Commissioned by the Walker Center for Applied Ethics, the Indiana Ethics Survey: The State of Ethics in the Workplace will inform efforts to improve ethics in Indiana businesses.
The Walker Center for Applied Ethics at Â鶹ÊÓƵAPK has released its first-ever ethics study – Indiana Ethics Survey: The State of Ethics in the Workplace. The survey was commissioned and funded by the Walker Center through the Ethics Research Center at the Ethics & Compliance Initiative, the nation’s oldest nonprofit in the ethics and compliance industry, and Ipsos International, a global market research organization.
Through the survey, the Walker Center for Applied Ethics hopes to gain an understanding of the current state of ethics culture across Indiana businesses, as perceived by their employees, and will use the survey data as a guide to identify areas of opportunity and need for improvement across Indiana’s business community. The research reveals a strong link between the quality of a company’s ethics culture and how that culture is influenced by the quality of a company’s ethics and compliance function, which leads to favorable ethics outcomes and higher employee retention rates.
Key overall findings from the survey were:
“This important research provides us with data on trends in workplace ethics that allow us to focus on the key drivers that improve ethical cultures in the workplace. The Walker Center for Applied Ethics will build on this study to further understand the drivers and differences across various sectors, industries and employee groups and, more importantly, to understand the implications for business performance,” said Elizabeth Coit, Executive Director, Walker Center for Applied Ethics.
Additional survey findings include:
The Indiana Ethics Survey: The State of Ethics in the Workplace surveyed 975 employees at all levels within organizations, working in companies of all sizes and in numerous industries. Sixty percent of those surveyed were middle or top management, and 26 percent were first-line direct supervisors or individual contributors. Employees surveyed were from many industries and fields with the top three being education, medical and technology.
Click here to read the full survey.