This is the Trace Id: b00bbf3d5f9a08ff305912f0982cf54e
Skip to main content
Legal
Two colleagues talking together while sitting in a modern office.

Build trust

Trust Code: Microsoft Standards of Business Conduct

Achieving our mission

Microsoft’s Standards of Business Conduct (our “Trust Code”) will show you how to apply our culture and values to build and preserve trust with our customers, governments, investors, partners, representatives, and each other, so we can achieve our mission.

Read our Trust Code

Click all Trust headings below to view the entire code.
Two men working at a profit-for-purpose company in South Africa having a discussion.

Trust with our customers

Our ability to meet people and organizations where they are, with what they want and need, is our path to success. Our customers must be at the center of everything we do. Look for ways to engage our customers, advocate for them, and empower them to achieve more.

When making decisions, ask yourself: does this build or harm trust with our customers?

Nelson Palmer from the SBC training video working at a computer in a darkened office, with a screen behind him displaying computer code.

Honor privacy

We honor privacy by being transparent about how we handle customer data, including personal data. We want our customers to trust us to protect their privacy and use their data in the ways that they permit us.
Mobile professional using a Surface Book and Surface Pen viewing a financial chart.

Don’t make improper payments

We are committed to truthful and transparent interactions with customers, and we prohibit any attempt to influence their decisions through improper payments. Corruption can harm our customers in many ways, including sometimes causing them to pay more than they should. Winning and preserving customers’ trust every day is more important than any benefit we might get from doing business improperly. In some parts of the world, paying bribes to get business may be something that others do. We prohibit them. We would rather lose the business than secure it through a bribe, kickback, or other improper benefit.
Five characters from the SBC training video at a table in a bar having a conversation.

Compete fairly

The way we compete is as important as the result we achieve. Healthy competition and fair business practices put our customers first by giving them access to a variety of products and services at fair prices. Competing fairly ensures that we meet our business objectives with our integrity intact.

Build Secure Products and Services

We are committed to designing, building, testing, and operating our technology to ensure we deliver solutions that meet the highest possible standard of security. We strive to ensure that all aspects of customer data remain confidential, that data integrity and security is maintained, and that our business functions operate effectively and resist attacks. We all bear the responsibility to directly contribute to the security of Microsoft and our customers.

How to build trust:

    • By following local privacy and data protection laws.
    • By providing clear and accurate privacy notices when collecting or processing personal data, including employee personal data.
    • By honoring privacy choices by using customer data to provide the services customers have agreed to.
    • By protecting our customers’ data through building secure products and services.

    Learn more

    Privacy Policy (internal only)
    Privacy principles

     

    • By refusing to offer or pay bribes or kickbacks to anyone.
    • By prohibiting corrupt payments of all kinds, including payments to secure permits or approvals, and small payments to speed up a routine government process (often known as a “facilitating payment”).
    • In any deal, we will avoid hidden terms or arrangements and reduce complexity wherever possible, because transparent transactions reduce the risk of a bribe or kickback.
    • By using partners that have a reputation for integrity, and reporting signs that a representative is unethical or could be paying a bribe.
    • By making sure that any gifts, hospitality, or travel we offer to government officials or customers are reasonable and appropriate, and pre-approved where necessary.
    • By hiring candidates based on their merits, and not make hiring decisions to benefit a customer or government official.
    • If we make charitable donations, we will do so to support a legitimate charitable cause, not as part of an exchange of favors.

    Learn more

    Anti-Corruption Policy
    Giving Gifts, Hospitality & Travel to Government Officials (internal only)
    Commitment to anti-corruption and anti-bribery

    • By avoiding any formal or informal agreements with competitors that limit competition.
    • By respecting competitive bidding processes, and not rigging or fixing the outcomes or helping anyone else do so.
    • By not dictating the prices that our independent channel partners charge their customers.
    • By gathering competitive intelligence using only appropriate resources, being truthful, and not misrepresenting who we are.

    Learn more

    Competitive Intelligence Policy (internal only)
    Microsoft Fair Competition Policy (internal only)

    • By delivering impact for the Security Core Priority.
    • By completing and applying learnings from required training, including Security Foundations and the Trust Code (Standards of Business Conduct) course.
    • By learning about the Microsoft Secure Future Initiative (SFI) framework and objectives.
    • By prioritizing security in your own work, and anticipating and implementing secure approaches to products, processes, and tools in alignment with our Secure Future Initiative (SFI).
    • By using MSProtect to learn more about how you can contribute to securing Microsoft.
    • By reporting any suspicious or malicious cyber activity, concerns regarding the integrity of our systems and data, and any suspected digital or physical security violations and vulnerabilities via Report It Now.

    Learn More:

     Security Core Priority (internal only)

    Microsoft Security Policy (internal only)

    Secure Future Initiative

    Report It Now (internal only)

    MSProtect (internal only)

Back to tabs

Upholding our Trust Code

Employees are expected to uphold this Trust Code, Microsoft policies, and the law. This means you must:

  • Read, understand, and comply

    Read, understand, and comply with this Trust Code, and the policies, laws, and regulations that apply to your job.

  • Speak up

    Speak up when we see possible violations of the Trust Code, Microsoft policies, and legal and regulatory requirements.

  • Be truthful

    Be truthful and cooperate fully in any internal investigations. Do not conceal or destroy information.

  • Complete training

    Complete training on the Trust Code, and attest that you understand and commit to comply with the Trust Code. Failing to read or attest to the Trust Code does not excuse you from these responsibilities.

Back to tabs

Microsoft’s Standards of Business Conduct and its Compliance and Ethics Program are endorsed by and have the full support of Microsoft’s Board of Directors. The Board of Directors and management are responsible for overseeing the Compliance and Ethics Program and compliance with these Standards. These Standards apply to Microsoft, its Board of Directors, and all employees, directors, executive officers of Microsoft. When we refer to “Microsoft” we mean Microsoft Corporation and all its subsidiaries and affiliates in which it directly or indirectly owns more than 50% of the voting controls. References to “employees” include the Board of Directors, employees, directors, and executive officers of Microsoft. Only the Board of Directors may waive a provision of these Standards for a director or executive officer. Any waiver that is granted to a director or executive officer will be publicly disclosed as required by NASDAQ listing requirements and applicable laws, rules, and regulations. These Standards are important to us. Violation of these Standards may result in disciplinary action, up to and including termination of employment. ​Employees are expected to always exercise common sense and good judgment and to act responsibly, irrespective of the existence of a policy that prohibits specific behavior.

Nicole Walters from the SBC training video wearing a red blazer is looking off to the distance in thought.

Speak up when something is not right, so that we can address the problem.

A group of office workers sit around a conference table having a discussion.

Follow Microsoft