A little reality check is in order under these
circumstances. If you worked in the warehouse, would you be able to decide what you wanted to do today? If you were a customer service rep, would you get to determine how best to spend your day, and which parts of your job you’d really do? If you were in the purchasing department, if you didn’t like the company’s direction, would you have the freedom to ignore it?
So what makes you think you are so special? Answer -- nothing. Let’s put the freedom that we enjoy and the money that we make
in perspective. We are, when all is said and done, employees of the company. And, I believe, we have a moral obligation to give our best efforts to that company for as long as we accept a paycheck.
Which brings us to the second situation. You have some major difference of opinion in not only the degree of what is expected, but a deep-seated difference of opinion in the basic issues themselves. I’m not talking about issues like you think you need to focus on your current
customers and your company wants you to sell new customers. Those are relatively superficial issues that fit into the previous discussion.
Instead, I’m talking about differences in fundamental values and ethics. Here’s an example from my own experience. I once worked for a company that introduced a new product, and developed a quota for each of us to sell that product. The problem was, the product never worked. It didn’t do what the company said it was going to do. We, the
sales people, knew it, and the company knew it. Yet, they still wanted us to sell it. We were given quotas and strongly directed to go out and get orders at all costs. They directed us to, in effect, lie to our customers.
I left the company shortly thereafter.
The issue wasn’t “Do I sell 100 or 130 of these?” That’s an issue of degree. Instead, the issue was, “Do I lie to my customers?” That’s an ethical
issue.
If it’s an
ethical issue, then I think you have only one choice. Find another job. Life is too short to spend it violating your ethics and compromising your integrity.
That sounds simple, and it rarely is that black and white. It almost never happens that your manager sends you an email that says, “From this day forward you will lie to your customers.” Instead, it is more likely that a pattern...[Click Here To Read The Entire Article Online]