Explain how ethical issues may alter the way change is conducted in the organization.
3 answers
Which organization?
It might depend on what kind of change is desired. For example, an organization may realize that a product is unsafe for consumers, so, from an ethical perspective, may decide to invest in alterations to the product to make it safer, or withdraw it from the market. Or, the organization could reject the idea of doing either in the interest of maintaining profit margins. Or an organization may decide that a policy of confining women to secretarial duties is unethical and change the policy to give women more responsibility. Those are two hypothetical examples. Your question is very broad, and cannot be answered definitively.
One question that many for-profit organizations face today is, "To whom are we responsible?" If the responsibility is to the investors/owners (stockholders), profits must grow and the stock price must rise. To acknowledge responsibility to the community at large may necessitate new pollution controls, but investing in the technology required will the growth of profit and stock price. Where do the "loyalties" of the organization lie? To whom are they responsible: the stockholders or the community at large? That is a legitimate ethical question. To choose between one or the other (or to find a way to do both) may involve change.