Last month, one of my candidates bailed out of a job offer after successfully negotiating the terms of employment. I suspect that he was using my client’s offer as a bargaining chip with another employer. Not an example of good-faith negotiations and a minor financial cost to me.
That same week, a golfing buddy asked for my advice about the propriety of the Informational Interview as a viable job-search strategy. I told him that whereas many savvy professionals had become jaded toward this tactic, it is acceptable so long as the request for such a meeting is made with full disclosure.
Not long after this discussion, a strategic partner told me of a mutual friend who was looking for a speaker to talk to his organization about Ethics in the Job Search process. At this point I decided that someone was trying to tell me something, especially since my next article was due for the USF Alumni Magazine. In fact, this subject is a good follow-on to my last article, “Working with an Executive Recruiter.” The advice in that article was about building relationships of trust, based on honesty and truthfulness.
In the past 30 years, the employer-employee compact has changed. Job security is a thing of the past. Employees are now Free Agents. Have standards of ethics kept the pace of that change? I am not so sure. I have heard it said that cut-throat competition has led many to believe that ethics is passé or naïve. That may or may not be true, but I do think it is safe to say that role models of ethical behavior seem to be in short supply. We all know of leaders, from government, industry, sports, and even the clergy, who have had ethical lapses. I have long held the opinion that the average person can distinguish between ethical and unethical behavior when confronted with same, at least intuitively. But, how do you decide the proper behavior when confronted with a situation beyond your experience?
My dictionary defines ethics as “conforming to the standards of conduct of a given profession or group.” Another definition which appears frequently in the literature defines ethics as “principles or standards to guide actions based on established corporate values.” In other words, ethics is an established set of rules, a paradigm.
How do ethics apply to job search? My last article spoke to the expectations of the job seeker by the potential employer and the recruiter working on their behalf. Now, let’s address expectations of the job seeker from a prospective employer. After all, isn’t it better to work for a company that is highly ethical, which values integrity? How do you know if you are talking to an ethical employer? Here are a few questions you should resolve.
• Is there a formal code of ethics? Is that code reinforced by training and a part of the employee evaluation process?
• Is training and development around ethical decision-making provided?
• Are there formal systems to report unethical behavior in a non-threatening way?
• Is misconduct addressed in a timely manner?
• Is integrity emphasized to new employees as a part of the cultural overview?
• How are senior managers perceived by employees?
I have found that the more ethical companies are better about informing the job seeker as to their selection process and maintain communication throughout that process.
Over lunch this past week, I asked a friend, a consultant and professional trainer, how she would define ethical behavior. After a brief pause she answered with one word; “accountability.” What a great answer! If we were to be held accountable for our all of commitments and our actions I would think that ethical behavior would prevail. Expect ethical behavior of prospective employers and you will likely be happier in your career.