• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Vested

Based on research with…

HASLAM College of Business. The university of Tennessee, Knoxville
  • Home
  • What Is Vested?
    • Vested FAQ’s
    • The Story of the Vested Movement
    • About the Vested Faculty
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Speaking
  • Resources
    • Books
    • Vested Courses
    • Vested White Paper and Case Study Library
    • Workshops
    • Assessments
    • Vested Toolkit
    • Vested Certified Deal Architects
    • Vested Centers of Excellence Coaching and Consulting
  • Toolkit
  • Courses
    • Overview of Vested Courses
    • Online Courses
    • On Site Courses
    • Certified Deal Architect Program
    • Courseware FAQ
  • Login

When is it okay to lie?

August 12, 2022 by Kate Vitasek Leave a Comment

Lies by Ged Carroll via Flicker CC

That’s a sticky question, especially in 2022 business environments marked by mounting economic uncertainties, talent issues, and struggling post-pandemic supply chains. So, is the answer Never? Sometimes? It depends?

“There’s a universe of ambiguity between outright fraud and the whole truth,” says John Paul Rollert in an article published in 2020. It’s ambiguous because while few business executives are willing to dismiss a commitment to the truth outright, “for most people today, an affirmative fidelity to the truth seems a better fit for Boy Scouts than business executives.”

Rollert cites the work of the economist Albert Z. Carr in the 1960s. Carr said: “Most executives from time to time are almost compelled, in the interests of their companies or themselves, to practice some form of deception when negotiating with customers, dealers, labor unions, government officials, or even other departments of their companies. By conscious misstatements, concealment of pertinent facts, or exaggeration—in short, by bluffing—they seek to persuade others to agree with them. I think it is fair to say that if the individual executive refuses to bluff from time to time—if he feels obligated to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth—he is ignoring opportunities permitted under the rules and is at a heavy disadvantage in his business dealings.”

What Carr says is unfortunate but true and perhaps one reason why transparency has become such a prevalent buzzword in business negotiation. It’s also a conundrum because if both sides are bluffing in a negotiation where does that leave truth, the deal, and integrity?

Filed Under: From the Blog Tagged With: Albert Z. Carr, bluffing, business

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Vested 411

  • What is Vested
  • Vested FAQ's
  • Vested Faculty

Support

  • Technical Support

Join the Movement

  • Courses
  • Books
  • Speaking

Resources

  • Assessments
  • Books
  • Case Studies
  • White Papers
  • Toolkit
  • Centers of Excellence

Media

  • Contact

Privacy Policy

  • Privacy Policy
11410 NE 124th St. #311 Kirkland, WA 98034
Ph 762-475-8378
[email protected]
Vested

© 2025 Vested Outsourcing Inc. All Rights Reserved.