Measuring Integrity & Transparency Challenge

Originally published on LinkedIn · August 2017.

My brain is hurting from this question, born out of my teaching on Absolute Integrity and my curiosity about how a person can objectively evaluate the integrity of organizations, people, and roles they encounter — and yes, I am a fraud investigator. I am far from perfect here. There are just so many things going on in the world that I keep coming back to the same common theme: a lack of integrity.

The Problem

You know those companies, organizations, and people that make your skin crawl — because you know they lack integrity or transparency and you would love to publicly call them out. Sometimes it’s easy. Other times it’s very hard. Here are some examples:

  • The author or publisher of a news article that does not meet the Journalism Code of Ethics
  • The physician financially influenced by their suppliers (which is why financial disclosure websites exist)
  • The company with the 6-point font disclaimer at the bottom, or the fast-talking voiceover at the end of the commercial
  • The politician who may need to re-read their own Code of Official Conduct
  • The person who calls themselves a “pastor” or “minister” but knowingly does not walk in integrity and transparency

Current Options for Measuring Integrity

I have not found an internationally accepted standard, but there are some resources worth considering:

  • BBB, D&B, FICO, Charity Navigator
  • Wikipedia “Criticism” and “Controversies” sections
  • Trust Across America research by Barbara Brooks Kimmel — 1,000 companies surveyed; average trust score: 59; only 105 scored above 70; 180 scored below 50. That means 895 companies had the equivalent of a D grade.
  • International travel has taught me that integrity can mean different things in different cultures — MNCs must adapt
  • Ask for a company’s Code of Conduct or Code of Ethics before doing business with them — the same way you ask for a license or insurance certificate

My Challenge — to Myself and to You

Board of Directors

  • Ask great and hard questions about trust, integrity, and transparency
  • Add a trust/integrity grade question to your regular employee surveys and customer NPS studies
  • Require your organization to publish its integrity and transparency weaknesses and a plan to fix them
  • Ban 6-point font and fast talkers
  • Define at what level of integrity violation disciplinary action or termination is triggered

Operationally

  • Evaluate everything you do, print, produce, and say using a trust/integrity/transparency framework
  • List every ingredient
  • Go beyond government regulations for disclosures — absolute integrity and appropriate transparency is a higher bar than “compliant”

Personally

  • Write up your personal credo of Absolute Integrity. Share it with your spouse, your kids, and an accountability partner. Ask them to hold you to it.
  • Work on the courage to “raise your hand,” “flip tables,” or write great letters when you know there is a lack of integrity or necessary transparency
  • Do you teach your kids about integrity and transparency? Without using words?

My question to you: what are your specific, measurable ideas for publicly tracking the integrity and appropriate transparency of a company, non-profit, or individual in a business context?


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