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Chapter 10

The key aspects of marketing ethics discussed in the document include: - Marketing ethics addresses principles and standards that define acceptable conduct in the marketplace. Unethical activities often develop from pressure to meet performance objectives. - Laws and regulations are designed to protect consumers from unethical business practices and recognize basic consumer rights. However, each marketer must rely on their own value system to determine what is ethical. - The political-legal environment consists of laws requiring fair competition and consumer protection. Government agencies regulate various aspects of marketing and industries. Marketers must comply with regulations to serve customers and avoid legal issues.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views

Chapter 10

The key aspects of marketing ethics discussed in the document include: - Marketing ethics addresses principles and standards that define acceptable conduct in the marketplace. Unethical activities often develop from pressure to meet performance objectives. - Laws and regulations are designed to protect consumers from unethical business practices and recognize basic consumer rights. However, each marketer must rely on their own value system to determine what is ethical. - The political-legal environment consists of laws requiring fair competition and consumer protection. Government agencies regulate various aspects of marketing and industries. Marketers must comply with regulations to serve customers and avoid legal issues.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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ETHICS IN

MARKETING
Marketing ethics
• Marketing ethics addresses
principles and standards that define
acceptable conduct in the market
place. Marketing usually occurs in
the context of an organization, and
unethical activities usually develop
from the pressure to meet
performance objectives.
• Some obvious ethical issues in
marketing involves clear cut
attempts to deceive or take
advantage of a situation
Marketing Ethics & Consumer Rights
• The law and regulations are
generally designed to protect the
consumers from unethical
practices by businesses
• These laws and regulations
recognize that consumers have
certain basic rights in the market
place
• Each marketer must relay on
his/her own value system to
determine what is and is not
ethical
THE POLITICAL-LEGAL ENVIRONMENT
• Political-legal environment Component of the
marketing environment consisting of laws and their
interpretations that require firms to operate under
competitive conditions and to protect consumer rights.

GOVERNMENT REGULATION
• Antimonopoly period of the late 19th and early 20th
centuries.
• Protecting competitors during the Great Depression.
• Consumer protection in past 40 years.
• Industry deregulation began in the 1970s and
continues today.
• Newest regulatory frontier is cyberspace.
GOVERNMENT REGULATORY AGENCIES
• Federal Trade Commission has broadest regulatory
powers over marketing.
• Others include Consumer Product Safety Commission,
the Federal Power Commission, the EPA, and FDA.
OTHER REGULATORY FORCES
• Consumer interest organizations.
• Self-regulatory groups.
CONTROLLING THE POLITICAL-LEGAL
ENVIRONMENT
• Complying with laws and regulations serves
customers and avoids legal problems.
• Influencing the outcome of legislation through
lobbying or boycotts.
ETHICAL ISSUES IN MARKETING

• Marketing ethics Marketers’ standards of


conduct and moral values.
• Many companies create ethics programs to train
employees to act ethically.
• Employees’ personal values sometimes conflict
with employers’ ethical standards.
ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH
• Invalid or unreliable research studies
• Invasion of consumer privacy, not respecting
confidentiality
• Disguising sales as research
• Failure to secure voluntary and informed
participation
• Competitive intelligence gathering
• Consumers are concerned about privacy, and
Internet has increased privacy concerns
• FTC provides consumer information about
privacy online
• The U.S. government also maintains a Do Not
Call registry to prevent unwanted telemarketing.
ETHICS IN PRODUCT/PACKAGE STRATEGY
• Example: Package strategy.
• Larger packages are more noticeable on the shelf.
• Oddly sized packages make price comparison
difficult
• Actual versus apparent size
• Example: Product strategy.
• Misleading or inadequate information
• Excessive or environmentally-unfriendly packaging
• Product testing: on animals or insufficient testing to
reveal safety concerns
• Marketing socially controversial products
• Marketing unsafe products
ETHICS IN DISTRIBUTION
• What is the appropriate degree of control over the
distribution channel?
• Should a company distribute its products in marginally
profitable outlets that have no alternative source of supply?

ETHICS IN PROMOTION
• Truth in advertising is the bedrock of ethics in promotion.
• Marketing to children has come under increased scrutiny.
• Marketing beer to college students, including through
providing promotional items such as shirts and hats, raises ethical
questions.

ETHICS IN PRICING
• Most regulated aspect of a firm’s marketing activities.
FOUR AREAS OF PRICING ARE CONSIDERED
UNETHICAL AND ILLEGAL:

• Deceptive Pricing: Where a salesperson tries to


influence lure customers into a store. Thereafter,
a salesperson tries to influence to buy a higher-
priced item.
• Unfair Pricing: When competitors are driven out
by low prices the company raises price back to
their former level.
FOUR AREAS OF PRICING ARE CONSIDERED
UNETHICAL AND ILLEGAL:

• Price Discrimination: It can be unethical if


similar buyers are charged different prices for the
same based on their ability to pay.
• Price fixing: It is an agreement among firms in
an industry to set up prices at certain levels. Two
types of price fixing:
1. Horizontal price fixing
2. vertical price fixing
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY IN MARKETING
• Social responsibility
Marketing philosophies,
policies, procedures, and
actions that have the
enhancement of society’s
welfare as a primary
objective.
MARKETING’S RESPONSIBILITIES
• Marketing decisions must involve consideration of
general well-being and even potential global effects.
• Some organization help promote social causes or
practice socially responsible investing.
MARKETING AND ECOLOGY
• Ecology is the study of the relationship between
natural things and their environment.
• Protection of the environment influences all areas
of marketing decision making.
• Marketing system produces billions of tons of
packaging materials annually.
• Green marketing Production, promotion, and
reclamation of environmentally sensitive products.
Marketing Ethics & Consumer Rights

• AMA has established a codes of ethics to provide


guidelines for ethical conduct. It says, in part, that,
“Marketers shall uphold and advance the
integrity, honor and dignity of the marketing
profession, by being honest in serving
consumers, clients, employees, suppliers,
distributors, and the public.”
ETHICAL VALUES

• Honesty: to be truthful and forthright in our


dealings with customers and stakeholders.
• Responsibility: to accept the consequences
of our marketing decisions and strategies.
• Fairness: to try to balance justly the needs of
the buyer with the interests of the seller.
• Respect: to acknowledge the basic human
dignity of all stakeholders.
CONTD…….

Openness: to create transparency in our


marketing operations.

Citizenship: to fulfill the economic, legal


and societal responsibilities that serve
stakeholders in a strategic manner.
NATURE of MARKETING ETHICS

• Ethics –doing the“right” thing


Ethical vs Legal
Personal & not punishable - Societal and Punishable

▪ Laws
UNDERSTANDING ETHICAL BEHAVIOR

1st Influence - Societal Culture and Norms

▪ Culture dictates what is right and wrong,


so “right” changes from culture to culture.
2nd Influence - Business Culture & Industry
Practices - B to C
•Early 1900s: Caveat Emptor
–A Latin phrase meaning “let the buyer beware” - what
you see is what you get,… not what you expected, too bad
–Belief that competition in the marketplace corrects abuses

• 1962, Kennedy’s Consumer Bill of Rights


Consumer Bill of Rights (1962)

The Consumer Bill of Rights (1962)


is a law that codified (standardized what
was not previously written down) the
ethics of exchange between buyers and
sellers. It includes the buyers rights:
(1) to safety
(2) to be informed
(3) to choose, and
(4) to be heard.
TODAY: Seller’s Versus Consumers’ Rights

Sellers’ rights: Consumers’ rights:


– To introduce products – To choose
of different styles and – To be informed
sizes, provided they are – To safety
not hazardous
– To be heard
– To set its own prices,
provided no – To redress
discrimination occurs – To consumer education
– To spend to promote – To participate in
the product marketplace decision
– To use any product making
message, provided it is – To have access to basic
not misleading services
– To use buying – To a sustainable
incentives environment
Business Culture & Industry Practices - B to B

▪ Ethics of Competition
• Economic Espionage – stealing trade secrets
•Includes trespassing, wiretapping, dumpster diving
• Bribes -payment before service
• Kickbacks-payment after service

Both are illegal in U.S.,


…but very common in developing nations
3rd Influence- Corporate Culture &
Expectations

▪ Corporate Culture – shown in dress codes,


work space, compensation
▪ Code of Ethics
▪What’s in it?
▪What if its breached?

▪ Whistle-blowers
Personal Moral Philosophy and
Ethical Behavior

▪ Moral Idealism
▪ There is a right thing to do,
…no matter what the cost
▪ Favored by religious &consumer groups

▪ Utilitarianism
▪ The right thing to do is what hurts the fewest
▪ Favored by business executives and the military
Concept of Social Responsibility

▪ Profit Responsibility-
➢ company’s duty is to maximize profits
➢ Profiteering- shrink supply to raise price & profit

▪ Stakeholder Responsibility-
➢ company’s duty is to protect the interests of owners
➢ people who gain from it
▪ Societal Responsibility –
➢ company’s duty is to preserve environment
➢ protect users of their products
✓ while reaping profit

• Green Marketing
Concept Check

2. What are three possible reasons for


the present state of ethical conduct in
the United States?
A: (1) Pressure on businesspeople to make
decisions in a society with diverse value
systems. (2) Business decisions being judged
publicly by groups with different values and
interests. (3) Ethical business conduct may
have declined.
Concept Check

1. What main rights are included in the


Consumer Bill of Rights?
A: The rights to safety, to be informed,
to choose, and to be heard.
Concept Check

2. What is meant by moral idealism?


A: Moral idealism is a personal moral
philosophy that considers certain
individual rights or duties as
universal, regardless of the outcome.
Concept Check

1. What is meant by social


responsibility?
A: Social responsibility means that
organizations are a part of a larger
society and are accountable to that
society for their actions.
Concept Check

2. Marketing efforts to produce,


promote, and reclaim
environmentally sensitive products
green marketing
are called _____________.
Ethics

Ethics are the moral principles and values


that govern the actions and decisions of
an individual or group.
Laws

Laws are society’s values and standards


that are enforceable in the courts.
Code of Ethics

A code of ethics is a formal statement of


ethical principles and rules of conduct.
Whistle-blowers

Whistle-blowers are employees who


report unethical or illegal actions of their
employers.
Moral Idealism

Moral idealism is a personal moral


philosophy that considers certain
individual rights or duties as universal,
regardless of the outcome.
Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism is a personal moral


philosophy that focuses on “the greatest
good for the greatest number,” by
assessing the costs and benefits of the
consequences of ethical behavior.
Social Responsibility

Social responsibility means that


organizations are a part of a larger society
and are accountable to that society for
their actions.
Green Marketing

Green marketing consists of marketing


efforts to produce, promote, and reclaim
environmentally sensitive products.
Some Morally Difficult Situations in Marketing

• You are considering hiring a


product manager who just left a
competitor’s company. She would
be more than happy to tell you all
the competitor’s plans for the
coming year. What do you do?
Some Morally Difficult Situations in Marketing

• You have a chance to win a big


account that will mean a lot to you
and your company. The purchasing
agent hints that a “gift” would
influence the decision. Your
assistant recommends sending a fine
color television set to the buyer’s
home. What do you do?
Some Morally Difficult Situations in Marketing

• You are interviewing a capable


woman applicant for a job as a
salesperson. She is better qualified
than the men just interviewed.
Nevertheless, you know that some
of your important customers prefer
dealing with men, and you will lose
some sales if you hire her. What
do you do?
Some Morally Difficult Situations in Marketing

• You are a sales manager in an


encyclopedia company. Your
competitor’s salespeople are getting
into homes by pretending to take a
research survey. After they finish
the survey, they switch to their
sales pitch. This technique seems
to be very effective. What do you
do?

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