What the marketplace is telling us led to our support of the work of the William G. McGowan Charitable Fund and its longstanding priority on enhanced ethics and ethical leadership in business. For 15 years, the McGowan Fund has funded a model for a truly immersive experience in ethics and ethical leadership by working with 10 universities to select a high-potential MBA student to be a McGowan Fellow and providing all the costs for participation in the program. The Fellows Program is a model for other MBA programs to follow, evidenced by the compelling feedback from the participants.
We also are pleased that one of our senior executives served on the founding National Panel of Judges for the first-ever Ethical Leader of the Year Award, created by the McGowan Fund three years ago. In our view, they have made truly outstanding choices for the first three awards of Chief Executive Officers who have so consistently “walked the talk” of ethics and ethical leadership.
These are outstanding examples of genuine ethical leadership. Each of them has made it clear to us, and to the 20,000 HR professionals who attend the SHRM National Conference where the award was presented, that ethics is not simply the right thing to do, but (as Bill McGowan always said) it is also the right business thing to do.
The Ethical Leader of the Year Award stresses the importance of being transparent and consistently demonstrating a commitment to ethics and ethical leadership even in the toughest of times. These companies are all rated as the best-in-class in their industries, and in the eyes of their customers, shareholders, and employees.
We don’t believe this is a coincidence—it further affirms the business value of ethics and ethical leadership.
As leaders in the talent management and executive search profession, we try to predict what the future relationship will be between employers hiring at the C-suite level and those executives who became a part of their leadership team. The evidence demonstrates that on both sides of the employer-employee relationship there is an acceleration in the demands for a shared commitment to ethics and ethical leadership.
For many years, we have made background searches on candidates a key component of our service to the companies and organizations that retain us. To further ensure their success in identifying people who will make a positive impact within their corporate culture and environment, we have extended our assessment process to include evidence of appropriate ethical leadership and behavior.
It is our conviction, based on the market intelligence we have, that ethics and ethical leadership is here to stay.
Its time has truly come. ■