Enron Cultural Analysis: Accounting Fraud

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Enron Cultural Analysis

Enron, which was the seventh largest company not so many years ago, was forced into bankruptcy in 2001 due to the collapse of their once successful organizational structure. Enron was seen and widely recognized as one of the most innovative companies of its time, and its downfall came as a great surprise to many. However, Enron’s consistent rise in profits did raise some eyes. In fact in that turned out that Enron had conducted millions dollars of accounting fraud. What set aside Enron from other companies was its aggressive organizational culture. It was seen as setting forth a “new economic religion” as mentioned in Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room.

This new economic religion revolved around money and wealth being the primary motivator to everything. The aggressiveness and stress on the importance of wealth was apparent through the company’s use of a performance review committee. It was seen as a “rank and yank” system where every year each employee was brought in front of a board and given a rating. If you weren’t the best, you would be let go. Enron fired up to 15% of their employees. At the same time, this obsession with money was apparent because they posted the stock prices everywhere, including elevators. The company would hike up stock prices and immediately cash out their profits. An employee even stated, “If I’m on the way to my boss’s office to argue about my compensation and If step on somebody’s throat and that doubles it, well I’ll stomp on the guy’s throat”.

Such thinking became basic assumptions of the organizational culture because it became acceptable organizational value of the company to do whatever was necessary, even if unethical. Therefore, most of the enacted values of the ...

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...oyees that there were not accounting issues either. As a result of this overall scandal, 20000 employees lost their jobs and medical insurance, averaging at about 4500 dollars in severance. Employees lost about 1.2 billion in retirement funds and retirees two billion in pension.

In order to prevent the development of such cultures, organizations should make sure to enforce their code of conduct instead of just hoping for the best and implementing actual punishments for employees that fail to follow them. They should also be sure to incorporate and bring up ethics as much as possible in the work place, such as meetings and announcements. Meanwhile, publically committing to being an ethical organization will keep a company more in line and focused upon doing the right thing because they are now in the public’s eye and have given their word to abide by their rules.

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