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Joan Paxton, VP of marketing for Supertone Recording Equipment, has developed a

ID: 2361516 • Letter: J

Question

Joan Paxton, VP of marketing for Supertone Recording Equipment, has developed a marketing plan for presentation to the company's president. The plan calls for television ads, something the company has never used. As part of her presentation, she will indicate the impact of the TV ads on company profit as follows:

Incremental sales from increased exposure $9,058,000
Less:
Incremental cost of goods sold $3,623,200
Cost of TV ads 2,524,000 6,147,200
Incremental profit $2,910,800
While Joan is quite confident in the cost of the ads and the incremental cost of goods sold if sales are $9,058,000, she is quite uncertain about the sales increase. In fact, she believes that her estimate is on the high side. However, she also believes that if she puts in a more conservative estimate, such as $7,093,000, the president will not go along with the TV ads even though they still will generate substantial profits at $7,093,000 of incremental sales.
Is it unethical of Joan to bias her estimate of incremental sales on the high side, given that she believes the ultimate outcome is in the best interest of the company?

Explanation / Answer

I think yes, because she is intentionally misleading them. All though it may seem unethical it's not morally wrong

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