Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Recruitment & retention
    • Wellbeing
    • Occupational Health
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise

Personnel Today

Register
Log in
Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Recruitment & retention
    • Wellbeing
    • Occupational Health
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise

Latest NewsRecruitment & retentionMigrant workers

Ethics and their place in training

by John Charlton 17 Jul 2007
by John Charlton 17 Jul 2007

Ethics used to be the province of arcane university philosophy departments. Now you can’t move for them. What does it mean for training and learning and development managers?

Ethics is pretty big in business these days. If you haven’t noticed then you can’t be much of a consumer. Consumerism, ethics, ecology and business are hitting off one another like molecules in a particle accelerator.

There are two main strands to business ethics: one is around sound and honest corporate governance and fiscal probity, while the other is concerned with matters environmental. The former has been a hot topic for many years. But, after the antics of Nick Leeson, Bernie Ebbers and their ilk, it became evenhotter.

This prompted some of the great and the good of commerceto take an ever stronger line on business ethics. In the US, the Sarbannes-Oxley rules were devised to help ensure corporate rectitude. In the UK, the findings of the 1991 Cadbury Committee drove corporate business ethics. But ethics are a continuum and now we have much huffing and puffing about the ones practised by private equity fund managers.

On the green front, business has seen ethics as a way of driving product and brand development, with a view to turning a more honourable penny than via non-ethical products. Thus McDonald’s has pledged to make the most ethical cups of coffee on the British high street. Experience indicates that some British consumers will pay quite a premium to buy ethical products.

So where does this leave training and learning and development? What role does ethics have to play here?

Apart from the fall-out from corporate social responsibility (CSR), it’s fundamentally about the morality of loyalty. Is the training/learning and developmentmanager loyal above all to the employer or to the employee or delegate? Or both?

There’s no doubt where the loyalty of some of training’s uber-martinets lie: wholly and solely with the employer. They are the ones who will argue that training and development should be focused solely on meeting business needs.

How wise is this?Well if this employer-centric approach is followed relentlessly, it may well diminish employee loyalty and commitment. Staffwill not necessarily see the corporate training and learning and developmentpath as one that will give them the fulfilment they want from work.

Younger professional staff, especially, tend to expect their personal development needs to be at least partly met by whatever learning and developmentpath they follow at work. Sothe ethical training and learning and developmentmanager should bear that in mind when devising learning, training and mentoring programmes.

Finally, back to CSR. I’m glad to report that delegates – high–performers apparently –from business consultancy Convergys recently built a badger watching platform near the Falls of Clyde in Lanarkshire as part of a teambuilding weekend. Let’s hope it was an ethical win-win for both high–performers and badgers.

Scream-building

Talking of teambuilding events, I never cease to be less than gob-smacked by some of the activities dreamt up by purveyors of same.

Take Orb360. These freewheelersfrom Brighton have rolled out a harum-scarum “package”.It involves two delegates being harnessed inside a giant inflatable orb and rolled along the South Downs. Once hurtling down a hill, speeds of up to 30 mph can be attained.

Sign up to our weekly round-up of HR news and guidance

Receive the Personnel Today Direct e-newsletter every Wednesday

OptOut
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

“There is nothing like an adrenaline rush to get people talking and laughing,” says Orb360 founder and director Paul Butler. “I like to think that a team which does those two things will stay together and be more productive.”

Indeed – as they say in the bars of Whitley Bay: the team that vomits together, sticks together.

John Charlton

previous post
Easyjet and Ryanair must apply French employment laws to staff operating from the country, court rules
next post
Atos Origin, IT supplier for London’s 2012 Olympic Games, confirms some jobs will be in Barcelona

You may also like

New ‘failure to prevent fraud’ law a ‘game-changer’

2 Sep 2025

PCs removed from firearms unit after Tallia Storm...

2 Sep 2025

Top 10 HR questions August 2025: Conduct outside...

2 Sep 2025

Nestlé sacks CEO over ‘undisclosed’ romantic affair

2 Sep 2025

Revolut employees to receive share sale payout

2 Sep 2025

Personnel Today Awards 2025 shortlist: Health and wellbeing

2 Sep 2025

Deloitte to hire 1,500 graduates and apprentices

2 Sep 2025

Airbus strikes postponed after new pay offer

1 Sep 2025

Free childcare expansion beset with recruitment challenges

1 Sep 2025

Business confidence grows to post-Budget peak

1 Sep 2025

  • Work smart – stay well: Avoid unnecessary pain with centred ergonomics SPONSORED | If you often notice...Read more
  • Elevate your L&D strategy at the World of Learning 2025 SPONSORED | This October...Read more
  • How to employ a global workforce from the UK (webinar) WEBINAR | With an unpredictable...Read more

Personnel Today Jobs
 

Search Jobs

PERSONNEL TODAY

About us
Contact us
Browse all HR topics
Email newsletters
Content feeds
Cookies policy
Privacy policy
Terms and conditions

JOBS

Personnel Today Jobs
Post a job
Why advertise with us?

EVENTS & PRODUCTS

The Personnel Today Awards
The RAD Awards
Employee Benefits
Forum for Expatriate Management
Whatmedia

ADVERTISING & PR

Advertising opportunities
Features list 2025

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin


© 2011 - 2025 DVV Media International Ltd

Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Recruitment & retention
    • Wellbeing
    • Occupational Health
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise