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John Dalton

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Title: John Dalton


1

2005
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT A Holistic Business Tool
Presented by John Dalton Director of LSPR
Worldwide
2
Financial performance and capital
Customer benefits
Business processes
Tangible assets
Intangible assets
Human/Structural capital
Stakeholder engagement
Culture values
Adapted from Intangible Assets J. Daum Wiley,
1999
3
REPUTATION
  • If we picture a company as a living organism,
    say a tree, then half of the mass or more of that
    tree is underground in the root system. And
    whereas the flavour of the fruit and the colour
    of the leaves provides evidence of how healthy
    that tree is right now, understanding what is
    going on in the roots is a far more effective way
    to learn how healthy that tree will be in years
    to come
  • Leif Edvinsson and Michael S. Malone
    Intellectual Capital

4
REPUTATION An overview
  • What does reputation mean to you?
  • How much is your companys reputation worth?
  • Can you measure and manage your reputation?
  • How much of your organisation is made up of
    intangible assets?

5
REPUTATION An Overview
  • What one mistake do businesses keep making?
  • Answer
  • Asking the wrong questions
  • Issues facing business change little, but the
    answers do
  • Ask not what I should be doing, but WHAT NEEDS TO
    BE DONE source P. Drucker
  • We must become the change we want to see
  • - Ghandi

6
REPUTATION An overview
  • Corporate image can be created, but corporate
    reputation must be earned
  • What exactly does reputation mean?
  • Various perspectives and meaning, both in a
    business and cultural sense

7
REPUTATION An Overview
  • Hill and Knowltons Corporate Reputation Watch
    2004 Survey Some key findings
  • www.hillandknowlton.com
  • 93 of senior executives believe that customers
    consider corporate reputation important or
    extremely important
  • 79 of senior executives believe that investors
    and lenders consider CR either important or very
    important
  • The impact of corporate governance has increased
    dramatically since 5 years ago now 40 of senior
    executives believe that strong corporate
    governance is a critical factor that potential
    investors consider before committing, whereas 5
    years only 19 thought the same.

8
REPUTATION An Overview
  • In 2001, the insurance firm Aon polled 2000 top
    UKs private companies and showed that loss of
    reputation was viewed as the greatest risk,
    followed by failure to change
  • www.aon.co.uk

9
WHO IS AT RISK?
  • You are at particular risk if you
  • Offer life-saving or life threatening products
    pharmaceuticals or arms
  • Enjoy high, global brand awareness luxury brands
  • Are based on new technology GM, mobiles
  • Confront changing social mores fashion,
    alcohol, tobacco
  • Produce significant spill-over effects mining,
    waste, oil

10
GLOBAL BUSINESS CONTEXT
  • Pluralism over time markets are inherently
    entropic
  • This leads to CREATIVE DESTRUCTION
  • Sustaining a competitive brand now relies more on
    reputation than it did a decade ago reputation
    is one of the key sustaining factors

11
TRUST the engineering of consent
  • Trust vs. Trustworthiness
  • Increased fraud reward based incentives
  • Loss of authority from key institutions
  • Media distortion and anti-campaigning
  • Growth of urban decay and ant-social behaviour
  • Poor corporate governance and corporate behaviour
    The Precautionary Principle

12
CHANGE IN ATTITUDES
  • In the Industrial age, the marketing model was
    driven by advertising
  • For knowledge-intensive products, inherent value
    cannot be as easily communicated in 5-10 sec
    commercial
  • Therefore, products and services rely more on
    reputation the key vehicle for which is the
    BARND and its ability to create value

13
CHANGING ATTITUDES
  • Corporate value can no longer be determined by
    short-term profit and sales
  • Long-term, sustainability is the key
  • Mobile phone industry is a classic example
  • Old systems deemed employees as cost factors, not
    as value creating elements and stakeholders

14
CHANGING ATTITUDES
  • Transition from the neo-classical economic
    theory to socio-economic theory stakeholders
  • Triple bottom line and sustainability
  • Economic
  • Social
  • Environmental
  • Differentiate by behaviour

15
REPUTATION ICE BERG
  • Union Carbide (USA Bhopal, India)
  • Enron (USA)
  • WorldCom (MCI) (USA)
  • Shell (UK)
  • Nike (USA)
  • Arthur Anderson (USA)
  • Parmalat (Italy)
  • Yukos (Russia)

16
REPUTATION An Overview
  • Reputation is the sum values that stakeholders
    attribute to a company, based on their perception
    and interpretation of the image that the company
    communicates over time
  • John Dalton Managing Corporate Reputation

17
REPUTATION An Overview
  • Reputation is the principal means through which
    a market economy deals with consumer ignorance
  • Professor John Kay
  • Reputation exists because of asymmetric
    information

18
REPUTATION An Overview
  • Reputation is a collective term referring to all
    stakeholders views of corporate reputation,
    including identity and image
  • Professor Gary Davies Manchester Business
    School
  • Reputation experience - expectations

19
IT ALL ABOUT ISSUE MANAGEMENT
  • Good reputation management is based on issue
    management
  • Issue identification
  • Issue Analysis
  • Issue Change Strategy Options
  • Issue Action Programme
  • Evaluation of Results
  • Monitoring Weblogs and user groups online

20
SOME HOT ISSUES
  • Obesity, salt and food labelling
  • GM technology
  • Mobile phone radiation
  • Stem cell and embryo technology
  • Nanotechnology
  • Biodiversity loss and pollution
  • Compliance, governance CSR
  • Off-shoring
  • Innovation and value creation
  • IP theft counterfeiting
  • Customer retention and equity
  • Development of an amateur media online

21
BRANDS AND REPUTATION
Phase I
Phase II
Phase III
Reputation
Corporate Image
Corporate Identity
Positioning
22
CORPORATE IDENTITY
  • Logo TM
  • Name typeface
  • Slogan or tagline
  • Packaging and uniforms
  • Colour and semiology
  • Brochure and advertising
  • Annual Report
  • Websites
  • Photography

23
IMAGE FORMATION
Communities
Communications
Attitude behaviour of employees
Quality of goods services
Corporate Image
Organisation Structure Culture
Experience
Corporate Social Responsibility
Financial Performance
Physical Environment
24
ROYAL DUTCH SHELL Image problems
  • Nigeria and the Ogoni People
  • Greenpeace and Brent Spar 1995
  • Profits before principles
  • Pollution and biodiversity loss
  • Reserves crisis 2004 over estimate

25
ROYAL DUTCH SHELL corporate communications
  • Shells Society Report
  • Shell Foundation
  • Profits and Principles campaign
  • Environmental Reports
  • Local Reports and external assurance
  • Reporting GRI and UN Global Compact
  • Adaptation of International Financial Reporting
    Standards Dow Jones Sustainability Index

26
ROYAL DUTCH SHELL Corporate Communications
  • Developed and pioneered scenario planning for
    crisis management
  • Highly developed CSR and Branding
  • Corporate communications centralized
  • Significant alteration to organizational
    structure
  • Strategy of stakeholder engagement
  • Listing on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index

27
TELECOMS Orange - rags to riches
  • Classic example of corporate brand-building
    success
  • 1994 equity worth little by 2000, Market Cap -
    50 billion
  • Strategy brand focused
  • Good use of corporate identity name and slogan
    use of semiotics
  • 1996 IPO youngest company ever to enter
    FTSE-100
  • Integrated marketing communications campaign
    strong positioning against competitors

28
TELECOMS Vodafone
  • Vodafone is the worlds largest mobile
    telecommunications community, employing over
    65,000 staff and over 130 million customers
  • Success and reputation because of its brand
    brand driven

29
TELECOMS Vodafone
  • Brand strategy key to its success
  • Operates over 300 of its own stores
  • Sells through independent retailers
  • Extensive sponsorship
  • Advertising - high profile-celebrity endorsement
  • Extensive below the line promotion
  • High profile involvement in CSR award winning

30
TELECOMS Vodafone
  • Extensive market research and focus groups
  • Innovation Vodafone live!
  • Increased penetration of new data services
  • Sponsorship of
  • Ferrari and Formula 1
  • Manchester United
  • English cricket
  • Epsom Derby

31
GUINNESS A REPUTABLE DRINK
  • 250 year-old beer brand
  • Well know and identifiable
  • Irish provenance
  • Made from nature ingredients
  • Owned by Diageo- UK
  • Sold in 150 countries brewed in 49
  • Brewed for local tastes
  • In UK, Europe, USA Guinness Draught
  • In Africa, Asia and Caribbean Foreign Extra
    Stout
  • Nigeria largest overseas market
  • A pint of Guinness has less calories than
    equivalent Semi-skinned milk
  • In Muslim countries sold as Malta Guinness
    non-alcoholic

32
GUINNESS A Brilliant Brand
  • Brilliant marketing communications advertising
  • Highly innovative and adaptive
  • -introduced larger Harp
  • -introduced Guinness Draft Extra Cold
  • -in Nigeria it is seen as a Nigerian brand
  • Large degree of passion involved with the brand
  • Single global brand vision Power Goodness
    Communion
  • Brand experience perfect pint campaign
  • Good congruence in sponsorship

33
INTANGIBLES
  • The last two decades have witnessed a revolution
    - transfer from industrial capitalism to a new
    knowledge-based economy
  • Industrial capital based mainly on physical
    assets
  • New economy based on intangible assets and value
    creation

34
INTANGIBLES
Market Capitalisation
Brand
Reputation
IP
Customers
Employees
Innovation
Organisational structure
Book value ___________
The above would also be affected by other
variables including
macroeconomic factors, shareholder sentiment
and market speculation
35
INTANGIBLES
  • A companys market value is driven by its
    anticipated earning potential the net present
    value of its future economic profit
  • Intangibles are systematically underreported
    within existing accounting practice

36
INTANGIBLES
  • The Brookings Institute found that in 1962 - 62
    of an average companys value was represented by
    physical or hard capital - by 1992 this had
    decreased to 38 and in 2000 was as low as 20
  • The market to book value ratio

37
INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL
MARKET VALUE
38
INTANGIBLES
  • Welcome to the world of intellectual capital
  • Human capital
  • Structural and organisational capital
  • Customer or stakeholder capital

39
INTANGIBLES
  • Market to book ratio
  • Dell 17.5
  • Pfizer 18.2
  • Capital is now not just financial it is
    anything that adds wealth and value
  • Back in 1999, only 6.6 of Coca-colas market
    capitalization was reported as book value

40
INTANGIBLES
Brand capital
Sales push focus Customer pull focus
Human capital
Production focus Customer focus
Working capital
High Low (WIP, finished goods)
(direct delivery
to customers)
Physical capital
41
INTANGIBLES
Market value
  • Development of the value of intangible assets as
    a percentage of total market value of S P 500
    companies between 1982 and 1999. Intangible
    Assets J. Daum (1999) Wiley, p4

42
INTANGIBLES
Market value as a multiple of net book value
Taken from eCFO, Wiley 2001, p95
43
INTANGIBLES AND ACCOUTNING
  • Off the balance sheet
  • Problems with global accounting - do not
    properly allow the inclusion of internally
    generated assets, except those obtained by
    acquisition
  • The issue of goodwill
  • REPUTATION IS AN INTANGIBLE ASSET IN ITS OWN RIGHT

44
REPUTATION AND METRICS
  • The FT Worlds Most Respected Companies 2004
    Financial Times November
  • Coca-Cola
  • Dell
  • Wall-Mart
  • GE
  • Microsoft
  • Toyota
  • IBM

45
REPUTATION INDEXES
  • The Harris Fombrun Reputation Quotient (RQ)
  • www.thereputationinstitute.com
  • Fortune Magazine Global Most Admired Companies
    www.fortune.com
  • Management Today Britains Most Admired
    Companies
  • FTSE4 Good Index www.ftse4good.com
  • The Dow Jones Sustainability Index
  • Financial Times Worlds Most Respected
    Companies www.ft.com

46
REPUTATION AND METRICS
  • Vital Attributes
  • Corporate Governance
  • Shareholder value
  • Innovation
  • Corporate responsibility (CSR)
  • Role and leadership of CEO
  • Satisfied employees!
  • Value creation that is sustainable

47
DRIVERS OF CHANGE
  • Increased specialisation outsourcing and
    disintermediation
  • Relationship marketing one-to-one customer
    relationship
  • Business is increasingly customer-led rather than
    production driven
  • Alliances and partnerships
  • Vulnerability of brand equity
  • Decline in trust especially institutional

48
DRIVERS OF REPUTATION
  • Financial performance and shareholder value
  • Corporate responsibility
  • Corporate governance compliance and regulation
  • Technology Internet and wireless
  • Weblogs (blogs) over 5 m web journals
  • Investor engagement (SRI) and NGOs
  • Stakeholder convergence and managing
    stakeholders expectations
  • Employee expectations
  • Brand and operational risk

49
DRIVERS OF REPUTATION
Indicators
  • Shareholders
  • Number of shareholder resolutions
  • Results of shareholder satisfaction survey
  • Customers
  • Satisfaction survey
  • Customer complaints
  • Third-party ratings and awards
  • Employees
  • Employee turnover
  • Employee profiles (ability, gender, race)
  • Employee satisfaction
  • Society
  • Boycotts, marches, incidents
  • License to operate
  • Direct action
  • Media reports
  • Partners
  • Quantity of partnerships accepted, sanctioned or
    rejected on basis of stewardship criteria
  • Health and safety records of partners

Indicators
  • Cash flow
  • Earnings
  • Costs
  • Capital expenditure
  • Market growth

Financial performance
Sustainability
Indicators of reputational value taken adapted
from eCFO C. Read et al, p115, Wiley, 2001
50
DRIVERS OF REPUTATION
  • A more intrusive and sensational media media
    amplification
  • Need for transparency (disclosure) and
    accountability
  • Companies as social institutions
  • Globalization and the rise of corporate brands
  • Notion that ethics counts
  • Historical Enron and WorldCom
  • Reputation as an asset in its own right -
  • Victim culture insurance claims

51
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
  • Good corporate governance and compliance are seen
    by many as the primary force behind reputation
    management
  • FSA in (UK)
  • Basel II
  • Sarbanes Oxley (USA)
  • Role of compliance officers

52
REPUTATION an enabler?
  • Gain control and anticipate events
  • Avoid long-term brand equity damage
  • Avoid boycotts or sale losses
  • Ensure compliance and shareholder value
  • Better stakeholder relations NGOs
  • Better media relations and issue management
  • Understand your risk exposure and allow easier
    entry into new markets and brand extensions
  • Improved investor relations and profile

53
REPUTATION an enabler?
  • Better employee output, retention and internal
    communications
  • Better understanding of issues
  • Preparation for crisis situation
  • Alignment of strategy with key stakeholders
    expectations
  • Sustainable wealth and value creation
  • Development of alert systems and a radar

54
REPUTATION an enabler?
  • Positive influence on regulators when issuing
    licenses
  • Local authorities may take it into account when
    considering planning applications
  • In the financial markets more likely to raise
    capital
  • Reduce the cost of entry into new markets,
    thereby securing a price advantage

55
MEDIA MANAGEMENT
  • Good and diligent management of the media is
    central to reputation management media profile
  • Learn which media are the most influential within
    your target group
  • Supply the press with information that is
    accurate and useful
  • Build relationship with journalists
  • Look for triggers within issues monitor the
    media and other users groups
  • Use media intelligence agencies

56
MEIDA INTELLIGENCE
  • Romeike www.romeike.com
  • Metrica www.metrica.com
  • Echo www.echoResearch.com
  • Prnewswire www.prenewswire.com
  • Prweb www.prweb.com

57
PR AND REPUTATION
  • World of confusing terms
  • Public relations a discipline in transition
  • Public affairs and lobbying
  • Corporate affairs
  • Corporate communications
  • Reputation management
  • Whats the difference?

58
PR AND REPUTATION
PR
REPUTATION
BRAND
Desired image
Vehicle of promise
Delivery of promise
59
CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS
Marketing Communications
Management Communications
Organisation Communications
- Van Riel (1995)
60
REPUTAION An Overview
Organisational Reputation
Brand Reputation
Stakeholder Reputation
Reputational Radar
61
Relationship between PR and Reputation
  • Public relations and reputation are intricately
    linked
  • PR more specific issues media relations,
    public affairs, crisis management, event
    management and branding
  • Reputation management is more holistic in its
    approach and involves all employees.

62
Traditional PR
Reputational Management
  • Strategic in nature
  • Integrated
  • Holistic - long-term
  • Involves all employees
  • Aims to deliver an image and brand promise
  • Uses all forms and opportunities to communicate
    policy and values
  • Greater emphasis on multiple stakeholder
    relationships
  • Less strategic
  • Non-integrated
  • Focus - short-term
  • Key people involved
  • Aims to give the best possible image
  • Media relations focused
  • Focus on transactional stakeholders

1980, 1990s, 2000 2010
63
Some Traditional PR functions
64
Some Key Tools For PR Practitioners
65
Integrated marketing communications
66
BRAND AND REPUTATION
  • What is the difference between brand and
    reputation are they the same?
  • Brand promise
  • Reputation delivery on the promise

67
THE BUSINESS CASE FOR REPUTATION?
  • Links between reputation and financial
    performance are not easy to generalize about
    evidence to-date unclear and inconsistent
  • Question how do you measure and what?
  • Mathematical co-relations do not necessarily
    demonstrate causality
  • The question is complicated and multidimensional

68
BUSINESS CASE FOR REPUTATION
  • Does a good financial performance develop a
    perception of a good reputation?
  • Good links do exist between corporate image and
    customer satisfaction
  • Satisfied customers are not always loyal

69
REPUTATION AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
  • Risk and reputation are linked
  • Traditional methods of assessing risk
  • Value at risk VaR a measure of the riskiness of
    a portfolio, based on assessing the maximum
    amount that would be lost 19 out of 20 days,
    given typical levels in market prices

70
BUSINESS CASE FOR REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
  • How do FTSE 100 companies currently measure
    performance?
  • Growth in earnings per share (EPS)
  • Total Shareholder Return (TSR)
  • Earnings before Interest and Tax (EBIT)
  • EBITA
  • Economic Value Added (EVA)
  • Return on Capital Employed (ROCE)
  • Net Operating Profit After Tax (NOPAT)

71
BUSINESS CASE FOR REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
  • How do FTSE 100 companies currently measure
    performance?
  • Cash flow
  • Cost of capital management
  • Market share
  • Strategic targets

72
BUSINESS CASE FOR REPUTATION
  • Measuring Shareholder Value
  • EVA (rate of return - cost of capital) x
    capital employed
  • Other ways of measuring shareholder value
    include
  • Net Present Value (NPV)
  • Price/earnings ratio (P/E)
  • Capital asset pricing model (CAPM)
  • The Du Pont Equation
  • The Wealth Added Index (WAI) www.sternstewart.co.u
    k

73
REPUTATION AND CREDIBILITY FOR FOREIGN FIRMS
  • IPO
  • London Stock Exchange
  • Alternative investment market (AIM)
  • OFEX
  • Share price is now an indicator of
  • a companys reputational capital

74
FOREIGN FIRMS AND REPUTATION DEVELOPMENT
  • Develop investor relations and financial
    communications
  • Produce detailed Annual Reports
  • Develop media profile
  • Work towards best practice and compliance with
    corporate governance
  • Establish a strong and transparent working board
  • Integrate risk analysis in all areas of the
    business
  • Develop strong and clear corporate responsibility
    polices
  • Appoint risk and reputation officers

75
INVESTOR RELATIONS
  • Educate key stakeholders NGO
  • Help shape and modify legislation
  • Correct misconceptions
  • Lobby on behalf of a trade body
  • Lobby at the Diplomatic level
  • Highlight unfair or restrictive practice
  • Grassroots campaign development
  • Develop high profile media campaigns

76
THE STAKEHOLDER IMPERATIVE
  • Classic discussion based on whether a company is
    solely responsible to just its shareholders or a
    wider range of interests
  • Pure economic argument focuses on optimising or
    maximising shareholder return
  • BUT modern business operates in a volatile,
    hostel environment a more pluralistic approach
    is required

77
STAKEHOLDERS
  • COMMUNITY
  • Consumers
  • Regulators
  • Government
  • Local community
  • Media
  • NGOs
  • Trade groups
  • CONTRACTUAL
  • Customers
  • Employees
  • Distributors
  • Suppliers
  • Shareholders
  • Lenders
  • Alliances

78
STRATEGIC APPROACH TO REPUTATION
  • Since 1980s Three big ideas
  • TQM - Xerox and Motorola
  • Reengineering
  • Intellectual Capital (KM) GE
  • It is not the strategy itself sometimes, just
    the way it is executed.

79
STRATEGY AND REPUTATION
  • An organisations strategy describes how it
    intents to create value for its shareholders and
    stakeholders
  • What is the link between reputation and
    intangibles?
  • Intangibles are hard for competitors to imitate,
    therefore they are a source of competitive
    advantage
  • Co-creation of value

80
STRATEGY AND REPUTATION
  • Intangibles per se do not directly affect
    financial performance instead they work more
    indirectly via a complex chain of cause and
    effect
  • The impact of a new tangible asset tends to be
    more immediate
  • Intangibles need to be generally combined with
    other assets HR and IT

81
BALANCED SCORECARD
  • Kaplans and Nortons Balanced Scorecard
    approach and strategic maps
  • Four perspectives
  • Financial
  • Customer
  • Process
  • Developmental

82
CASE STUDY Coca-Cola problems
  • Poor executive reshuffle
  • Anti-Americanism Mecca and Zam Zam Cola
  • Problems in Belgium 1999
  • Faltering financial performance
  • Crisis with Dasani drinking water UK 2004
  • Obesity issues
  • Problems with NGOs in India
  • Trying to grow faster than the market
  • Deaths in Colombia

83
Coca-Cola Solutions
  • Continuous brand equity building within
    communities
  • Citizenship initiatives
  • Work with Greenpeace on reducing carbon dioxide
    emissions
  • Open acknowledgement of the obesity issue within
    the US
  • Sustaining brand identity and Image
  • Re-evaluation of strategic growth

84
HOW TO DEVELOP A REPUTATION
  • Quality of products and services
  • Passion for brand
  • Customer relationship marketing
  • Strong corporate governance and compliance
  • Integrated risk and issue management
  • Crisis planning
  • Corporate responsibility (CR)
  • Strong brand values, experience and
    communications
  • Organisational culture and structure
  • Contract fulfilment
  • Business presentation and conferences
  • Customer facing staff

85
HOW TO DEVELOP A REPUTATION
  • Innovation
  • Vision and leadership by CEO
  • Investor relations and public affairs
  • Intelligence gathering
  • Developing media profile
  • Adaptive and ability to reinvent
  • Community relations
  • CEOs reputation
  • Core competencies
  • Establishing networks and alliances
  • Understand the market
  • Develop brand experience moments of truth

86
HOW TO DEVELOP A REPUTATION
  • Clear strategies and resources
  • Learning from others mistakes
  • Listening to customers opinions
  • Audit and assurance
  • Measuring and evalutation
  • IP protection
  • Stakeholder analysis, mapping and engagement
  • Deliver on customer promise
  • Think global, act local

87
HOW TO DEVELOP A REPUTATION Organisational
Structure
  • Who talks to who?
  • Final gatekeeper responsibilities
  • Question of internal communications
  • Vertical to global matrix to e-business network
    structures
  • The Case of ABB Asea Brown Boveri

88
A REPUTATION PLAN
CEO leadership and senior management commitment
Communication audit
Frame your corporate communicational structure
Implementing programme and resources
Maintaining and evaluating
89
HOW TO CONDUCT A COMMUNICATION AUDIT
  • Based on GCI group Corporate Brand study
  • Internal management survey - employee survey
  • External Stakeholders survey
  • Assessment
  • Gap analysis
  • Structural equation modelling
  • Sensitivity analysis
  • Competitor analysis
  • Strategic communication planning
  • Communication programme implementation
  • Evaluation, measuring and monitoring

90
CONCLUSION
  • The early part of the 21st Century is the era of
    reputation management and the management of
    intangibles
  • The ruthless organisation cannot succeed
  • Companies must adopt pluralistic approaches to
    managing risk and reputation- must adopt a
    socio-economic approach
  • Emphasis must go on pro-active approaches, risk
    and issue management - not just crisis management

91
CONCLUSION
  • Reputation management must be strategic in
    nature, but must incorporate emergent properties
    and reporting involve everyone, not just
    managers
  • Getting organisational structure right and
    managing structural capital is critical

92
CONCLUSION
  • Corporations must be innovative, passionate, and
    adaptive
  • Reputation must be viewed as a strategic weapon,
    emergent and monitored
  • Stakeholders views must be measured and
    evaluated what is stakeholder reputation?
  • Reputation management should not stop at senior
    management and customer facing staff all
    employees should be involved

93
CONCLUSION
  • Brands are the glue of reputation
  • Develop brand equity internally and externally
  • Ensure your employees understand your intangible
    assets
  • Be proactive with the media

94
CONCLUSION
  • Ensure your brand is not too easily copied or
    imitable differentiate by behaviour
  • View CSR as a way forward, not a defence
    mechanism
  • Develop first rate corporate governance
  • Ask the right questions, then integrate,
    integrate, and integrate
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