conduct

(noun)

The manner of guiding or carrying one's self; personal deportment; mode of action; behavior.

Related Terms

  • code

Examples of conduct in the following topics:

  • Codes of Conduct

    • Organizations adopt codes of conduct to guide employees' actions and decisions.
    • As part of comprehensive compliance and ethics programs, many companies formulate policies pertaining to the ethical conduct of employees.
    • Public signage often contains messages guiding conduct.
    • Similarly, behavior in organizational settings may be guided by organizational codes of conduct.
    • State the importance of utilizing a code of conduct to outline and maintain ethical business standards within an organization
  • Managers Role in Ethical Conduct

    • Managers hold positions of authority that make them accountable for the ethical conduct of those who report to them.
    • The manager has an important role in maintaining ethical conduct in a firm, but a firm's ethics cannot simply be based on a "manager to the rescue" approach.
  • The PESTEL and SCP Frameworks

    • According to the structure-conduct-performance (SCP) approach, an industry's performance (or the success of an industry in producing benefits for the consumer) depends on the conduct of its firm.
    • The conduct of the firm, in turn, is dependent on its structure (or factors that determine the competitiveness of the market).
    • This creates a linear relationship of sorts, where the structural inputs can impact the conduct and strategy of the firm, leading to better (or worse) performance.
    • This structure will provide critical inputs for the broader industry, which in turn will impact the conduct of the organization through strategic integration.
    • If this process is accomplished effectively—and management has integrated the external structure with the internal conduct strategically—higher performance can then be derived.
  • Defining Values

    • Since values often strongly influence both attitude and behavior, they serve as a kind of personal compass for employee conduct in the workplace.
    • Values can strongly influence employee conduct in the workplace.
  • How Values Influence Behavior

    • Values influence behavior because people emulate the conduct they hold valuable.
    • All individuals possess a moral compass, defined via values, which direct how they treat others and conduct themselves.
    • Training programs, codes of conduct, and ethics committees can inform employees of the types of behavior that the company finds acceptable and unacceptable.
  • Moral Principles in Management

    • Ethics, also known as moral philosophy, is a branch of philosophy that involves systematizing, defending, and recommending concepts of right and wrong conduct.
    • Business ethics applies to all aspects of business conduct by individuals and organizations as a whole.
    • Ethical behavior is conduct that follows one's personal beliefs or shared organizational or institutional values.
  • Social Responsibility Audits

    • Organizations may also hire external firms to conduct CSR audits; these often have more credibility than an internally generated report.
    • Having third-party groups conduct social audits is one way that corporations are held accountable for their CSR performance.
  • Project Management Audits

    • It is important, however, to monitor how an audit is conducted so that employees or project team members don't perceive it as a sign that the project manager does not trust them to complete their work.
    • It is important to consider interpersonal factors before conducting an audit of a project.
  • The Manager's Role in Ethical Conduct

  • Behaviorism: Follett, Munsterberg, and Mayo

    • The research he conducted in the Hawthorne studies of the 1930s showed the importance of groups in affecting the behavior of individuals at work.
    • Mayo's employees Roethlisberger and Dickson conducted the practical experiments.
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