Dreilinger and Rice, "Ethical Decision Making in Business"
Notable because it considers specific impediments to decision-making, and because it allows a decision to be modified after implementation
SOURCE FOR THE PROCEDURE
Dreilinger, Craig and Dan Rice. "Ethical Decision Making in Business." Business Ethics: Readings and Cases in Corporate Morality. Eds. W. Michael Hoffman and Robert E. Frederick. 3rd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995: 89-93.
Some elements of this strategy originated with Verne E. Henderson or Kenneth Goodpaster.
THE PROCEDURE ITSELF
- Identify desired outcome for the entire situation.
- What exactly are you trying to accomplish?
- In addition to the problem having been solved, what else should or should not occur?
- What is the ideal outcome?
- What outcomes might you be willing to "settle for"?
- Define the problem.
- What were the antecedents of the problem?
- What is the environment of the problem?
- When and where does this problem occur?
- Is this a short-term problem that can be solved quickly or a long-term problem requiring sustained effort?
- What created or is causing the problem?
- Who is generating or exacerbating the problem?
- Whom does the problem affect?
- Examine difficulties and obstacles.
- Are the facts of the situation unclear or incomplete?
- Are the words used to describe the problem "loaded"?
- Do subjectivity and personal perceptions create barriers to objectivity?
- Do emotions get in the way of logic?
- Do conditions preclude obtaining the required knowledge?
- Do conditions preclude exercising the required freedom?
- Do conditions preclude the possibility of action?
- Brainstorm to generate as many alternative solutions as possible.
- Select best solution from among these alternatives.
- Decide on goals.
- Identify the goals of the organization and set priorities among these goals.
- Identify the goals of stakeholders and set priorities among these goals.
- Select high-priority goals and ensure that they are compatible (not mutually exclusive, not in conflict).
- Settle on methods for accomplishing these goals.
- Select methods that are acceptable to stakeholders, that do not violate their values.
- Select methods that satisfy or maximize the chosen goals.
- Select essential methods, excluding those that are incidental or extraneous.
- Examine your motivation.
- Are your motives hidden or evident?
- Are your motives shared or selfish?
- Do your motives reflect your values and the values of the organization?
- Examine all the imaginable repercussions of the courses of action you are contemplating.
- Examine possible actions from the perspective of each stakeholder.
- Choose actions that create the most favorable cost/benefit ratio for each stakeholder.
- Choose actions that best respect the rights of each stakeholder and ensure that they are treated fairly.
- Choose actions that satisfy obligations you have to each stakeholder.
- If these choices result in divergent courses of action, determine which should take precedence over the others.
- Delineate the specific steps that will be required to put the solution you have selected into action.
- For each step, define the specific indicators you will use to determine whether the step is succeeding or failing.
- Develop general criteria you will use to decide whether to continue, modify, or abandon your effort.
- Identify likely reactions to, and rewards for, your solution.
WALT'S CHECKLIST
The same checklist was applied to all procedures.
- This method is most useful when the DECISION-MAKER ...
- can tolerate ambiguity, complexity or conflict [step 3]
- has keen insight into human motivation [step 5c]
- has plenty of time for investigation and analysis [step 4]
- is skilled in causal or consequential reasoning [steps 5e, 5g and 6]
- is skilled in conflict- or dilemma-resolution methods [steps 5a and 5f]
- is skilled in the application of general ethical principles to specific cases [step 5e]
- This method is most useful when STAKEHOLDERS ...
- share ethical codes or policies [step 5e]
- share values [step 5b]