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BlueAdept -> RE: Ethics in Business question. (7/27/2008 2:42:13 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: mvic I respect and understand your points of view. How would you feel if you run your own business (fixing cars) and un-beknown to you, several of your employees are using their own tools, in their own time and in their own homes, fixing other peoples' cars. They come to work for you in the morning, but there's little business coming in. You still have to pay them a wage. Do all the HR and Tax paper work. Pay rent on your premises, plus gas and electricity etc ... And don't forget interest on the loan you took to start your business. Why is there little work coming in to you? Because your staff don't have any overheads and charge less for the same work done on your premises. Ethical or not? That is a TOTALLY different issue. If I own my own business, a auto repair shop, and there is no business coming in; I would be wondering WHY that is. I doubt that my 'wrenchs' would be stealing my business. Chances are the reason I have no business, is my shops reputation is shot because of shoddy work. When you run a good shop, word gets around and not having enough business is not likely to be an issue. As for paying rent, and taxes....etc, those are side points. The ONLY way this could be an issue, is a current client of the business came to him and ask him to come in after hours and do some work. Heck even if an employee of a client asked him to do some work on the side it would not be an issue, since once again the work would not have come to the business any way. Lets throw in out another way. Say that a local large church calls this guy, large enough that it COULD be a client of the business, and they want him to come in and set up their network, tape backups, and email server. Would it be ethical for him to either do the work, or donate the work as a in kind donation? That to me would be a better question, and a much grayer area. Since he then COULD be taking work from the business.
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