Marketing research interviewers and their perceived necessity of moral compromise

Journal of Business Ethics 15 (10):1107 - 1117 (1996)
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Abstract

Marketing research interviewers often feel that they must compromise their own moral principles while executing work-related activities. This finding is based on analysis of data obtained from three focus group interviews and a mail survey of 173 telephone survey interviewers. Data from the mail survey were used to construct scales measuring interviewers' perceived necessity of moral compromise, moral character, and job satisfaction. The three scales then were used in a hierarchical regression analysis to predict incidences of interviewers' self-reported proscribed behaviors on the job, the latter being an index of behaviors known by interviewers to be wrong. Results support all hypothesized relationships.

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Legalized Theft.[author unknown] - 1998 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 12 (1):8-8.

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