Key Terms
- brand
- a type of product or service marketed by a particular company under a particular name
- branding
- the process of creating, differentiating, and maintaining a particular image and/or reputation for a company, product, or service
- bribe
- a payment in some form (cash or noncash) for an act that runs counter to the legal and ethical culture of the work environment
- duty of confidentiality
- a common-law rule giving an employee responsibility to protect the secrecy of the employer’s proprietary information, such as trade secrets, material covered by patents and copyrights, employee records and salary information, and customer data
- duty of loyalty
- a common-law rule that requires an employee to refrain from acting in a manner contrary to the employer’s interest
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
- an amendment to the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934; its main purpose is to make it illegal for companies and their managers to influence or bribe foreign officials with monetary payments or rewards of any kind in an attempt to get or keep business opportunities outside the United States
- insider trading
- the buying or selling of stocks, bonds, or other investments based on nonpublic information that is likely to favorably affect the price of the security being traded
- intellectual property
- the manifestation of original ideas, protected by legal means such as patent, copyright, or trademark
- internal marketing
- the process of getting employees to believe in the company’s product and even to buy it
- non-compete agreement
- a contract clause ensuring that employees will not compete with the company during or after employment there
- nondisclosure agreement
- an agreement to prevent the theft of trade secrets, most of which are protected only by a duty of secrecy and not by federal intellectual property law
- nonsolicitation clause
- an agreement that protects a business from an employee who leaves for another job and then attempts to lure customers or former colleagues away
- pay secrecy
- a policy of some companies to prevent employees from discussing their salary with other workers
- qui tam provision
- the section of the False Claims Act of 1863 that allows private persons to file lawsuits for violations of the act on behalf of the government as well as for themselves and so receive part of any penalty imposed
- trade secret
- a company’s technical or design information, advertising and marketing plans, and research and development data that would be useful to competitors
- whistleblowing
- the act of reporting an employer to a governmental entity for violating the law
- work style
- the way and order in which we are most comfortable accomplishing our tasks at work
- workplace personality
- the manner in which we think and act on the job
Citation/Attribution
Attribution information
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Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/business-ethics/pages/1-introduction
- If you are redistributing all or part of this book in a digital format, then you must include on every digital page view the following attribution:
Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/business-ethics/pages/1-introduction
Citation information
- Use the information below to generate a citation. We recommend using a citation tool such as this one.
- Authors: Stephen M. Byars, Kurt Stanberry
- Publisher/website: OpenStax
- Book title: Business Ethics
- Publication date: Sep 24, 2018
- Location: Houston, Texas
- Book URL: https://openstax.org/books/business-ethics/pages/1-introduction
- Section URL: https://openstax.org/books/business-ethics/pages/1-introduction
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