Saturday, November 27, 2010

The Corporate Apology

In classical literature, an apology can mean a defense, such as Plato’s Apology. In modern parlance, an apology is known as an expression of genuine sorrow and an acceptance of responsibility for having caused harm to another person. Consumers should be on guard lest a company use the semblance of an apology for marketing purposes. Robert Bacal advises that an apology be used as a strategy to use “along with other techniques."[1] According to Bacal, “perfunctory or insincere apologies are worse than saying nothing at all.”[2] Accordingly, he advises that a “sincere apology can help calm a customer, particularly when you or your company has made an error. You can apologize on behalf of your company.”[3] However, how can an apology be both sincere and geared to manipulating a customer? I contend that giving a "perfunctory or insincere" apology is unethical because it is essentially a lie spun under the subterfuge of compassion. 


The full essay has been incorporated into On the Arrogance of False Entitlement: A Nietzschean Critique of Business Ethics and Management, available at Amazon.

1. Robert Bacal, Perfect Phrases for Customer Service, 2nd Ed. (New York: McGraw Hill, 2010), p. 19. Italics added.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

An Industry Undoing European Federalism: The Case of Cookies

In 2010, the EU Parliament passed a law to protect internet users from invasive “cookies,” which track computer usage at the expense of privacy. The 27 E.U. states had to implement the directive, but as this involved discretion, the business sector feared at the time that the states “might interpret the law differently, creating a nightmare of conflicting standards.” In other words, business can be intolerant toward federalism.


The full essay is at "Essays on the E.U. Political Economy," available at Amazon. 

1. Paul Sonne and John W. Miller, “EU Chews onWeb Cookies,” The Wall Street Journal, November 22, 2010, pp. B1-2.