The Case of the Budget Beef: Choose a stakeholder or stakeholder group to receive the explanation of your decision?
The Case of the Budget Beef – Page 41 of 44
Step 5: Being Reflective
Part 1—Communicate Your Decision
As you come to the end of the process, you’ve made the following decision:
Because the process for ensuring a fair result is clear, submit a full and accurate report. Inform the Governor’s Chief of Staff that you refuse to be bullied into misleading the Budget Committee.
The option you chose was limited to one of the six on the list I provided. Now, however, you have the opportunity to communicate a decision to reflect what you believe is the most ethical course of action. Feel free to change any or all of the conditions to create the option you believe works best.
I’ve laid out for you a method for organizing your thoughts. This format could easily be used as the basis for an email or an inter-office memo, but its primary purpose is to organize the reasons behind your action and to defend your decision. While each section of the memo has a word count limit, a concise memo will often be much shorter. I recommend aiming for roughly one-half of the maximum, but you can always write more if necessary.
The goal is to use the norms of both ethical perspectives to write a memo that is technically sound and coherent as well as persuasive and inspiring. If you want to know more about the criteria for a good communication, check the Memo Structure page under Game Information on the left menu bar.
Audience
Choose a stakeholder or stakeholder group to receive the explanation of your decision? If you believe the decision should not be made public, then write a memo to the file or to yourself.
Answer preview for The Case of the Budget Beef: Choose a stakeholder or stakeholder group to receive the explanation of your decision?
APA
1210 Words