Proper vs. improper compromise

Proper vs. improper compromise

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What is the difference between these two situations?:

a) You are negotiating a price of a product with a buyer. You are asking for $120, the price that you ideally would like to get. The buyer counters with an offer of $80, which would leave you virtually no margin.  You want the sale but you also want to make a profit. So you compromise on your desired price, and offer the product for $100 (assuming that other buyers have not been forthcoming). The buyer really wants your product because it is of value to him. He also compromises his desired price of $80, and agrees to pay $100. The sale is completed. You get a sale, although a lower margin that you had hoped, and the customer gets the product, although for a higher price than he had hoped–but you both are satisfied at the end.

b) You are facing a lot of pressure to cut costs at your business. There has been cash flow problems for a while, and something needs to be done. One of your employees suggests that you eliminate quality control for a while in order to save money. You decide to compromise temporarily your value of offering outstanding quality to your customers and your principle of honest dealing (you decide not to tell anyone that quality control has been eliminated and hope that nobody notices).

The situation (a) is a proper compromise: a compromise of price of product by mutual consent, with no deception or fraud. The situation (b) represents an improper compromise: a compromise of valid moral principle, such as honesty (not telling customers that quality control has been omitted and pretending it has not) and integrity (saying that you offer outstanding quality, and then not putting your money where your mouth is).

Valid moral principles should never be compromised because they are the guidelines for achieving our long-term self-interest, such as a profitable business. Skipping quality control can lead to increase in profits in the short term but to big losses, or even bankruptcy, in the long term when customers start returning defective products, or worse, get harmed or injured by them, and sue for damages.

Compromising a valid principle even once is hazardous because it leads to a slippery slope: compromising a principle once undermines its value as a guideline–which we fallible beings need to project the long-term consequences or our actions and to reach our goals. If you get away with one compromise, you are tempted to it again, until the principle has been tossed aside. You arbitrarily decide whether to follow it or not–which is the same as to have no principles at all. Consider the principle of honesty, which tells us not to fake reality in order to gain a value. One day you decide to compromise the principle to fib a little to get something and get away with it. The next time there is an opportunity to fake in order to get something, you decide to try again. After all, it worked once, so why not. At this point, you have thrown out the principle of honesty; it has become useless as a guideline.

The topic of this post occurred to me from my email conversation with Robert Genn–thank you, Robert. We were discussing whether an artist should continue a relationship with  an art dealer who  increases agreed-upon prices without consultation and pockets the difference. While an artist and a dealer should be free to negotiate a commission (and may compromise what each may ideally want, by mutual consent), it is not in an artist’s self-interest to continue a relationship with a dealer who violates a contract or tries to deceive the artist. That would be a violation of the principle of justice (judging people’s character and conduct objectively and granting them what they deserve). A contract-violating or deceptive dealer does not deserve the artist’s business. Continuing to do business with such a dealer is not in the artist’s self-interest.

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  • February 16, 2012

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Jaana Woiceshyn teaches business ethics and competitive strategy at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, Canada.

She has lectured and conducted seminars on business ethics to undergraduate, MBA and Executive MBA students, and to various corporate audiences for over 20 years both in Canada and abroad. Before earning her Ph.D. from the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania, she helped turn around a small business in Finland and worked for a consulting firm in Canada.

Jaana’s research on technological change and innovation, value creation by business, executive decision-making, and business ethics has been published in various academic and professional journals and books. “How to Be Profitable and Moral” is her first solo-authored book.