By Dr. Kevin Hall
The Way – Walking Faithfully in Leadership
Ethical leadership is rarely tested when conditions are ideal. It is tested when people are tired, under pressure, dissatisfied, or feeling unseen. The real question is not whether leaders face hardship—but how they respond when they do.
Consider this true-to-life case.
A Cautionary Story
Brown’s Shoe Store was a successful specialty retail brand serving urban communities. Its appeal rested on trendy footwear and competitive prices. One of the ways the company maintained affordability was by keeping payroll lean—meaning salaries sat on the lower end of the market.
One evening, a supervisor unexpectedly returned to the store during a scheduled shift. The sales floor appeared active. But in the back room, the supervisor discovered something disturbing: the part-time supervisor was asleep at her desk, surrounded by merchandise. No oversight. No accountability.
An investigation revealed something far worse.
Several employees—frustrated with pay, juggling multiple jobs and school—had created a system to “supplement” their income. Each day, a fixed amount of cash was taken before transactions were entered into the POS system. Once customers spent an equivalent amount legitimately recorded, the theft was hidden. Weekly losses reached thousands of dollars. Employees even rotated sleeping during shifts to cope with exhaustion.
The business did not collapse because of low wages.
It collapsed because ethical leadership collapsed.
