Maximizing profits in a crisis, such as a hardware store hiking shovel prices during a blizzard, ignores the powerful economic force of fairness. While rational by traditional models, such actions cause public outrage that can inflict far more long-term brand damage than the short-term profits are worth.

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To avoid ethical slippery slopes, project the outcome of a small compromise over time. Exaggerating a claim by 2% for better results seems harmless, but that success creates temptation to push it to 4%, then 8%. This compounding effect pushes you far from your original ethical baseline before you notice.

In analyzing a public scandal, Scott Galloway notes that the greatest damage in a crisis typically isn't the initial event but the subsequent "shrapnel": the attempts to cover up, excuse, or avoid accountability. An effective response requires acknowledging the problem, taking responsibility, and overcorrecting.

A company's monopoly power can be measured not just by its pricing power, but by the 'noneconomic costs' it imposes on society. Dominant platforms can ignore negative externalities, like their product's impact on teen mental health, because their market position insulates them from accountability and user churn.

A study found that CEOs trained to prioritize shareholder value deliver short-term returns by suppressing employee pay. This practice drives away high-skilled workers and cripples the company's long-term outlook, all without evidence of actually increasing sales, productivity, or investment.

Sludge is profitable in the short term. With CEO tenures shorter than ever and compensation tied to quarterly stock performance, executives are incentivized to cut customer service costs now, even if it harms long-term customer relationships and brand loyalty.

When Nespresso priced a feature-rich coffee machine the same as its basic model, customers grew suspicious. Assuming a hidden flaw in the advanced version, they overwhelmingly purchased the simpler one, showing how price equality can paradoxically devalue a superior product.

True corporate values are steadfast principles that guide a company regardless of the political or social climate. Values that are easily discarded when they become controversial are not core values but rather branding exercises. This inauthenticity risks significant consumer backlash when exposed.

When pressured to hit quarterly targets with promotions, use a simple filter: 'Does this action increase the long-term desirability of my full-price product?' This framework helps balance immediate revenue needs with the crucial goal of protecting and building brand equity, preventing a downward spiral of discounting.

Trust can be destroyed in a single day, but rebuilding it is a multi-year process with no shortcuts. The primary driver of recovery is not a PR campaign but a consistent, long-term track record of shipping product and addressing user complaints. There are very few "spikes upward" in regaining brand trust.

Generosity towards employees and customers is more than just good ethics; it's a strategic move in the iterated game of business. It signals your intent to cooperate, which encourages reciprocal cooperation from others. This builds trust and leads to superior long-term outcomes versus a defect-first approach.

Violating Public Fairness for Short-Term Profit Can Destroy a Business | RiffOn