The value and ethics are not just some motivational words written on your office wall neither they are some branding exercises designed to make the business look good externally.
From what I have experienced in life and business, ethics and values are what you stand for in your business. They are what you prioritise when making decisions. They are what you tolerate repeatedly. They are also what you refuse to compromise on, even when it costs you something.
A founder’s ethics and values quietly influence almost every important decision in the business.
There have been moments in my own journey where I have walked away from projects midway because the client did not trust my process or respect my expertise. Financially, it may not have been the smartest short-term decision but continuing to work on those projects would have made me feel even more irritated and frustrated.
The problem that I see with founders is that they already know their value. Sometimes, they are simply not self-aware to make decisions based on those values consistently.
why values and ethics matter in business
Your values and ethics shape you far more than you realise. They influence who you hire, who you work with, who do you partner with, how you price your work, how you communicate with your team, the culture you create within your business and how you set boundaries.
To share an example with you, I no longer tolerate working with clients who are unwilling to listen, experiment or explore different possibilities. Earlier, I would ignore those signs because I wanted the project or the money. but eventually I realised that constantly compromising on your values and ethics creates friction everywhere else.
This is also why you start feeling a little disconnected from the business. You start questioning everything and everything in your business becomes inconsistent overtime. Your values and ethics create an alignment. Without them, you only react to decisions you make in your business.
what happens when founders lack clear values
When founders are unclear about what they stand for, the business starts to feel confused. Your decisions become inconsistent because there is no clear filtration system to guide them.
The wrong clients keep entering the business because there are no boundaries around what fits and what does not. Your team becomes confused because your expectations keep changing depending on the situation. and internally you as a founder feels disconnected from their own business.
I once mentored a founder who constantly struggled to move forward. He was nearly paralysed in making decisions in their business. Every step felt unclear. At first, I thought it could be a strategy problem but underneath that, the real issue was much different.
The founder had no clarity around what they actually wanted, what mattered to them or what kind of business they were trying to build. So, instead of making informed decisions, they waited for some magical moment of certainty to arrive. But guess what? It never did.
how can founders define their values
A good place to start is by looking at what frustrated you most in business. Frustration often points directly towards ethics and values that matter deeply to you. You should also pay attention to any behaviour that goes against what you stand for. A useful question to keep asking yourself is – What matters more to you than money?
For me, short-term wins have never mattered as much as building something that genuinely serves people. I am not saying that money doesn’t matter. It matters, of course. But if the entire business becomes only about short-term gains, the decisions eventually start drifting in the wrong direction.
It also helps to ask: “what kind of business do I never want to build?” This question creates clarity surprisingly fast. For example, I would never enter into a gambling, alcohol, tobacco or anything designed to manipulate, create addition and quietly ruins people’s lives or families.
Sometimes defining what you do not want becomes clearer than defining what you do. And that is completely okay. What matters at this point is being self-aware as a leader about the values and ethics you stand by in your business.
closing thought
Values do not make the decisions easier; they make them clearer. Without being aware of your values and ethics, you will keep reacting to situations based on pressure, fear, urgency and short-term gains.
With values and ethics, your decisions will start becoming more consistent because there is finally a filter behind them. And you stop building a business that constantly fights who you are rather business a slightlybetter business that is aligned to your passion.





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