Who is a Customer?
(View Complete Item Description)Hyping vs. lying at a start-up company.
Material Type: Reading
Hyping vs. lying at a start-up company.
Material Type: Reading
The role of banks and institutional investors in IPOs.
Material Type: Reading
Fetzer Vineyards exhibits attention to sustainability and workers' quality of life.
Material Type: Reading
Providing time for family at a start-up company.
Material Type: Reading
A description of the events between the declaration of bankruptcy by WoldCom and its acquisition by Verizon.
Material Type: Case Study
Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Executive Director Kirk O. Hanson interviews John W. Noble, vice chancellor, Delaware Court of Chancery. Advice for a new corporate director includes preliminary self-assessment: What can you bring to the board? Have you studied the company? What are your strengths and weaknesses? Check on liability insurance as it relates to your role as a board member, and make sure you have the time and energy to do the job. Continually educate yourself about the business and its risks. Due care and the duty of loyalty should be foremost. It's important to remember that the board provides the long-term vision, and is not involved in everyday minutiae. Talk to the experts, including financial advisers and accountants, and be aware of conflicts and potential conflicts ahead of time. Board decisions are just that, not individual decisions. The focus should be on doing the right thing and setting an example. Problems can occur when directors are conflicted and don't have a clear sense of priorities.
Material Type: Lecture
Michael L. Hackworth, chair of the Advisory Board of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics and member and chair of numerous corporate boards, talks with Lon Allen, chair of the National Association of Corporate Directors-Silicon Valley, on what boards can do to promote ethics in an organization. The Number 1 responsibility of the board is to promote ethics in the boardroom. If you think there's an ethical issue, there probably is one. The board should also monitor C-level executives behavior. Does it reflect the values of the organization? Finally, the board should be aware of incentives for employees. The way employees are incentivized can promote or detract from ethical behavior. Hackworth shares a scoring system for the ethics of corporate boards.
Material Type: Lecture
Fiduciary duties of corporations: J. Travis Laster, Vice Chancellor of the Court of Chancery, Delaware, talks with Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Executive Director Kirk O. Hanson
Material Type: Lecture
Jeff Kuhn, Managing Partner, FLG Partners, talks with Kirk O. Hanson, executive director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University.
Material Type: Lecture
Tom Lavelle, general counsel of Rambus, and Christine De Guglielmo, co-author of "Indispensable Counsel," talk with Kirk Hanson, executive director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, about the role of a company's chief legal officer in supporting the ethical culture of a company. The general counsel is one of the leaders in promoting ethics within a company. He or she is an enabler for executives but also a gatekeeper, preventing the corporation from engaging in illegal behavior. The general counsel should offer business-oriented solutions to problems that are legal and fit the company's values.
Material Type: Lecture
Myron Steele, chief justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, describes the duties of corporate directors, especially fiduciary duties. Those duties focus on a duty of loyalty and a duty of care, which must be carried out in good faith.
Material Type: Lecture
Daniel Cooperman, Of Counsel with the Bingham McCutchen law firm, talks with Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Executive Director Kirk O. Hanson about where conflicts of interest arise and how disclosure and transparency address the problem.
Material Type: Lecture
Bob Finocchio and Lon Allan, both directors of several corporate boards, talk about the relationship between the CEO and the Board. Finocchio emphasizes that the CEO works for the Board, not the other way around. While both are working for the same objective, maximizing shareholder return, there is necessarily some tension between them and the board must be willing to challenge the CEO, particularly the "rock star CEO." The CEO also has reasonable expectations of directors: They should be prepared, available, and have some passion for the company.
Material Type: Lecture
Ethics and compliance officer Pat Gnazzo talks with Kirk O. Hanson, executive director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, on how companies can manage the ethics and compliance function. As Gnazzo advises ethics and compliance officers 1) Don't see yourself as the expert. 2) Don't make a report on an ethics infraction before you've done a thorough review of the facts. 3) Don't try to preach morality. Talk about business ethics with respect to shareholder value.
Material Type: Lecture
Pat Gnazzo, ethics and compliance officer for companies including United Technologies and Computer Associates, talks with Kirk Hanson, executive director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics about the distinctions between ethics and compliance. Compliance is based on a set of rules, regulations, and laws. Ethics and values are based on a set of standards the company imposes on itself.
Material Type: Lecture
In this interview, distinguished business ethicist Kirk Hanson speaks with Meghan Skarzynski, a senior finance major at Santa Clara University, about ethical challenges that a recent college graduate can expect to face when starting their first job in the business world. Hanson is the Executive Director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics. During her senior year at SCU, Skarzynski was a Hackworth Fellow in Applied Ethics.
Material Type: Lecture
In this interview, distinguished business ethicist Kirk Hanson speaks with Meghan Skarzynski, a senior finance major at Santa Clara University, about ethics scenarios that a recent college graduate can expect to face when starting their first job in the business world. Hanson is the Executive Director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics. During her senior year at SCU, Skarzynski was a Hackworth Fellow in Applied Ethics.
Material Type: Lecture
Aligning the long-term interests of shareholders with executive pay strategies. A conversation between Center Director Kirk Hanson and Dan Siciliano from the Rock Center on Corporate Governance at the Stanford University School of Law.
Material Type: Lecture
The how and why of the financial collapse: Kirk Hanson talks with Mike Kelly, Chairman and CEO of Kinsale Associates.
Material Type: Lecture
Richard Moran, CEO of Accretive Solutions, talks with Kirk O. Hanson, executive director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, about the ethical challenges for corporate boards when they need to fire the CEO.
Material Type: Lecture