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How a Penn State debacle could happen at your company

By
Jill Geisler
Jill Geisler
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By
Jill Geisler
Jill Geisler
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July 16, 2012, 11:44 AM ET

(Poynter.org) — The Freeh Report is a chilling indictment of the leadership at Penn State. People at the top build, sustain, or change organizational culture, and clearly, Penn State needed a radical change. It took a tragedy to make people believe it.

Rather than looking upon it like head-shaking witnesses to a horrific train wreck, let’s focus on how situations like these evolve, because, in truth, a leadership failure of this sort could happen to any of us.

Smart, successful people, even those who see themselves as particularly ethical and moral, cultivate a collection of blind spots. In Blind Spots: Why We Fail to Do What’s Right and What to Do about It, authors and business ethicists Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel argue that we overestimate our ability to act ethically. They say we succumb to “bounded ethicality,” which they describe as “systematic constraints on our morality that favor our own self-interest at the expense of the interest of others.”

That means we may say we’re all about doing the right thing — and even believe it. But when doing the right thing has too many negative consequences for us, we may reframe the situation to favor our own interests. We find a way to justify our self-serving decisions.

Sounds like Penn State’s leaders, doesn’t it? It’s why this statement from the Freeh Report is so haunting: “Although concern to treat the child abuser humanely was expressly stated, no such sentiments were ever expressed by them for Sandusky’s victims.”

It’s why a former dean of student affairs at Penn State — who was responsible for administering the school’s code of student conduct — ran afoul of coach Joe Paterno and left the university, discouraged. When athletes got into trouble, Paterno wanted to determine their punishment and whether it would be made public, rather than allow the normal university process to prevail.

Leaders define an organization’s values in practice. That means even when the mission statement says we stand for what’s right — even when we have a code of ethics (I’m looking at you, Enron), we take cues from the actions of the most powerful people in the organization. Their actions and decisions, along with the operational systems and procedures they develop, influence everyone else.

Again, from the book Blind Spots: “Aspects of everyday work life — including goals, rewards, compliance systems, and informal pressures — can contribute to ethical fading, a process by which ethical dimensions are eliminated from a decision.”

It can be something as simple as how we describe the decision. Is this a “business decision” or an “ethical decision”? Is this about “avoiding bad publicity” or “reforming bad practices”?

We’re all susceptible to blind spots, but because of their power, leaders must be acutely aware of the dangers of bounded ethicality and ethical fading.

Could a Penn State-like leadership meltdown happen to you? It could happen anywhere, under the right conditions. Let me share eight scenarios that easily come to mind:

1. Your organization uses words like “integrity” and “values” in promotional literature, but leaders rarely utter them in the course of daily decisions, much less the toughest ones.

2. Your organization has decided that Human Resources is a budget luxury and has reduced its function to record keeping.

3. Your employee handbook encourages people to confide in the HR department. But your HR department has developed a reputation for being a black hole for employee complaints, existing only to protect management. People believe life will get worse for them if they raise questions or concerns about powerful people. If it’s a myth, no one has dispelled it.

4. Training is reduced to only those things that show an immediate return on investment, not “touchy-feely” stuff like ethics and values. We all know the rules around here and just use common sense, right?

5. Managers identify more closely with colleagues under scrutiny rather than their potential victims. It sounds something like this: “Heck, if every boss who made a pass at an intern got fired, you couldn’t run the business. Besides, have you seen how some of those kids dress?”

6. Managers’ hands are just a little bit dirty, not a lot. (“Sure, I’ve taken a few modest gifts, but its not enough to be a conflict of interest. Not me.”) When someone with much muddier mitts is uncovered, concern about being tarred with the same brush causes people to downplay the seriousness of the situation.

7. Managers have made “No Whining” such a pervasive mantra that people hear it as “No Whistleblowing.” They fear bringing bad news to bosses who don’t want to hear it.

8. Employees are evaluated on metrics alone, not how they achieved them. Rainmakers and stars are protected, insulated, forgiven — as long as they perform.

Everyone, including (and especially) the boss, should play by the same rules. But to make that happen, you have to do what the leaders at Penn State failed to do: Take off your blinders.

Jill Geisler heads the leadership and management programs of the Poynter Institute. She is the author of the recently published book, Work Happy: What Great Bosses Know.

More from Poynter:

  • Hire Great People, but Don’t Leave Them Alone 
  • The Four D’s That Can Derail a Difficult Conversation 
  • A Paycheck is Not a Thank-You: What Great Bosses Know about Recognition
About the Author
By Jill Geisler
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