Case Study on "Tiffany Authentic Assessment"

Case Study 7 pages (2228 words) Sources: 3

[EXCERPT] . . . .

Ethical Issues That Are Raised

A) An Explanation Of Why These Issues Are Ethical Issues

As one defines ethical issues -- "problem or situation which requires a person or organization to choose between alternatives that must be evaluated as right (ethical) or wrong (unethical)" (Business Dictionary) -- Tiffany's dilemmas are not easy ones to deal with.

Kowalski feels that the company has a direct obligation towards its customers to assure them that the gold used by Tiffany is manufactured and processed "in a way that [the customer] would be proud of." As much as it is an ethical issue, in the end it also translates into a strategic decision for the company: "This about protecting our brand. Our customers have certain expectations about how we do business. Part of the brand promise that we make every time we sell something is that we will conduct ourselves in an acceptable way. It is risk management in a very broad sense of the word. [...]At the end of the day, this is absolutely driven by our strategic need to protect our brand, which is at the very heart of the profitability of this company. It is about protecting our bottom line." (Kosich, 2004)

The choice between the flows of actions deriving from the ethical or unethical decisions (Doing something vs. Doing Nothing) is a rather tough one to make, given the consequences and risks for any of the options.

Even if maybe the choice of Doing Nothing could be cheaper on short-term (reducing the number of gold providers only to the socially responsible ones could, leading to increased prices for the resource), on long-term one could see that the effects of such a
Continue scrolling to

download full paper
decision on Tiffany's brand equity, negative perception of the company outside and inside it, and the possible crisis of consumer confidence could all have negative influences on the company's productivity and the long-term sales levels.

On the other hand, the choice of Doing Something is also not an easy one to sustain on long-term, as it increases the costs for the metal and thus the costs of final products, increases expectations for Tiffany's level of "green" commitment to other levels (thus increasing pressure for continuous sustainable actions and attitude), puts the company in a position it cannot always control when it comes to its alignment with NGOs forces.

Bottom line, the main problem reduces to the choice between being a reactive company to the socially responsible issues implied by its activity (and thus not risk so much to get out of its "comfort circle"), or living up to its mission who promises "to bring beauty into the lives of our customers [by] creating beautiful objects" and to the special demands such mission puts on the products, given the emotional nature they involve and thus the social responsible attitude customers expect from the company.

The fact that this differentiation could translate into a competitive advantage over its competitors might be just the bonus for gaining the "social license to continue to do business," as the same Kowalski says.

b) Legal concerns raised by the facts, and how these affect the formulation of the ethical issues

The legal concerns raised by the situation, as currently perceived after reading the case study, were not of direct influence on Tiffany & Co. Indeed, if the gold providers would have arrived to be under legal ban due to any environment-related legislation they would have been found to break, Tiffany & Co. would have been obliged by the law to break their provider-client contracts. In our case though, it was Tiffany the pro-active party in this whole story, trying thus to avoid the repetition of the difficult situation of the "blood diamond" issue of the years before.

The open letter written by Kowalski, warning the government and society that the Rock Creek Mine would pollute the "stark beauty" found in the Cabinet Mountains and endanger the wildlife, brought the General Mining Law of 1872 in a bad light, as it had handed over in time huge swaths of public land to miners, without a clear demand for sustainable actions and protection of the environment. It thus served as a call for actions for the U.S. mining regulators (Gagnon, 2004).

c) A careful consideration of all stakeholders whose rights or interests are affected, and specifically, which of their rights and interests are affected

Once the letter made public, it "implicitly communicated that Tiffany & Co. is committed to 'responsibly-mined' minerals and metals," thus raising many questions for its management team in the view of what behavior would such attitude create when it came to Tiffany's stakeholders: consumers, shareholders, gold providers, and the involved NGOs .

Regarding the rights and interest of their consumers, by adopting the "Doing Something" option, Tiffany can deprive them of cheaper products, which is not always well received, even for "not discretionary" goods. Additionally, it can lead to antagonizing the ones who are not preoccupied by environmental issues and "ruin the moment" for them.

Regarding their shareholders, the same "Doing Something" decision can raise the question regarding their returns on investments, as the approach of the "gold standard" can open the way up to expensive problems… On the other side, "Doing Nothing" can have a negative effect on the perception of the company (both on employees' side and customers' side), reducing their confidence in Tiffany and making it also vulnerable to criticism from NGOs or other organization, all of these matters translating in the end into long-term benefit loss for the shareholders.

Gold providers' interest in having their contracts respected and securing their customers are also affected, knowing that the ones failing the social-responsibility demands of Tiffany's will be discarded if the company chooses to "do something."

The involved NGOs gain a strong ally if Tiffany decides to go for the "Doing Something" course, thus making their voices more far-reaching. By having one first ally of the size and importance of Tiffany & Co., their road to success becomes a clearer and to a certain degree, an easier one.

d) Discussion of the fiduciary duties of managers that are implicated

Fiduciary duties are defined as "employees' or directors' legal and moral duty to exercise the powers of their office for the benefit of the employer or the firm. Directors owe the duty of utmost good faith and must not put themselves in a position where their personal interests and their fiduciary duties may conflict" (Business Dictionary)

The first thing I believe to stand out as a fiduciary duty of involved managers is to respect the social responsible direction indicated by their CEO, by making sure, for example, that contracts they close with gold mines are indeed true to their company's "green" approach. This means they will not see their own interest of closing good deals and receiving bonuses for that or even increasing their "income" through corruption, and thus closing their eyes in front of not-so-"clean" sources. The same issue remains of actuality when considering the progressive "chain of custody" promoted by Tiffany's for its gold and silver sourcing: even if the costs of obtaining "clean" resources are higher that the other ones, managers need to withhold from trying to make unnecessary financial savings by neglecting certain areas that have influence on the final sustainability of their actions.

Part III: Consider, in about 3 pages, alternative courses of action, and a reasoned justification for one of these alternatives as the best course. This justification should

a) Argue, from an ethical point-of-view, why one course of action is the best, and b) Consider whether your chosen best course of action is also in the best long-term interest of the business, as a profit-seeking institution.

The two main alternative courses of actions presented in the case study are the "Do Nothing" one and "Do Something" (with its "addition" of industry leadership).

The first one, implying that Tiffany & Co. does not take a stand regarding the validity of their sources and continues to do business with the mines that bring environmental hazards, such as millions of gallons of waste water as well as mine tailings.

It might be a cheaper option for Tiffany & Co. On short-term, but when one considers the way such unethical behavior would be perceived on long-term by its employees and its customers, and thus having negative effects on employee motivation (resulting in lower productivity, lower engagement with the company, etc.) and consumer happiness with the values of the company (thus resulting in reduced sales), it is rather clear that the second option, "Do Something," has to be the chosen one.

From an ethical point-of-view, by choosing this second option, Tiffany & Co. remains truthful to its course of actions started once with its reaction to the "conflict diamonds" situation in the late 1990's, when Tiffany became a member of the World Diamond Council, thus pledging to eliminate the commerce of diamonds in the underdeveloped countries where it thus contributed to exploitation and conflict.

Additionally, given the fact… READ MORE

Quoted Instructions for "Tiffany Authentic Assessment" Assignment:

I need to have only Part II and Part III done by November 8, 2009.

Authentic Assessment Details

Part II: Write a detailed description of the ethical issues that are raised. This discussion should be no more than four pages, and should include the following:

a) An explanation of why these issues are ethical issues

b) A discussion of legal concerns raised by the facts, and how these affect the formulation of the ethical issues.

c) A careful consideration of all stakeholders whose rights or interests are affected, and specifically, which of their rights and interests are affected.

d) A discussion of the fiduciary duties of managers that are implicated.

Part III: Consider, in about 3 pages, alternative courses of action, and a reasoned justification for one of these alternatives as the best course. This justification should

a) argue, from an ethical point of view, why one course of action is the best, and

b) consider whether your chosen best course of action is also in the best long-term interest of the business, as a profit-seeking institution.

¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬ Michael J. Kowalski, chairman and CEO of Tiffany & Co., the world-famous luxury jeweler and specialty retailer, wasted no time correcting what he called a "misperception" about his company's products. "Jewelry is not discretionary," Kowalski began when he recently addressed MBA students in Wharton marketing professor Stephen J. Hoch's marketing class and in four other classrooms participating via videoconferencing hookups. "It fulfills a need for human adornment."

Following a quick burst of laughter, Kowalski and the students returned to the morning's more serious discussion, a case study called "Tiffany & Co.: A New Gold Standard." Written by Wharton second-year graduate student ***** Zalcman, the study was triggered by Kowalski's open letter advertisement to Dale Bosworth, chief of the U. S. Forest Service, published in The Washington Post on March 24, 2004.

In the letter, Kowalski criticized the government's reliance on an antiquated law used to grant approval for the development of a silver mine *****“ to be called Rock Creek Mine *****“ in Montana's Kootenai National Forest. Kowalski cited the environmental hazards that the proposed copper and silver mine would produce, ranging from millions of gallons of waste water to "vast quantities of mine tailings *****“ a polite term for toxic sludge." As Kowalski wrote in his letter: "Minerals should *****“ and can *****“ be extracted, processed and used in ways that are environmentally and socially responsible. Government and industry each has a role to play in shaping sensible measures to achieve this goal."

Kowalski's letter, noted the case study, was not the first time the company has expressed disagreement with the federal government's decision to permit mining in environmentally sensitive areas. Indeed, over the last decade Tiffany & Co. has "expressed concern over mine suitability, antiquated federal regulation, and the responsibility of the mining and jewelry industry to promote change." But this particular letter had come at a critical moment *****“ right after the U.S. Department of Agriculture had approved Rock Creek Mine and after several non-governmental organizations (NGOs) had launched a campaign to publicize the environmental and social impact of the gold mining industry. According to the case study, the letter not only served as a call for reform in U.S. mining regulation, but also "implicitly communicated that Tiffany & Co. is committed to 'responsibly-mined' minerals and metals."

Tiffany's public appeal for mining reform posed many questions for the Tiffany management team. How should Tiffany proceed in its campaign to promote responsible mining for both silver and gold? Known as the company that "brings beauty into the lives of its customers," would Tiffany's environmental efforts threaten its brand equity? How would consumers respond? What about shareholders? And would Tiffany's public commitment to responsibly-mined minerals and metals keep NGOs from attacking the Tiffany brand, or would the company's efforts serve as a lightning rod for NGO attacks? "The Tiffany management team," according to the case study, "was uncertain how to proceed."

Doing Nothing vs. Doing Something

To begin the case review discussion of these issues, Hoch led his students through an exercise designed to discuss the risks that Tiffany faced in pursuing one of two scenarios: Doing Nothing versus Doing Something. Doing Nothing, various class members concluded, offered a range of consequences and risks:

*****¢ Potentially damages brand equity, leaving Tiffany open to attack by an NGO or another organization and making the company vulnerable to criticism. As the case study noted, "Targeting brands was like discovering gunpowder for environmentalists."

*****¢ Forces the company to operate from a stance of damage control, responding to agendas framed by others; forces company into a position of responding only "after the fact" at a time when rumor mills threaten to diminish any company response.

*****¢ Creates a negative perception of the company for its own employees and lowers employee morale.

*****¢ Creates the potential for a crisis of consumer confidence, which translates into a risk for sales.

*****¢ Brings into question Tiffany's commitment to being an ecology-minded company, creating a negative "halo" for the company. The silent, subtle approach might actually compromise Tiffany's existing environmental strategies and its ability to attract socially responsible investors.

But Doing Something, the students noted, brings risks, to

*****¢ Increases costs incurred by ensuring that metals are procured from valid sources and pronounced "clean." Increases costs incurred by advertising to show that you are taking a stand for responsible mining and environmental protection.

*****¢ Attracts attention to what may be a "non-problem." As the case study noted, "Kowalski felt that consumers were currently unaware of the issues associated with precious metals*****¦"

*****¢ Fosters even more scrutiny to determine just how committed Tiffany is to the "green" agenda. For instance, Tiffany is committed to a progressive "chain of custody" for its gold and silver sourcing, but has not yet amended platinum sourcing (although Kowalski favors adding platinum to the agenda at some later date). This raises the potential for a discussion of Tiffany's "degrees of clean" when it comes to environmental issues, students noted.

*****¢ Cheapens the brand by aligning Tiffany with other "green" companies. For instance, what do Tiffany diamonds have in common with Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream?

*****¢ Antagonizes customers who do not want environmental concerns to "ruin the moment." Distracts from "selling dreams." Clouds Tiffany's message about what they are selling *****“ which for generations has been the perception of wealth, luxury and a wonderful life.

*****¢ Raises questions about returns for shareholders. Does this protect the brand in the long run, or open up expensive problems?

*****¢ Raises prices of products.

*****¢ Draws a line between customers' divergent environmental sensitivities. For instance, will mining issues influence customers in the Western states more than Eastern ones?

*****¢ Creates concern over Tiffany's role with NGOs, their goals and agendas. Should Tiffany advocate NGO goals? What power should Tiffany have to tell NGOs what agendas to seek in exchange for the company's cooperation? Alignment with NGOs forces the company into a position it cannot always control.

*****¢ Focuses attention on Tiffany, running the risk that the company will "stand alone" among its competitors.

When the students' Do Nothing vs. Do Something lists were complete, Hoch turned the discussion over to Kowalski, a Wharton graduate who first joined Tiffany & Co. in 1983 and was named president in 1996, CEO in 1999 and chairman in 2002. To the issues articulated by the students, Kowalski then went on to add a little more "color. Specifically, I want to place this in the context of our company's mission statement, how we think about what we do, and try to go to the heart of what we did and why we did it, because quite honestly, until a few weeks ago, in terms of the retail jewelry industry, we were the only ones addressing this subject. It's fair to say that most consumers are not aware. I didn't say that they don't care; I said they aren't aware."

First, Kowalski noted, is Tiffany's mission, which is "to bring beauty into the lives of our customers [by] creating beautiful objects." The company's clients "acquire those objects to celebrate all of life's milestones *****“ whether engagement, graduation, birth, promotion or wedding anniversary ... That is extremely important in the context of what we are talking about here. It places some very special demands on our products. It obviously means that the quality and the craftsmanship [must] stand the test of time, and hopefully will be passed along from one generation to the next *****¦ We absolutely believe," Kowalski added, "that due to the nature of what we do, because of the emotional nature of what we do, we have to be socially responsible. That's precisely what our customers expect [from us]."

Founded in New York City in 1837 and now operating out of 148 locations in 17 countries, Tiffany reports an average daily revenue just below $5.5 million. In 2003, net sales increased by 17% to exceed the $2 billion mark; its brand identity alone was recently valued at $3.64 billion by BusinessWeek.

Encouraging Others to Do the Same

In the case study presented to the marketing classes, Kowalski laid out Tiffany's advocacy strategy over the past nine years, including its attempts to reduce the risk of environmental hazards (such as the cyanide contamination and acid drainage associated with gold mining), to source gold and silver from more responsible mining operations, and to create a "chain of custody" for its gold and silver (a process that allows products to be traced directly to a commodity's source). In the late 1990s, the issue of conflict diamonds was raised. Tiffany was a member of the World Diamond Council, which pledged to eliminate the trade of diamonds in underdeveloped countries where it contributes to conflict and exploitation and create a "chain of custody" for diamonds.

"If you want to anger people [at Tiffany], just suggest that they compromise quality or craftsmanship, or that they compromise service *****“ or, in this case, that we compromised our social responsibility," Kowalski told the students. "That is something that we don't do."

Kowalski also said Tiffany did not expect and was surprised by the response generated by the publication of the Rock Creek open letter advertising in The Washington Post. He considers Tiffany's position to be "a-political" because, "unlike other environmental issues today, mining issues traditionally cut across party lines." All of that changed when newspaper headlines began announcing, "Tiffany Battles Administration over Mining Reform." "It was something that we certainly didn't anticipate," Kowalski noted.

Tiffany, however, has no plans to back away from the controversy. "Certainly all of our fellow retailers, and almost everyone in the mining industry, consider our degree of engagement suspect, stupid or insane *****“ pick your poison," Kowalski told the students. "Many of the mining communities in this country absolutely believe that we act as a front for the NGO community, that I am a radical environmentalist who is out of control, that we have been corrupted by the NGOs *****“ none of which is true. In terms of brand leadership on this issue, we are at a turning point right now. To some degree, we could walk away from this today and say *****¦ We have done more than any jeweler in the past by basically putting mining reform back on the national political agenda through our open letter ad in The Washington Post."

Standing in front of the lists of risks associated with Do Nothing and Do Something strategies, Kowalski made it clear that he prefers the risks of doing something. Why? "Our motivation to date has been primarily defensive, with a fair measure of altruism thrown in," he admitted. "But putting our own house in order probably isn't enough. Now we have to step up and step out and exercise industry leadership." According to Kowalski, Tiffany is prepared not only to be accountable when it comes to its own environmental issues but to encourage other retail companies like Wal-Mart, and other jewelers like Rolex, to do the same.

"On the one hand, I feel great about this. If the mining companies and the NGOs go to war over the issues of mining reform, then I think *****¦ the battles are going to be fought on the sidewalks in front of Tiffany. And that's really what we have been trying to avoid. But on the other hand, I fear that the NGO strategy is just to attack, attack, attack. Between 11% and 12% of our worldwide sales are done at the corner of 57th Street and Fifth Avenue. So imagine a sustained NGO protest, day after day, week after week, month after month. That is a frightening possibility. It's the ultimate risk."

Kowalski acknowledged that Tiffany commits a lot of resources to working behind the scenes on mining reform. At an upcoming global conference on mining, for instance, "we will oppose any sham mining reform, but we may not publicize or go public with any of this." What the company would like to see, perhaps five years down the road, he said, is a third-party certificate program for "good gold," along with mining certification: "It's a market-driven solution. It's not about government regulation. It's about like-minded people making an assessment about their customers. We are not miners *****“ we do not operate mines. But what we are trying to do is put pressure on the mining industry by saying, 'Make your R&D investments, do what it takes to do it right and if you do, there will be a market for it."

When questioned, Kowalski acknowledged that the company's response to environmental issues has not always been associated with leadership qualities. In the mid-1990s, when "conflict diamonds" first became an issue, "we felt as an industry that we blew it," he said. "We should have seen it coming, we should have acted sooner, and we said to ourselves, 'Never again'."

Now that Tiffany has established a "chain of custody" for its diamonds, the company has also turned its attention to the issue of lab-created diamonds vs. the natural diamonds that Tiffany sells. "I think our greatest fear is that manufactured diamonds could affect the supply chain, and consumers will purchase a manufactured or lab diamond without being aware of what they are doing. We are working very hard to make sure that manufactured diamonds are identified. And we would direct a fairly emotional campaign. 'Natural diamonds are two billion years in the making. What kind of man would give a loved one a lab diamond?' We would be ruthless," Kowalski noted, to much laughter.

Do investors, one student asked, ever criticize Kowalski for spending so much

time promoting environmental and social responsibility issues, taking his

focus off other daily and strategic initiatives? "That's a fair question," he said.

"But investors have not asked. When the subject comes up and when we

outline our programs, those investors who are concerned are predisposed to be

supportive of what we are doing. And I would say that my role is not to focus

on daily operations. My role is to focus on issues of strategic importance. I

would place this near the top of our list. It really is about our social license to

continue to do business. That is about as fundamental a CEO-like

responsibility I can imagine."

How to Reference "Tiffany Authentic Assessment" Case Study in a Bibliography

Tiffany Authentic Assessment.” A1-TermPaper.com, 2009, https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436. Accessed 6 Jul 2024.

Tiffany Authentic Assessment (2009). Retrieved from https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436
A1-TermPaper.com. (2009). Tiffany Authentic Assessment. [online] Available at: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436 [Accessed 6 Jul, 2024].
”Tiffany Authentic Assessment” 2009. A1-TermPaper.com. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436.
”Tiffany Authentic Assessment” A1-TermPaper.com, Last modified 2024. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436.
[1] ”Tiffany Authentic Assessment”, A1-TermPaper.com, 2009. [Online]. Available: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436. [Accessed: 6-Jul-2024].
1. Tiffany Authentic Assessment [Internet]. A1-TermPaper.com. 2009 [cited 6 July 2024]. Available from: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436
1. Tiffany Authentic Assessment. A1-TermPaper.com. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/ethical-issues-raised/6436. Published 2009. Accessed July 6, 2024.

Related Papers:

Fact Pattern Case Study

Paper Icon

Pattern

Case Study (Fact Pattern)

Criminal activities have been on the rise in many states of the United States. To control such criminals from going unpunished in the society, the… read more

Case Study 9 pages (2946 words) Sources: 9 Topic: Crime / Police / Criminal Justice


Macular Hole Case Study

Paper Icon

Because of her age and the fact that the hole was in its early stages, only monitoring was first prescribed. A cautious approach was determined given surgery contains some risks,… read more

Case Study 3 pages (1035 words) Sources: 3 Topic: Nursing / Doctor / Physician


Quiksilver Case Study

Paper Icon

Quiksilver, Inc. Case Study

Brief Company Description

Founded in 1976, Quiksilver, Inc. (hereinafter alternatively "the company") is headquartered Huntington Beach, California and competes in the global surf- and sports-apparel and… read more

Case Study 10 pages (2910 words) Sources: 2 Topic: Business / Corporations / E-commerce


Drug Abuse the Movie: Small Case Study

Paper Icon

Drug Abuse Case Study

The Movie: Small Fish- a synopsis

An evaluation of the case

The substance abuse model for my client

The disease model of addiction

The physical dependency… read more

Case Study 6 pages (1659 words) Sources: 7 Topic: Psychology / Behavior / Psychiatry


Chest Pain the Presenting Patient Case Study

Paper Icon

Chest Pain Case Study

The presenting patient in the present case scenario is Mr. Hay, an 82-year-old male with an existing diagnosis of Cardiac Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). This existing… read more

Case Study 4 pages (1112 words) Sources: 1 Style: Harvard Topic: Medicine / Pharmacy


Sat, Jul 6, 2024

If you don't see the paper you need, we will write it for you!

Established in 1995
900,000 Orders Finished
100% Guaranteed Work
300 Words Per Page
Simple Ordering
100% Private & Secure

We can write a new, 100% unique paper!

Search Papers

Navigation

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!