Leadership gets complicated fast.
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| Photo by said alamri on Unsplash |
Information is incomplete.
Emotions run high.
Stakeholders disagree.
And somewhere in the middle of all that, you have to make a decision.
The problem isn’t usually a lack of intelligence. It’s a lack of structure. When ethical decisions get messy, leaders need a framework that forces clarity.
That’s where the Ethical Triangle comes in.
The Ethical Triangle examines decisions from three angles:
Principles-Based Ethics
Values-Based Ethics
Consequences-Based Ethics
Instead of reacting emotionally or impulsively, the triangle forces leaders to pause and analyze from multiple perspectives before acting.
Let’s break it down.
1. Principles-Based Ethics — What Rules or Duties Apply?
Principles-based ethics focuses on duties, laws, rules, and moral obligations.
This approach asks:
What policies apply here?
What laws govern this decision?
What professional standards must I uphold?
What commitments have I made?
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| Photo by Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash |
In education, this might involve student privacy laws or district policy.
In business, it might involve contracts or compliance regulations.
In leadership, it might involve professional codes of conduct.
Principles create boundaries. They prevent chaos and ensure fairness.
However, principles alone do not solve every ethical dilemma. Sometimes rules conflict. Sometimes they don’t fully address complex human situations.
That’s why the triangle has two other sides.
2. Values-Based Ethics — What Aligns With Our Core Beliefs?
Values-based ethics focuses on identity and character.
It asks:
Who are we as an organization?
What do we claim to stand for?
Does this decision reflect integrity?
Does it align with our mission?
This approach connects directly to organizational values—whether that’s honesty, service, loyalty, respect, accountability, or excellence.
If principles are the guardrails, values are the compass.
A decision might technically follow the rules but still violate the spirit of your organization’s stated beliefs. When that happens, trust erodes.
Values force leaders to ask:
Is this consistent with who we say we are?
3. Consequences-Based Ethics — Who Is Affected and How?
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| Photo by Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash |
It asks:
Who benefits from this decision?
Who might be harmed?
What are the short-term impacts?
What are the long-term ripple effects?
Does this create more good than harm?
In schools, this might mean considering student morale or parental trust.
In business, it might mean evaluating employee impact or customer confidence.
In leadership, it might mean weighing reputation and culture.
Consequences force leaders to think beyond the immediate moment and consider broader impact.
Why You Need All Three
If you rely only on principles, you risk becoming rigid.
If you rely only on values, you risk inconsistency.
If you rely only on consequences, you risk justifying questionable actions for “the greater good.”
The strength of the Ethical Triangle is balance.
Strong leaders examine decisions from all three perspectives before acting.
When a decision aligns with:
Sound principles
Core values
Responsible consequences
It becomes defensible, transparent, and credible.
How the Ethical Triangle Applies Everywhere
In Schools
Discipline decisions

Photo by 愚木混株 Yumu on Unsplash
Grading disputesParent communication
Policy enforcement
In Coaching
Playing time decisions
Conflict resolution
Team standards
Injury management
In Business
Hiring and firing
Budget allocation
Competitive strategy
Crisis management
The framework slows you down just enough to make better decisions without becoming paralyzed.
A Free Decision-Making Tool
To make this practical, I created an Ethical Triangle Decision-Making Framework that walks leaders through each side step-by-step.
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👉 https://johnvandusen.com/books%2Fjournals%2Fproducts/ols/products/ethical-triangle-decision-making-framework
Use it for leadership meetings.
Use it for staff development.
Use it for personal reflection.
Ethical clarity builds organizational strength.
Final Thought
Ethical decisions rarely come with flashing warning signs. They arrive quietly—often disguised as pressure, urgency, or convenience.The Ethical Triangle gives leaders structure in moments that matter most.
Examine the principles.
Test against your values.
Evaluate the consequences.
That’s how trust is built.
That’s how integrity is protected.
That’s how leaders stay credible—even under pressure.
Teach it. Coach it. Lead.
JVD











