Ethical dilemma The burger murders George Siedel and Christine Ladwig

A few years ago, you founded a company
that manufactures meatless burgers.

Your product is now sold
in stores worldwide.

But you’ve recently received awful news:

three unrelated people in one city died
after eating your burgers.

The police concluded that a criminal
targeted your brand,

injecting poison into your product
in at least two grocery stores.

The culprit used an ultrafine instrument
that left no trace on the packaging,

making it impossible to determine
which products were compromised.

Your burgers were immediately
removed from the two stores

where the victims bought them.

The deaths are headline news,

the killer is still at large,
and sales have plummeted.

You must quickly develop a strategy
to deal with the crisis.

Your team comes up with three options:

  1. Do nothing.

  2. Pull the products from grocery stores
    citywide and destroy them.

Or 3. Pull and destroy
the product worldwide.

Which do you choose?

Your company lawyer explains
that a recall is not required by law

because the criminal is fully responsible.

She recommends the first option—
doing nothing—

because recalling the product
could look like an admission of fault.

But is that the most ethical strategy?

To gauge the ethicality of each choice,

you could perform
a “stakeholder analysis.”

This would allow you to weigh
the interests of some key stakeholders—

investors, employees, and customers—
against one another.

With the first option

your advisors project that the crisis
will eventually blow over.

Sales will then improve but probably
stay below prior levels

because of damage to the brand.

As a result, you’ll have to lay off
some employees,

and investors will suffer minor losses.

But more customers could die
if the killer poisoned packages elsewhere.

The second option is expensive
in the short-term

and will require greater employee layoffs

and additional financial loss
to investors.

But this option is safer
for customers in the city

and could create enough trust
that sales will eventually rebound.

The third option is the most expensive
in the short-term

and will require significant
employee layoffs and investor losses.

Though you have no evidence that these
crimes are an international threat,

this option provides the greatest
customer protection.

Given the conflict between the interests
of your customers

versus those of your investors
and employees,

which strategy is the most ethical?

To make this decision,
you could consider these tests:

First is the Utilitarian Test:

Utilitarianism is a philosophy concerned

with maximizing the greatest amount
of good for the greatest number of people.

What would be the impact of each
option on these terms?

Second is the Family Test:

How would you feel
explaining your decision to your family?

Third is the Newspaper Test:

how would you feel reading about it
on the front page of the local newspaper?

And finally, you could use
the Mentor Test:

If someone you admire were making
this decision, what would they do?

Johnson & Johnson CEO James Burke
faced a similar challenge in 1982

after a criminal added the poison cyanide
to bottles of Tylenol in Chicago.

Seven people died and sales dropped.

Industry analysts said
the company was done for.

In response, Burke decided to pull Tylenol
from all shelves worldwide,

citing customer safety
as the company’s highest priority.

Johnson & Johnson recalled and destroyed
an estimated 32 million bottles of Tylenol

valued at 250 million in today’s dollars.

1.5 million of the recalled bottles
were tested and 3 of them—

all from the Chicago area—

were found to contain cyanide.

Burke’s decision helped the company
regain the trust of its customers,

and product sales rebounded within a year.

Prompted by the Tylenol murders,
Johnson & Johnson became a leader

in developing tamper-resistant packaging

and the government instituted
stricter regulations.

The killer, meanwhile, was never caught.

Burke’s decision prevented further deaths
from the initial poisoning,

but the federal government investigated
hundreds of copycat tampering incidents

involving other products
in the following weeks.

Could these have been prevented
with a different response?

Was Burke acting in the interest
of the public or of his company?

Was this good ethics or good marketing?

As with all ethical dilemmas,
this has no clear right or wrong answer.

And for your meatless burger empire,
the choice remains yours.

几年前,你创办了
一家生产无肉汉堡的公司。

您的产品现在
在世界各地的商店销售。

但是你最近收到了一个可怕的消息:

一个城市的三个不相关的人在
吃了你的汉堡后死亡。

警方得出结论,犯罪分子
针对您的品牌,在至少两家杂货店

向您的产品注入毒药

罪魁祸首使用了一种超精细仪器
,在包装上没有留下任何痕迹

,因此无法确定
哪些产品受到了损害。

您的汉堡立即

受害者购买它们的两家商店中撤出。

死亡事件成为头条新闻

,凶手仍然逍遥法外
,销售额直线下降。

您必须迅速
制定应对危机的策略。

你的团队提出了三个选择:

  1. 什么都不做。

  2. 从全市杂货店拉出产品
    并销毁。

或者 3.
在全球范围内拉动并销毁产品。

你选择哪个?

您公司的律师解释
说,法律不要求召回,

因为犯罪分子负有全部责任。

她推荐第一种选择——
什么都不做——

因为召回
产品看起来像是承认错误。

但这是最合乎道德的策略吗?

为了衡量每个选择的道德性,

您可以
进行“利益相关者分析”。

这将使您能够相互
权衡一些关键利益相关者(

投资者、员工和客户)的利益

第一个选项是

你的顾问预测危机
最终会结束。

销售量随后会有所改善,但由于品牌受损,可能会
保持在之前的水平以下

结果,您将不得不解雇
一些员工

,投资者将遭受轻微损失。


如果杀手在其他地方下毒,更多的顾客可能会死亡。

第二种选择在短期内代价高昂

,需要更多的员工裁员

和投资者额外的经济
损失。

但这种选择
对城市的客户来说更安全,

并且可以建立足够的信任
,使销售最终会反弹。

第三种选择
在短期内成本最高

,需要大量
裁员和投资者损失。

尽管您没有证据表明这些
犯罪行为是国际威胁,但

此选项可提供最大的
客户保护。

考虑到客户利益

与投资者
和员工利益之间的冲突,

哪种策略最合乎道德?

要做出这个决定,
您可以考虑以下测试:

首先是功利主义测试:

功利主义是一种哲学,关注

为最多的人最大化最大数量的利益。

每个
选项对这些条款的影响是什么?

其次是家庭测试:

你会如何
向家人解释你的决定?

第三是报纸测试:

在当地报纸的头版阅读它的感觉如何?

最后,你可以
使用导师测试:

如果你钦佩的人做出
这个决定,他们会怎么做? 1982 年

,强生公司首席执行官詹姆斯·伯克 (James Burke)

在芝加哥的泰诺 (Tylenol) 瓶中添加了有毒氰化物后,面临着类似的挑战。

七人死亡,销售额下降。

行业分析师表示,
该公司已经完蛋了。

作为回应,伯克决定将泰诺
从全球所有货架上撤下,

理由是客户安全
是公司的首要任务。

强生公司召回并销毁
了大约 3200 万瓶泰诺

,按今天的美元计算价值 2.5 亿瓶。

对 150 万个召回的瓶子
进行了测试,其中 3 个——

全部来自芝加哥地区——

被发现含有氰化物。

伯克的决定帮助公司
重新赢得了客户的信任

,产品销量在一年内反弹。

在泰诺谋杀案的推动下,
强生公司成为

开发防篡改包装的领导者

,政府制定了
更严格的规定。

与此同时,凶手从未被抓获。

伯克的决定
阻止了最初中毒造成的进一步死亡,

但联邦政府在接下来的几周内调查了
数百起涉及其他产品的模仿篡改事件

可以
通过不同的反应来防止这些吗?

伯克的行为
是为了公众的利益还是他的公司的利益?

这是良好的道德还是良好的营销?

与所有道德困境一样,
这没有明确的正确或错误答案。

对于您的无肉汉堡帝国
,选择权在您手中。