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Home Opinion

Driving an ethical culture

Culture is king. It will eat strategy for breakfast any day. So much so that the literature indicates that the two most influential factors affecting our behaviour are genetics and workplace culture.

by Christine Bau
February 4, 2019
in Opinion
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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I don’t think there is any doubt that the culture, and consequently, the ethical behaviour, of some financial planning practices and individual planners over recent years has been dubious. The number of practitioners being banned by ASIC continues to grow daily. Will mandating that all practising advisers need to complete an ethics subject though fix the problem?

I certainly don’t think it hurts and I appreciate that you need to start somewhere. However, it seems to miss the bigger picture issue, which is that culture and ethics are led from the top.

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As articulated in the latest ‘Global Business Ethics Survey,’ senior management play a critical role in setting an organisation’s ethical tone. ‘Employees tend to follow leaders’ cues for both good and ill, which makes it especially problematic when leaders break rules or violate standards of integrity.’

While many practice leaders are also practising advisers, is it reasonable to assume that this is the case in all instances? My experience says ‘no’. Many financial planning firms have senior leadership positions that are held by non-practising advisers who are not obliged to complete the subject. The question therefore begs, what support are these senior leaders and mentors, the ones who are ultimately empowered to create and drive an ethical behaviour, being given?

Now for those of you thinking, ‘I don’t need any assistance in that area, we’ve got a great ethical culture in our workplace; no one would ever act unethically,’ I challenge you to write down the top two to three values that describe what is most important to your organisation and then ask the same question of your employees. If your employee responses don’t mirror yours and aren’t inclusive of words like ‘humility’ or ‘accountability’, there is work to be done.

A second and separate question is whether the principles that you identify as ‘key’ depict the virtues that really define and drive your business, and that you are 99 per cent more committed to them than your competitors. Read this to mean I am not talking about values that sound nice, but really, when push comes to shove you will find a way to justify why you compromised them. No, what I am talking about are the two to three values that distinguish you from your competitors, because they are so important that you will prioritise them above everything else.

Take for example South West Airways whose mantra is ‘employee’s first’. Several years ago, when the airline industry in America wasn’t performing particularly well many airlines made redundancies. It would have been entirely reasonable for South West Airways to also follow this path, but it didn’t. True to the idea of ‘employee’s first’, the company retained all of its employees and instead, chose to post losses.

Yes. That’s right, there will always be a cost associated with having strong values.

Equally, there also are many benefits to be had. In particular, you provide your employees with a common language and clarity around what is important and what isn’t. When people have clarity it is much easier for them to make decisions around who to hire, what training to undertake, which clients to engage and third parties to partner with.

Now just to clarify, I am not suggesting that we should extend the FASEA Code of Ethics training to senior leaders. However, the if the industry is genuinely serious about improving its reputation, consideration must be given to how it supports senior leaders and mentors to create, model and over communicate an ethical culture focused on putting clients first.

Ignoring their fundamental role in addressing the situation, or worse still, assuming that, in light of the royal commission, senior leaders will surely be risk adverse and take a more ethical approach, seems like a flawed approach. Particularly when you consider that unethical behaviour is typically driven by an erosion of the ethical implications of our actions, and so we end up engaging in or condoning behaviour that we would condemn if we were consciously aware of it.

As Louis Gerstner, former CEO of IBM said, ‘Culture isn’t just one aspect of the game, it is the game. In the end, an organisation is nothing more than the collective capacity of its people to create value’.


Christine Bau, principal, People Focused

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Comments 6

  1. Book Nerd says:
    7 years ago

    Is it ethical to paraphrase Peter Drucker in the first line without acknowledgement? “Culture eats strategy for breakfast” OR Is it ethical to claim two factors that the literature indicates without citing the literature?

    Reply
  2. John says:
    7 years ago

    Great article, thankyou. The leadership by example discussion has to include the most senior influencers – corporates, politicians and regulators. How can we expect sole operator financial advisers to act ethically when they see daily reports of unethical behaviour from the big end of town? They are just subscribing to the culture that they are immersed in.

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    What a load of BS ethics come from your family and childhood and that’s it! A bad person will still pass your ethics tests etc —

    Reply
  4. JC says:
    7 years ago

    Great insights as always Christine! I agree that a course for advisers (and RM’s) is just the starting point for our industry. I do however believe that all industry participants, and especially senior leader, should also obligated to undertake study in ethics as the starting point.

    Reply
    • FASEA for ALL Involved in Fina says:
      7 years ago

      Couldn’t agree more JC.
      And Christine I don’t understand why you would not recommend the FASEA course of Ethics be mandated to ALL Senior Executives from Govt. MPS, Govt. bodies such as ASIC, APRA, ATO, and right through the Big Institutions of Banks / Insurance Companies / Fund Managers / Super Funds, etc that ALL CEO’s, Boards, Executives, Managers, Trustees, etc should ALL Complete FASEA Ethics module.
      These were the so called Leaders that have ALL be found to be soooooo sadly lacking Ethics in the RC and yet not a single one of these “esteemed” 🙄 leaders will be forced to do the Ethics course.
      What an absolute FARCE.
      Of course go for the lowest hanging fruit and only make the Financial Advisers jump through the FARSEA Ethics course.
      Very sad but oh so very predictable.

      Reply
  5. Michael Gershkov says:
    7 years ago

    Exceptional article Christine and thank you for putting this forward today, only hours before we get the barrage of Royal Commission material which will consume all for months to come. Culture is what defines the true success of any business and the ones who have been (and will soon be again) named and shamed missed culture as being the driver of their business. It was all about meeting the short term needs of shareholders and the greed of senior executives which drove decision making which is the true destroyer of equity value, staff morale and a complete loss of focus on customers. All the best for 2019!

    Reply

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