Login, change your address, subscribe to new or manage current magazines or e-newsletter subscriptions
ComputerWorldNetwork WorldCIO CanadaCIO Canada Governments' ReviewJobUniverse Canada
Advanced Search
Knowledge Centres
Content Types
Featured White Papers
Unlock the potential of data with the right data warehouse solutionUnlock the potential of data with the right data warehouse solution read more
IBM Multiform Master Data Management: The evolution of MDM applicationsIBM Multiform Master Data Management: The evolution of MDM applications read more
Closing the data privacy gap: Protecting sensitive data in non-production environmentsClosing the data privacy gap: Protecting sensitive data in non-production environments read more
Yuk it Up
Featured IT Quiz
IT Quiz: What does it take for your service management to become more effective? What are the keys to looking at the business of IT from the IT customer's perspective? Take a minute to test yourself here and prove you are an expert in service management
Featured White Paper
Today's organizations must optimize the quality of service, while minimizing IT expenditures; respond quickly to customer and market demand, while using all available assets; and have an IT infrastructure that keeps pace with changing business needs - with a minimum of human intervention. This white paper explains how businesses of all sizes can use IBM WebSphere Extended Deployment software to increase business flexibility and reduce IT complexity.
Download this report to learn more about the benefits and business value of building on mainframe legacies compared to migrating to "open', distributed server environments, including significant software cost reductions. Complimentary with registration.
Where distributed systems were once viewed as potentially more cost effective and easier to manage than the mainframe, the demand for processing has increased the associated costs in this environment. Rising electrical costs and increasing personnel requirements for large distributed infrastructures have increased its total cost of ownership while the TCO of the System z platform continues to decrease. In attempts to address rising costs, many organizations are looking to virtualize and consolidate servers, capabilities the System z platform has been capable of doing for some time. The System z platform offers significant opportunity for reducing TCO, consolidating existing distributed infrastructures, and simultaneously simplifying disaster recovery efforts. Download this report to learn more. Complimentary with registration.
IBM WebSphere BPM products address both the integration-centric and human-centric business processes that occur. This white paper describes how IBM WebSphere BPM combines software capabilities and business expertise to accelerate process improvement and facilitate business innovation by integrating and connecting business users.
This executive brief illustrates the progression of service management since the 1990s, illuminates the hidden service life cycles and discusses how, once they are visible, we can start to make them work - to improve services and better align IT with business objectives. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
This brochure describes how IBM service request and asset management solutions help IT integrate incident, problem, change and release management. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
An overview of IBM's service management products, this brochure outlines how these tools help you align people, processes, information and technology. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
This brochure provides a comparative analysis of IBM's key differentiations in the area of IT service management. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
-
CIO Green IT Playbook
Sign-Up for
Leadership
eNewsletter Delivered Weekly
Click here
Page 1 of 1

Building the ethical enterprise

The recent conviction of Conrad Black on fraud and obstruction of justice charges turned the spotlight once again on the topic of ethical behaviour, or lack thereof, in the corporate world. Black joins a long parade of disgraced former high-powered executives who have traded business suits for prison jumpsuits, including ex-WorldCom CEO Bernard Ebbers and Jeffrey Skilling, former head of Enron.

While such front-page fodder represents the ethics issue on its most sensational level, the fact is that questions around what represents right and wrong behaviour arise nearly every day for most CXOs. And we’re not just talking about financially related issues; ethical decisions have to be made on scales that are much more minute as well. The implications of such decisions can ultimately determine a firm’s identity and the degree to which it succeeds or fails.

Quote:

"Poor communication skills are the number one cause for early delay in career promotion." - Prof. Norman Ball

For Professor Norman Ball of the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ont., ethics really begins with the art of communication. The director of the school’s Centre for Society, Technology and Values believes that in order for all employees to treat each other with the kind of respect that will ensure success, they have to first understand what the people they are interacting with are saying and are concerned about. It’s a practice he always abides by, particularly when he is asked to speak at a conference.

“One of the things I always insist on when asked to speak is full conference registration. I want to be there so that I don’t fly in and get to the conference a half hour before,” says Ball, who has been with the university since 1989. “If people are going to believe my message I have to have them believing that I know who they are. I’ll have notes, but I will be going to sessions and learning and I put that in [my discussion] and as much as possible I try to relate that to what I’m saying. People really appreciate that, because we have so many incredibly rude keynote speakers.”

Ball points out that in today’s workplace, with the presence of all manner of electronic communication channels such as e-mail and instant messaging, workers are challenged like never before to maintain effective communication channels with peers.

“We might think we’re communicating because were firing stuff back and forth, but much of it is not reflective,” he says. “If we are talking face-to-face we can get all kinds of non-verbal cues. I can tell if you’re uneasy and you can tell the same. While IM clearly allows us to get messages back and forth, it doesn’t allow for deep meaning because it is essentially a broadcast technology. It also lulls us into thinking were doing something we’re not.”

Ball knows a thing or two about communication. He’s authored numerous books, his latest a history of the Canadian Niagara Power Company. When he instructs students, he makes a point of emphasizing the need for clear articulation when interacting with others, as it will be a prized possession regardless of where their degrees takes them.

In a course called IT and Society, for instance, Ball tries to get students to see the complexity of their work environments and the need to look at things carefully from many points of view. He believes that universities should be doing a better job of promoting this way of thinking.

“We know from research that poor communication skills — listening, reading, writing, speaking — are collectively the number one cause for early delay in career promotion,” says Ball. “No university is driven by that research. Another major cause we have from research is a lack of empathy and understanding of other people’s points of view. We don’t promote an understanding of what others can do and respect for them.”

It seems that Ball’s unique approach has opened the eyes of many of his students. “One wrote to me that they were ashamed that they were going to graduate that year because they had never had any courses that dealt with (helping) end users,” Ball says. “He told me he was going to try to learn more about them.”

Part of a pupil’s curriculum involves a work term, where they can get some hands-on experience in their chosen field. Ball urges them to view these as opportunities to put what communications skills they have learned in the classroom to use.

“The students have really good experiences from their work terms and I try to get them to reflect what went on in them. The theory is they learn all the good stuff on their work terms. Well, if you work for four months for a jerk of a boss, you learn how to be a jerk.”

Ball encourages an open-minded approach to learning, one which is inclusive of all people a student may come across in their career, whether they are an engineer or a manual labourer. All he has to do is relate some of his own experiences to prove that such an outlook pays off in the end.

He said, for instance, that one of the nicest compliments he received on his book about the Canadian Niagara Power Company came from one of the outfit’s labourers.

“I was in the their headquarters in Fort Erie, and a guy came up to me — he hadn’t shaved in a week, his pants and jacket hadn’t passed detergent since they were born — and he said to me, ‘Dr. Ball, I was reading your book and you really do understand how we work. You know that we only have one thing on our mind when the power is out: getting it back on for our friends.’

“I thought, ‘Oh my god, it’s worked.”

Page 1 of 1
Send to a Friend  Rate This Page  Print This PageAdd a new comment
Bookmark this article on:
del.icio.us| Digg it| Furl| Google| Technorati| StumbleIt| Yahoo!

Have something to say about this article? Add a new comment

If you find a comment inappropriate, You can notify the moderator by clicking the Report an innapropriate comment icon.
ADD A COMMENT
Name:*Your email address will not appear online and will be used only in the event that the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comment.
City:
Email:
Title:*
Comment:*
* required fields



Related Content
Articles

Special Advertising Partners
IDC Case Study: Identity And Access Management Buying Criteria.
IDC analyses IAM buying criteria and deployment at Coppin State University. Coppin State replaces "first generation" IAM solution to obtain benefits needed for today's agile enterprise: ease of integration, rapid deployment, simplified compliance, flexibility.
White Papers
Closing the data privacy gap: Protecting sensitive data in non-production environments
How can IT organizations protect sensitive data, including employee and customer information, as well as corporate confidential data and intellectual property? Industry analysts recommend "de-identifying" or masking data as a best practice for protecting privacy. This white paper explains the importance of closing the data privacy gap in non-production environments, and provides guidance on effective data masking. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
Unlock the potential of data with the right data warehouse solution
Once you've made the decision to implement a new data warehouse, you want to make sure you choose the one that's right for your organization. This buyer's guide provides checklists for starting points that you can use when evaluating vendors and their products. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
Prepare for a more efficient SAP implementation: Take data issues off the critical path
This white paper outlines how the Preliminary Data Assessment Appliance (PDAA) from IBM can help address the challenges of integrating data from different operational applications across the enterprise to an SAP platform. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.