| [Forty-four percent
of respondents] know a company, designer
and/or inventor that has had one of its
original product designs copied without
permission. |
For the past two years, a committee of concerned
members of the toy and game industry has been
studying and discussing a proposed Code of Ethics.
The proposed document has been accepted for review
by the Toy Industry Association.
Subsequently,
a survey was designed to learn more. Following is a
summary of the Code of Ethics Survey Report prepared
by Stuart Montaldo
of Cogno
Products. He has provided a powerful first look at
the issue from an objective view. This work will go
far to solidify the concerns and to help guide the
next steps for action on this issue. •
Stevanne Auerbach,
Ph.D., and Marshall P. Gavin,
Co-Chairs, Ad-Hoc Committee, Code of Ethics
Background
This survey was initiated by a committee comprising
toy and game industry members, and was distributed
via email to subscribers of
Playthings Magazine
and
TDmonthly Magazine. It was
designed to objectively assess experiences and
attitudes regarding business ethics.
The survey is still open, and so the count may
continue to grow, but 403 surveys were received as
of the beginning of February 2007.
Method
The survey was administered in January and February
2007, through
www.surveymonkey.com, an Internet research tool
that is regularly employed by research
professionals. The link to the survey was sent by
email to
TDmonthly and
Playthings subscribers.
Respondents represented a mix of industry
constituents. The category 'retailer' was
inadvertently left off as a choice, so a percentage
of the respondents who are retailers is indicated
under 'Other' in the full results (see link at
bottom of page). Ninety-one percent of all
respondents reside in the United States.
Statistical Confidence
A total of 403 surveys were collected, though
respondents occasionally skipped particular
questions. The number of responses to the
substantive questions in the survey (those
referenced in the key findings below) ranged from
334 to 396. Therefore, margin of error for the data
is + or - 4.6 percent or better, at a 90 percent
confidence level (except where noted below). For all
key questions, the responses varied far more than
4.6 percent; therefore the results are considered
statistically significant.
Key Findings
Awareness/Personal Experience
- Forty-four percent know a company, designer
and/or inventor that has had one of its original
product designs copied without permission.
- Nearly 12 percent of all respondents have been
personally involved in a legal action for such an
incident.
- Twenty-one percent have been asked to purchase
(for resale) or manufacture a substantially similar
copy of an original product.
Trade Associations and Ethics
- Ninety percent strongly agree (69.8 percent) or
somewhat agree (20.2 percent) that trade
associations should have basic standards for ethical
conduct.
- Slightly more than 90 percent strongly agree
(72.8 percent) or somewhat agree (19.6 percent) that
parties should agree to these standards as a
requirement for membership.
- Seventy percent would either lobby to change the
decision (29.1 percent) or consider canceling
membership (40.9 percent) if an association refused
to adopt sensibly worded ethics principles.
Industry-Wide Ethics
- Slightly more than 96 percent of respondents
consider it important (74 percent) or somewhat
important (22.3 percent) that our industry, as a
whole, should act more ethically.
- Five times as many respondents think
unethical
behavior is on the rise
vs. those who think it is on the decline
(30.5 percent vs.
5.7 percent; confidence level on this question is +
or - 5.7 percent due to only 213 responses).
by Marshall P. Gavin on
March 6, 2007
This publication of Stuart
Montaldo's
''Report on the Survey on the Code of
Ethics...Proposed to
TIA'' is a great service to our industry.
Thanks to TDmonthly
publisher Bob Naimi
and Editor Allison
Marek for their courageous and objective
reporting of the dirty little secret of the
declining ethics in our industry that is
damaging not only to our industry, but also the
United States economy and even our American
culture and has for too long been avoided by the
leadership of our industry. Intellectual
property piracy discourages innovation and
undermines
entrepreneurism, the driving force in our
economy. TDmonthly's
very valuable efforts to raise our industry's
consciousness of and attention to this important
issue will do much to motivate our call for
TIA action to
provide positive leadership in reversing this
destructive behavior. We greatly appreciate
TDmonthly's
responsible media leadership!