If you ask company executives to reveal their “core
values,” integrity is always one of their first answers, says Joel C.
Peterson, chairman of the board of JetBlue Airways and a Stanford
University professor of management. The single most important ingredient
to business success is trust, Peterson says, and trust starts with
integrity.
Entrepreneur and angel investor Amy Rees Anderson borrows from C.S Lewis’s famous quote, defining integrity as “doing the right thing all the time, even when no one is looking—especially when no one is looking.”Anderson offers many examples of acting without integrity: CEOs who overstate their projected earnings because they don’t want to be replaced by their boards of directors. Competitors who lie to customers to seal a deal. Customer service reps covering up mistakes because they fear clients will leave. There’s no shortage of high-profile major lapses, too: Bernie Madoff’s long-standing operation of a Ponzi scheme considered to be the largest financial fraud in U.S. history, Michael Milken’s conviction for violating U.S. securities laws after being the one-time toast of Wall Street, and Major League Baseball star Alex Rodriguez’ use of performance-enhancing drugs.
Acting with integrity can be difficult. “There are
plenty of situations that are not altogether clear,” says Peterson, who
has collected examples of integrity challenges during his long career in
business and academia. In one of them, the chief financial officer of a
company where Peterson served on the audit committee was unjustly
accused of wrongdoing by a regulator.
“The dilemma: You are spending shareholders’ money to
protect the CFO, and if you just fire the guy it would all go away. On
the other hand, that’s the wrong thing to do, and it could destroy this
man’s life,” Peterson explains. So he asks whether you make that
decision according to your own standards or the standards of
shareholders to whom you answer. “We fought. We said [the regulator’s
action] was wrong. We won’t cave, and we won’t be bullied.” The outcome:
The regulator dropped the matter, and the board’s audit committee sent a
message to the company that “integrity matters here.”
• Fulfill your promises… to your staff, your investors, everyone. If you break a promise, you must apologize, but don’t let this become a pattern.
• Keep appointments. Doing so affects you professionally and personally (practicing your faith, staying fit, being present for family, etc.).
• Before you make a commitment, “stop and soberly reflect on whether you are 100 percent sure you can deliver,” says Simons. “You need to be dispassionate in that evaluation.”
• Get comfortable with saying no. No one can say yes to everything and follow through on it all.
• Examine how you react in knee-jerk situations,
as well as how you make longer-term commitments (e.g., attending
events, completing projects, etc.). Use this introspection to become
self-aware, keep score and improve. (You can also use this behavioral
yardstick for determining whether others act with integrity.)
• Polish your communication skills.
Reread that email or report before you send it; plan what you’ll say in
oral presentations and phone calls. “Fuzzy communication leads to broken
promises,” says Simons. Ask someone to proofread written communications
and point out ambiguities before you distribute them.
• Consider the habits and skills you need to develop to enhance your integrity. You might need to stop certain actions (e.g., speaking impulsively or sugarcoating your responses). And you
might need to improve on others: building your personal courage (because
fear holds you back from acting with integrity—Peterson’s CFO might
have been fired without others showing courage). Issue apologies
“faster, simpler and aimed more at containing the damage [you may have
done] than at justifying yourself,” says Simons.
• Peterson advises to take great care with the language you use, especially when dealing with sensitive issues such as sexual preference, racism and religion.
• Avoid people who lack integrity. “Do
not do business with them,” Anderson writes in a blog post. “Do not
associate with them. Do not make excuses for them. It’s important to
realize that others pay attention to those you have chosen to associate
with, and they will inevitably judge your character by the character of your friends.”
Written by Robin Amster
Robin Amster is a writer and editor whose work appears in magazines,
newspapers and the web. She specializes in travel and the travel
industry. Robin has also written extensively on business, lifestyle,
interior design and architecture.
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