Saturday, September 10, 2016

A521.5.4.RB_LeeDarrell - Aligning Values

When you think about values within your organization, what comes to mind? In the Army, we may have a huge advantage over other organizations when it comes to identifying our values. We have had 241 years to develop them! The interesting thing is that we don’t necessarily recruit people that share those same values. That doesn’t mean that our values as Soldiers are not in line with that of the organization (the Army). Let me clarify that a little. As a recruiter, it isn’t my job to find people that hold any particular set of values or ethics. My job is to identify and recruit people that are qualified academically, physically, morally, and administratively for service. How is it, then, that Soldiers’ values are aligned with that of the Army? Again, we have another advantage over other organizations in that we indoctrinate our new hires. When you join the Army, your freedoms are temporarily removed. You go to Basic Training where you are totally immersed in organizational doctrine. You either adapt or you leave. It’s a genius method that has been proves to work. However, I’m quite positive that other organizations don’t have the same ability that we do to force adaptation and adoption of values. Can you imagine being hired be JP Morgan or Deloitte and being whisked away for several months to a secluded spot separated from life as you know it? I think not. So how do organizations develop and align their values?

Before I get into this next part, I have to point out that I am working on the assumption that the values of organizations are ethical. I just heard on the news this week that Wells Fargo terminated the employment of 5,300 employees for creating fake accounts to bolster the bottom line of the company. That kind of sounds like something that would have happened at Enron all those years ago. Clearly, to get that many employees to cheat, there had to have been some kind of an accepted norm – a set of values. That doesn’t mean it is ethical. So what is ethical? Denning (2011) notes that there are three basic components to an ethical community. They are trust, loyalty, and solidarity. Trust, to me, is synonymous with faith. I love the definition of faith found in Hebrews 11:1 which says “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (KJV). Trust, therefore, is complete confidence that all members of an organization will act with integrity and ethically in any professional actions. Loyalty is “acceptance of the obligation to refrain from breaching one another’s trust and to fulfill the duties entailed by accepting that trust” (Denning, 2011, p. 133). Basically, that means that I know that no matter what, others in my organization are not only doing what is right but they are going to protect my best interests in the process. The third component of solidarity is so similar to loyalty in that it means that the members of the organization has my back but it also means that I know that others will take care of me even at a personal cost to them. When members of the organization take ownership of one another and start to treat each other as teammates and not just individuals then that is when true solidarity exists. Using these three components – trust, loyalty, solidarity – an organization can construct a set of ethical values.

Values are not necessarily just something that are magically decided upon one day. They are built and refined over time. However, there has to be a conscious effort to ensure that the values are ethical. Again, consider the cases I mentioned above such as Enron and this new Wells Fargo scandal. Both of those organizations started off with ethical values. Through gradual changes, though, and group acceptance of minor variations of truths eventually led to the full on acceptance of unethical values. Part of the key to holding on to ethical values is to bring members of the organization in line with those values. Again, you won’t go to Accenture’s Basic Training or something like that so that makes the job of the HR department that much more important. They must first determine who already shares the values of the organization before even conducting the initial hire. At that point, though, the values set forth must be a team effort and they must be consistently met every day. By allowing any variations or exceptions to ethical policy sets forth a precedence of a gradual moral decline. So the bottom line – the key to the alignment of individual and organization values – is consistency.



Denning, S. (2011). The leader’s guide to storytelling: Mastering the art and discipline of business narrative. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

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