Description
It is easy to blame corporate fraud and financial-sector misconduct on a lack of morals. But framing the issue of businesses behaving badly strictly as a morality problem is problematic because it leads to solutions — ranging from expanded compliance programs and codes of conduct to compensation claw-back clauses — that aim to install and strengthen moral sensibilities for the purpose of positive behaviour modification. And these have proved largely ineffective. Ivey research has shown that it would be far more productive to interpret misconduct and misbehaviour in the business sphere as a failure of judgment caused by weaknesses in dimensions of character. This is because while most leaders aspire to have better judgment, many resist suggestions that they are morally flawed and see solutions that teach ethics and morals as condescending. The development of the Ivey Leader Character model, a framework currently being deployed across a wide variety of organizations, has opened the door to reframing misconduct and misbehaviour in business as a judgment issue. The dimensions in the Leader Character Framework are habits of behaviour that can change over time, for better or for worse. Leader character must be present wherever there is a competitive/strategic requirement for strong competency. Ultimately, strengthening leader character will positively influence and change an organization’s culture and (potentially) industry context.