Cheating – Small or big?
From the Ethics Bistro Blog
by Tara Leparulo,
Shenila Shahabuddin, Juan Posada Toro, Albert Agbemenu, Ming Yeung, Kannan Ganesan, Yannick Arekion, Witold Hendrysiak, Stelian ROMAN, Laszlo J. Kremmer MBA, CSPO®, CSM®, PMP®
We all tackle ethical dilemmas. Wrong decisions can break careers. Which are the key challenges faced? What are some likely solutions? Where can we find effective tools? Who can apply these and why? Dry, theoretical discussions don't help. Join us for lively, light conversations to learn, share and grow!
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How much cheating can be allowed to win? Is it important to cheat to win or is it ok to lose but not to cheat?
Some of us face some of these questions when either we as leaders take any decision or we follow leader who says winning come before the virtue and values.
During the recent ball tampering episode happened in South Africa followed by serious admissions and long term bans, one of the questions come up very strongly is that how come no one from the 11 people of the team said ‘No’ to cheat when it was tabled.
Are we becoming so blind followers to our leaders that we don’t apply our own values, learnings to say that – Hey, this looks wrong, something doesn’t seem right here and we should stop, I think we are making the error of judgement. How many times we have found ourselves in the situations where our senior leaders, Famous personalities are asking us to do something and we doubt it?
Of course it is easier to say that it’s all part of the culture where winning comes before values and virtues. So what if it’s only a game but a loss if not tolerated and ‘winning is everything’ rather than ‘winning honorably’. The cricket team in question here of course resorted to many other ways in past like sledging, over the top celebration, aggressive send-off in the past which were considered acceptable in the light of law and hence ball tampering seems to be a little further extension in order to win.
This is the problem with small cheating and it is often found that people tend to forget the line very easily when small becomes large and so large that it completely destroyed their career and image which they have earned hard ways.
Making the right choice and understanding that what we are planning to do is not right becomes very complicated, especially when everything is a matter of just few degrees.
This was a the true test of leadership where as a leader, you have to show trust on to your team, find ways to success by inspiring the team in the event of loss and improve so that team can return to the winning ways. The true leader knows the line and always plays by the rules even if it means loss.
What Australian captain did was certainly not traits of the true leader. True leaders don’t ask their team members to cheat and they don’t succumb to the pressure of losing so much so that cheating looks last resort. He was thinking that whatever he will do is the acceptable actions and they are the ones who decide the line. Unfortunately it wasn’t so.
Good leaders don’t cheat and they don’t lose faith in their team and never ceases to try to find ways to succeed. They inspire the team to come out of negativity, they support, help their team to be more positive and productive rather than slumping down to cheat or cut corners.
Needless to say that having ethics is vital because not only it’s based on truth, virtue and righteousness, but true leader also show light to others, guide the team the right way to behave and act.
To conclude, cheating small or big is absolute no-no and focus should be on winning righteously and honorably rather than just winning at any cost.
For more ethical resources please visit: https://www.pmi.org/about/ethics
Posted
by
Alankar Karpe
on: May 14, 2018 07:19 AM |
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Comments (26)
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I agree with your article. Cheating is wrong and we can't be right by choosing wrong.
There is no shortcut to build a rewarding career path. We can work hard and smart to be successful without cheating :)
Very real and here is a video to add on it Alankar.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-KMojzH8Ys
This is a challenge when you know that some people aren't "playing by the rules" -- I was almost demoted because I wasn't "gaming" -- and threatened to turn management over to the Department of Insurance because I knew that the decision was based on an unfair assessment of my performance.
It's a gray area though -- regardless. There are some things that are outright wrong no question, but too much honesty actually can hurt all parties. Sometimes there are cases to protect from liability that a degree of decorum is essential.
And it's naive to believe that certain aspects of bending the rules doesn't happen. As a Florida resident - we're seeing obvious signs of voter fraud -- in the same two counties of Palm Beach and Broward (again).
It's the world that we live in -- just have to be very principled and stand by it.
Markus Kopko
AI Enabler for Project & Program Mgmt | Founder PMotion.ai / The PM
AI Coach| PMotion.ai
Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
Amany Nuseibeh
Speaker, Global Leader | Optimal Consulting
Sydney, Nsw, Australia
Thank you for this Alankar. In a recent update the player said he "didn't know any better" as he was trying to fit in and feel valued in the team. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-12-26/cameron-bancroft-reveals-david-warner-role-in-ball-tampering/10668712
. Leadership failed to pay attention to the discussion! The pressure on the player not to let the team down at any cost is quite sad. How many organisations put pressure on employees to win at any cost, whether winning is making more profit or reporting a project as Green? or suppressing facts about abuse, fraud and misconduct. It takes awareness and courage to stand up, speak up and take action!
Joao Sarmento
Senior Project/Program Manager| UNITEL
Luanda, Luanda, Angola
Cheating a bit or cheating a lot, cheating is always cheating... Good reflection on ethics and code of conduct!
Thanks for sharing
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