Ethical dilemma: The burger murders – George Siedel and Christine Ladwig

A few years ago, you founded a company that manufactures meatless burgers.
Your product is now sold in stores worldwide.
But you’ve recently received awful news:
three unrelated people in one city died after eating your burgers.
The police concluded that a criminal targeted your brand,
injecting poison into your product in at least two grocery stores.
The culprit used an ultrafine instrument that left no trace on the packaging,
making it impossible to determine which products were compromised.
Your burgers were immediately removed from the two stores
where the victims bought them.
The deaths are headline news,
the killer is still at large, and sales have plummeted.
You must quickly develop a strategy to deal with the crisis.
Your team comes up with three options:
1. Do nothing.
2. Pull the products from grocery stores citywide and destroy them.
Or 3. Pull and destroy the product worldwide.
Which do you choose?
Your company lawyer explains that a recall is not required by law
because the criminal is fully responsible.
She recommends the first option— doing nothing—
because recalling the product could look like an admission of fault.
But is that the most ethical strategy?
To gauge the ethicality of each choice,
you could perform a “stakeholder analysis.”
This would allow you to weigh the interests of some key stakeholders—
investors, employees, and customers— against one another.
With the first option
your advisors project that the crisis will eventually blow over.
Sales will then improve but probably stay below prior levels
because of damage to the brand.
As a result, you’ll have to lay off some employees,
and investors will suffer minor losses.
But more customers could die if the killer poisoned packages elsewhere.
The second option is expensive in the short-term
and will require greater employee layoffs
and additional financial loss to investors.
But this option is safer for customers in the city
and could create enough trust that sales will eventually rebound.
The third option is the most expensive in the short-term
and will require significant employee layoffs and investor losses.
Though you have no evidence that these crimes are an international threat,
this option provides the greatest customer protection.
Given the conflict between the interests of your customers
versus those of your investors and employees,
which strategy is the most ethical?
To make this decision, you could consider these tests:
First is the Utilitarian Test:
Utilitarianism is a philosophy concerned
with maximizing the greatest amount of good for the greatest number of people.
What would be the impact of each option on these terms?
Second is the Family Test:
How would you feel explaining your decision to your family?
Third is the Newspaper Test:
how would you feel reading about it on the front page of the local newspaper?
And finally, you could use the Mentor Test:
If someone you admire were making this decision, what would they do?
Johnson & Johnson CEO James Burke faced a similar challenge in 1982
after a criminal added the poison cyanide to bottles of Tylenol in Chicago.
Seven people died and sales dropped.
Industry analysts said the company was done for.
In response, Burke decided to pull Tylenol from all shelves worldwide,
citing customer safety as the company’s highest priority.
Johnson & Johnson recalled and destroyed an estimated 32 million bottles of Tylenol
valued at 250 million in today’s dollars.
1.5 million of the recalled bottles were tested and 3 of them—
all from the Chicago area—
were found to contain cyanide.
Burke’s decision helped the company regain the trust of its customers,
and product sales rebounded within a year.
Prompted by the Tylenol murders, Johnson & Johnson became a leader
in developing tamper-resistant packaging
and the government instituted stricter regulations.
The killer, meanwhile, was never caught.
Burke’s decision prevented further deaths from the initial poisoning,
but the federal government investigated hundreds of copycat tampering incidents
involving other products in the following weeks.
Could these have been prevented with a different response?
Was Burke acting in the interest of the public or of his company?
Was this good ethics or good marketing?
As with all ethical dilemmas, this has no clear right or wrong answer.
And for your meatless burger empire, the choice remains yours.
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