Ethics and Social Responsibility in Marketing
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Transcript Ethics and Social Responsibility in Marketing
Ethics and Social Responsibility in
Marketing
Chapter 3
Ethical Marketing= Oxymoron?
What are ethics?
Ethics are the “moral principles and values
that govern the actions and decisions of an
individual or group.”
Legal v. Ethical Standards
Laws
Standards enforceable by the courts
Are laws and ethics the same thing?
Nike: Illegal? Unethical?
Causes for the increasing focus on ethics
Diverse value systems within the culture
Public groups are more active
Expectations have increased
Decrease in ethical behavior?
Influences upon What Is Ethical
Societal Culture and Norms
Business Culture and Industry Practices
Corporate Culture and Expectations
Society
Societal Culture
Levi Strauss
Societal Values
Patents
Businesses
Business Culture
The rules of the game in interactions between
buyers and sellers, and companies
Ethics of Exchange
Caveat Emptor
Consumer Bill of Rights
Businesses
Ethics of Competition
Economic espionage
Costs businesses in US
& Canada nearly $100
billion each year!
Bribery
Gifts, favors, etc.
Corporate Culture &
Expectations
Code of Ethics
Formal statement listing what comprises
acceptable behavior
Must be very clear
Must be equally applied throughout the
organization
Whistleblowers
Ethical Theories
Moral idealism
Considers certain rights as universal
Utilitarianism
Do no harm
“The greatest good for the greatest number”
Deontological Theories
“The ends justify the means”
Social Responsibility
Companies are accountable to society or
their actions
Three types:
Profit Responsibility
Stakeholder Responsibility
Societal Responsibility
Environment
General Public
Societal Responsibility
Environment
Green Marketing
ISO 14000
General Public
Cause-Related
Marketing
Public-Policy Issues
Deceptive Advertising
Advertising to Children
Telemarketing Fraud
Source: Mower & Minor. “Consumer Behavior: A
Framework.” Prentice-Hall, New Jersey, 2001.
Deceptive Advertising
“Literally false or potentially misleading”
False statements
Misleading Safety Claims
Misleading Affirmative Safety Claims
Deceptive Denials of Product Risk
Deceptive Information Omissions
Unfair Information Omissions
Source: Mower & Minor. “Consumer Behavior: A Framework.” PrenticeHall, New Jersey, 2001.
Advertising to Children
What’s wrong with it?
Source: Mower & Minor. “Consumer Behavior: A Framework.”
Prentice-Hall, New Jersey, 2001.
Telemarketing Fraud
Costs Americans $40
billion per year
Who is at risk?
Source: Mower & Minor. “Consumer
Behavior: A Framework.” PrenticeHall, New Jersey, 2001.
Compulsive Behavior
Smoking
Drinking
Gambling
Compulsive Shopping
Source: Mower & Minor. “Consumer Behavior: A Framework.” Prentice-Hall,
New Jersey, 2001.
Measuring Ethical Conduct
Social audit
McDonald’s
Long-term: Sustainable development
Impact of ethical behavior:
Word-of-mouth
Outperform less ethical competitors
Ethical Conduct- Consumers
Dishonest consumer practices
Billions of dollars lost annually
Consumers are unwilling to pay higher
prices for ecologically safe products
Consumers lack information