The news wires of late have been filled with
stories one after another of NFL players involved in some form of domestic
violence. Listening to Roger Goddell’s
statement last week added to the feeling that something in this picture
was missing. Like many organizations the NFL preferred their bottom line to
what was morally and ethically right. Consider the reports from the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission regarding the $17,000,000 they have collected
in fines for a wide range of charges including retaliation and sexual
harassment.
How many times have you watched the classic film
the Wizard of OZ and heard the scarecrow sing this Harold Arlen (music) and E.Y. Harburg (lyrics) song? The news
conference Mr. Goddell conducted and reading the EEOC RSS feeds since January
2014 seems to lead me to the thought, that today’s business leaders need to be singing
this song to themselves because a CEO is not using their brain.
For way to long we have been brought up
to believe that the shareholder’s interest are paramount to the health of the
organization. Everything we do and everything we say is directly attributed to
whether or not we are providing a return on their investment back to the
shareholders. If someone notices that we are doing something that could put the
organization in a bad light, management tells us to just let things lie as they
are. A human capital asset believes that they have been wronged; they complain
but end up being punished for trying to rock the boat. But times have changed
and the view has widened to include shareholders and stakeholders.
It is time we wake up to the importance
of human capital to the value of our organization. Organizations are supposed
to be like their second family. We do not tell them in our communication pieces
and the annual reports as how important they are to us and then turn our heads
to wrongs being done to them in the name of shareholder return on investment.
When we turn our heads away from the wrong treatment of individuals because it
may look bad for our shareholders we tell the human capital that they are
second-class citizens.
Our
FTE’s wake up in the morning and have a fight with their significant other. Our
FTE gets into a road rage situation on the commute to work. These and many more
such situations are brought into the workplace. Now with a wide range of bring
your guns to work the hard feelings can spill over into the office. It is high
time that our CEO’s understand that the real center of consideration is not the
shareholders but the stakeholders. It is high time that our CEO’s use their
brains to understand the our organizational extended family includes the FTE’s
and their significant others and any offspring. When our FTE’s get caught in
situations like Ray Rice it reflects back on the organization as well as the
parties involved. It puts into play how we define ethics and morality. It
reflects on the organization as to whether we walk the walk and talk the talk.
One of the last remaining contracts we
have with our human capital assets is to provide a safe workplace environment.
We have a moral and ethic responsibility to ensure to the utmost of our
abilities that the wrongful action of the FTE’s and their families does not
spill into the environment we call home. The vast majority of CEO’s that I have
encountered are well schooled; they have just forgot the school of common
sense. They have forgotten about how important our FTE’s are to the
organization. We need to demonstrate that violence against another person,
unless it is in your own self defense, will not be part of the organizational
belief system.
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