the scandals over expensive toilet seats and vast
cost overruns. The US Sentencing Commission laid down guidelines for
what would become the business ethics movement.
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed after Enron, put teeth into demands for
ethics in accounting and reporting. “Many senior leaders are honest
but they don't know how to convey ethical standards to their people,” says
Mr Gebler.
Difficulties arise when a corporate culture is not defined – after
mergers for example – and managers do not know what is expected
of them. “Ninety-five per cent of all unethical activities are
not done for personal gain,” says Mr Gebler. “They are done
because an employee thinks it is expected of him to keep his job, to
get the boss to like him.”
Mr. Gebler says company leaders must set the tone if they want to create
an antifraud culture. They must strongly convey that they value honesty
and ethics and why. They must tell employees when their company is in
trouble and explain plans to address it.
Jim Myers of Take the High Road, a consulting firm, surveys workers
in its client companies to determine general attitudes on morality and
ethics before establishing company ethics programmes. He attributes some
of the wrongdoing to bad communications. “What we find now is a
lot of communications by instant messaging. Employees don't have relationships
with people, not even by telephone. Since they don't know people how
can they deal with them?”
Too many company leaders show little consideration for the welfare of
their employees, says Mr Myers. “When a company is in trouble,
why aren't the top people taking pay cuts? How can the CEO, who is getting
$8m-$10m, fire someone making $40,000 a year without taking some cuts
themselves?”
Many headhunters see ethics as top priority when they look for able
job candidates. Fred Greene, managing director of Boyden Global Executive
Search firm in California, performs reference checks on candidates himself.
California privacy laws are so stringent that he cannot contact anyone
not listed on a resumé, and the candidates must be allowed to
see his reports if they ask.
Even so, Mr Greene believes he can evaluate a candidate's integrity
in interviews. “We are reasonably good at getting behind façades
when we delve into the whys and wherefores,” he says.
Sometimes he feels compelled to advise his clients that they may want
more thorough investigations. These can be performed by the rising number
of career verification agencies, which have millions of records from
public – and sometimes private – sources.
Pollsters also have reported some optimistic findings. The survey of
teenagers also found a conviction that 62 per cent of those who practice
good business ethics are more successful than people who do not. A new
poll by Harris Interactive found investor confidence is closely aligned
with companies' compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley. Fifty-seven per cent
said they would be very unlikely to invest in a company that failed to
comply with Sarbanes-Oxley. It is only a wonder that that percentage
is not much higher.
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