Another Recommended Book: The Rise of the Rogue Executive: How Good Companies Go Bad and How to Stop the Destruction by Leonard R. Sayles and Cynthia J. Smith (Wharton, 2005)

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This month and next, we’ll look at the dark side: two books that look not at what can be made right in corporate America, but what went wrong.

The Rise of the Rogue Executive places much blame on internal procedures that jettisoned 100 years of responsible practices, and the technologies that made fraud and profiteering possible on a scale that simply wasn’t possible in generations past.

And sometimes, flat-out lies, as in WorldCom using a totally theoretical “what-if” spreadsheet looking at the opportunity if Internet use doubled every 100 days as the basis of its income projections! The result of this total lie was devastation in the telecom industry, which was frantically laying cable in order to keep up with this demand prediction.

Another key cause was the incentive structure (eliminated by Sarbanes-Oxley in the aftermath of Enron’s collapse) that turned consultants and auditors at Big Six accounting firms such as Arthur Andersen into sales staff and pressured auditors not to jeopardize the far more lucrative consulting business (the book reproduces the full text of the Anderson indictment, in fact). Can you say “conflict of interest?”

And taking it further, CEOs face pressure to cook the books or look the other way when those to whom they delegate are unethical, both because of their own ludicrous compensation structures and pressure from investors for short-term growth. (The book cites bad behavior on the part of Dick Cheney during his Halliburton days, among others.)

But ethical, involved leaders can surmount the challenge. The book discusses this, but this part is much weaker, mostly focusing once again on the wrongdoers. I’d have liked to see that part built up.

Of course, my own award-winning sixth book, Principled Profit: Marketing That Puts People First covers that part in detail, explaining how to set up and run successful ethical companies.

And one easy step companies can do is to sign the Business Ethics Pledge, so consumers know of their commitment.

Find this book at Amazon: The Rise of the Rogue Executive: How Good Companies Go Bad and How to Stop the Destruction by Leonard R. Sayles and Cynthia J. Smith (Wharton, 2005)

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Note: As is the case for most professional reviewers, many of the books I review on this site have been provided by the publisher or author, at no cost to me. I've also reviewed books that I bought, because they were worthy of your time. And I've also received dozens of review copies at no charge that do not get reviewed, either because they are not worthy or because they don't meet the subject criteria for this column, or simply because I haven't gotten around to them yet, since I only review one book per month. I have far more books in my office than I will ever read, and the receipt of a free book does not affect my review.