How companies are stepping up efforts to build ethical cultures during COVID-19
73% reported leaders communicated candidly about challenges during COVID-19. Image: Pexels..
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- The task of building ethical cultures can be daunting, even in the most stable of operating environments.
- According to LRN’s new research, organizations relied on their values and exceeded their obligations during the COVID-19 crisis.
- In fact, 80% of respondents said that ethics and compliance played a key role in how organizations responded to the pandemic.
COVID-19 has challenged society, the planet and people in profound ways, and institutions continue to respond, adapt and pivot to address new problems caused by the crisis.
Even in the most stable of operating environments, the task of building ethical cultures and implementing ethical behaviour can be daunting.
What’s heartening for responsible businesses is that organizations largely relied on their values to go above and beyond their legal and regulatory requirements during the crisis. So much so, according to new research from LRN, 79% of respondents said their organization's ethical culture is stronger as a result of their COVID-19 experience.
The 2021 Ethics & Compliance Program Effectiveness Report: Meeting the COVID-19 Challenge is a first, holistic look at how COVID-19 affected ethics and compliance efforts worldwide. The findings illustrate how corporate values and ethics sustained companies during the pandemic.
- 80% of survey respondents said ethics and compliance considerations played a key role in shaping organization responses to COVID-19 challenges.
- 82% indicated that their organizations emphasized company values – not just rules and procedures – to motivate employees to do the right thing in difficult circumstances.
Leadership rose to the challenge and embraced company purpose and values and ethics and compliance considerations in key decisions, according to the study.
- 87% of ethics, compliance, and legal experts surveyed, reported that leadership rose to the challenges of dealing with the consequences of the COVID-19 crisis.
- 85% reported that their boards of directors effectively supported ethics and compliance during COVID-19.
- 85% answered that leaders responded to the challenges in a way that is consistent with company purpose and values.
- 73% reported leaders communicated candidly about challenges.
- 68% said leadership took steps to help employees cope with the negative effects of the pandemic in their lives.
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Overall, the data indicates that although COVID-19 was a stress test for ethical cultures and ethics and compliance programmes, companies’ ethical cultures and frameworks acted as real-world moral compasses – helping leaders, managers, employees, and other stakeholders navigate the unforeseen and unknown.
There is no doubt we are living in uncertain times with simultaneous crises now and in the future. At the same time, stakeholders are increasingly expecting companies to deliver performance through elevated standards for corporate behaviour. The data provides additional proof that mission, purpose, and values are not statements to hang on the wall but real tools that provide critical guidance and timely direction that is long-term and sustainable by its nature. There may not be a rule, law, or policy for every situation, but there is always a value – whether it is respect, integrity, fairness, or truth – to guide behaviour.
Mission, purpose, and values are not statements to hang on the wall but real tools that provide critical guidance and timely direction.
”LRN publishes this report annually as part of its ongoing efforts to evaluate the impact that ethics and compliance initiatives have on workplace behaviour. The 2021 report affirms LRN’s demonstrated research and experience that a values-based approach to governance builds and sustains ethical culture and correlates with more effective ethics and compliance practice. It also confirmed the challenge for those committed to values and principled performance to internalize lessons and embed them going forward in all they do.
This year’s report is based on a survey of nearly 650 ethics, compliance, and legal executives and experts at companies and organizations around the world with at least 1,000 employees (with more than half of respondents located outside the North America). A future report from LRN will delve even more deeply into the most effective programmes and the lasting impacts of COVID-19 on ways organizations are fostering ethical and compliant corporate cultures.
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Emma Charlton
November 22, 2024