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Good intentions aside:

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 1990Description: xv, 259pISBN:
  • 9780875842257
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 174.4 NAS
Summary: In recent years companies have become increasingly aware of the connection between ethical behaviour and economic performance. Once viewed as a cost of doing business, corporate ethics today is more likely to be seen as an asset. As we enter the 1990s, the goal for management is to foster ethical thinking throughout the organization. "Good Intentions Aside" addresses the theoretical and practical issues of recognizing and responding to ethical problems. Drawing on extensive interviews with scores of managers, Nash identifies the two primary reasons why well-intentioned people do not always maintain high personal standards in the workplace: traditional management assumptions about the goals of business, and habitual patterns of problem solving that tend to obstruct ethical thinking. The solution, according to Nash, is for managers to adopt a new framework that focuses on providing value to others. By making social relationships the top priority in decision making, managers can act on their good intentions without sacrificing strong economic performance.
Item type: Book
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book IIM Kashipur 174.4 NAS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 871

Includes bibliographical references and index.

In recent years companies have become increasingly aware of the connection between ethical behaviour and economic performance. Once viewed as a cost of doing business, corporate ethics today is more likely to be seen as an asset. As we enter the 1990s, the goal for management is to foster ethical thinking throughout the organization. "Good Intentions Aside" addresses the theoretical and practical issues of recognizing and responding to ethical problems. Drawing on extensive interviews with scores of managers, Nash identifies the two primary reasons why well-intentioned people do not always maintain high personal standards in the workplace: traditional management assumptions about the goals of business, and habitual patterns of problem solving that tend to obstruct ethical thinking. The solution, according to Nash, is for managers to adopt a new framework that focuses on providing value to others. By making social relationships the top priority in decision making, managers can act on their good intentions without sacrificing strong economic performance.

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