Title: Building Reputation
1Building Reputation
- Prepared by the
- Council of Public Relations Firms
2The value of a business increasingly lurks not
in physical and financial assets that are on the
balance sheet, but in intangibles.
- The Economist, June 12, 1999
3Shift from dependence on tangibles
- Traditionally companies valued by physical and
financial assets - Real estate, machinery, inventory, cash
- But companies have been shedding those assets
- Outsourcing, just-in-time inventory, leasing
- And new assets are adding value
- Brands, employee loyalty, public trust,
management credibility
4To claim that tangible assets should be measured
and valued, while intangibles should not -- or
could not -- is like stating that things are
valuable, while ideas are not.
- Baruch Lev, New York University Stern School of
Business
5Accounting industry knows it must adapt
- Like it or not, non-traditional yardsticks are
on their way. - Robert L. Israeloff, ChairmanAmerican Institute
of Certified Public Accountants
6The accounting industry faces a dilemma
- Information age accountants are faced with a
challenge live with the old system and distort
the truth, or develop a new system fraught with
the dangers of measuring intangibles. - William Davidow, Forbes ASAP
7Ernst Young Measures that Matter
- Interviews with portfolio managers
- Analysis of 300 sell-side investment reports
- Survey of 275 buy-side investors
- Concluded that 30 to 50 of a companys value is
in intangible assets
8Reputation encompasses all these intangibles
employee loyalty
management credibility
reputation
social responsibility
public trust
customer relationships
brands
9- If youre not managing your corporate
reputation, youre wasting a global corporate
asset. - Roy Vagelos, CEO, Merck
- A reputation is an incredible asset, one you
cant appreciate until you lose it. And when you
do, every aspect of business gets harder and
more costly. - Steve Miller, former CEO, Waste Management
10If you lose dollars for the firm by bad
decisions, I will be understanding. If you lose
reputation for the firm, I will be ruthless.
11CEOs perspective on reputation
- 96 of CEOs believe reputation is important to
their companies - 77 believe good reputation helps sell products
and services - 61 believe good reputation helps attract
employees - 53 believe good reputation increases credibility
in times of crisis
CEO Magazine/Hill Knowlton Poll, April 1999
12Reputation contributes to business performance
The Rewards of Being Viewed as a "Winner"
Brouillard Communications/Yankelovich Partners
Inc.
13Components of Corporate Equity
- Familiarity with the Company 25
- Overall Impression of the Company 20
- Perceptions of the Company 30
- Likelihood to Engage in SupportiveBehavior 25
Yankelovich Partners Inc.
14Reputation affects share price
Average Price/Earnings Ratio
High Corporate Equity (scores 45 and over)
28.4
5 Billion market cap for average Fortune 100
company
Moderate Corporate Equity (scores 31-44)
25.7
Low Corporate Equity (scores 30 or less)
25.4
Fortune/Yankelovich Partners Inc., 1998
15Reputation Multipliers
- Top 10 Corporate Equity vs. Bottom 10 Corporate
Equity Companies are - 7X more likely to have consumers buy
products/services at a premium price - 5X more likely to have their stock recommended
- 4X more likely to be recommended as a good
place to work - 3X more likely to be recommended as a good
joint venture partner - 1.5X more likely to receive the benefit of the
doubt
Burson-Marsteller/Wirthlin, 1998
16Management Consultants are beginning to address
reputation management
17Why is PR appropriate for managing reputation?
- Influences the intangibles
- Communicates with all stakeholders
- Strengthens relationships
18Even accountants reinforce the importance of
communications
- How skillfully companies manage key
non-financial areas of performance and then
communicate related successes to outside
constituencies -- shareholders, investors -- will
have a powerful effect on how they are valued. In
fact, the more analysts use non-financial
measures, the more accurate their earnings
forecasts become.
Ernst Young, Measures that Matter
19Conclusion of Measures that Matter
- Corporate leaders who effectively measure,
manage and communicate their non-financial
performance not only contribute to the increased
valuation of their firm, but also improve their
firms ability to attract new investment capital.
Ernst Young, Measures that Matter
20High Reputation Correlates to Financial
Performance
Total Return
Based on the 1998 Fortune Most Admired
Companies rankings