Building unshakable trust

A strategic blueprint for reputation resilience in a dynamic world
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Reputation risk has been around since commerce first began. It’s likely that we can all think of an organization whose long-established reputation was damaged by a single event or a sequence of events (either within or outside of their control).

For example, there have been many examples of firms’ reputations being damaged by clumsy marketing campaigns or poorly performing products and services, but these are rarely fatal. BP and Exxon’s reputations were severely damaged by environmental disasters, but they survived. However, the collapse of Enron also brought down their auditor Arthur Andersen, primarily because their reputation was damaged beyond repair.

Reputation itself is a critical asset, often considered intangible but having a significant impact on an organization’s success. It influences stakeholder decisions, affects customer loyalty, and can drive or hinder business growth.

In the modern dynamic world in which organizations operate, the range of reputational risks has increased, especially from emerging technologies or from external ‘bad actors’. This is exemplified by The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Perception Survey 2023-2024, which lists both AI and cyber-related threats in the top five material risks to organizations.

This article explores more fully where reputational risks may come from and, importantly, how to build a model for building reputation resilience across your organization, including how you might go about building quantitative measures that track your progress.

Guarding against reputational threats: The blueprint for a robust reputation management 

The potential impact of reputation risk

Reputation risk is the potential for negative publicity that can have profound and far-reaching consequences for organizations. Financially, they can lead to decreased sales, stock price declines and higher operational costs (as companies may need to invest in damage control efforts or face legal penalties). Customer trust and loyalty can be severely compromised, leading to long-term erosion of the customer base and market share.

Additionally, reputational damage can strain relationships with key stakeholders such as investors, regulators and partners, potentially resulting in the loss of investment, increased scrutiny and disrupted business operations. In severe cases, reputation risks can trigger leadership changes, employee dissatisfaction, and talent retention challenges, as well as affect future growth prospects.

Reputation risk can arise from various sources, including unethical behavior, governance failures, operational disruptions, product recalls or environmental incidents. Unlike other types of risk, reputation risk is often interconnected with other risks, amplifying their impact.

Ultimately, reputation risks, if not effectively managed, can undermine the organization’s overall competitiveness and sustainability in the market.

The need for reputation resilience

An organization’s ability to maintain and protect its reputation despite facing crises, challenges or changes in the external environment is known as reputation resilience.

Reputation resilience involves the capacity to anticipate potential threats to reputation, respond effectively during a crisis, and recover or even strengthen reputation post-crisis. Reputation resilience combines proactive measures, effective crisis management and long-term strategies to ensure that the organization can withstand and adapt to reputation-related challenges.

To build reputation resilience, a reputation management framework is desirable.

Reputation management framework

A reputation management framework is a structured approach to systematically manage, protect and enhance an organization’s reputation. It integrates various strategies, processes and tools to ensure that reputation is maintained as a key strategic asset.

The framework typically includes:

  1. Strategic alignment:

    Integrating reputation management into the organization’s overall strategy and operations.

  2. Governance and accountability:

    Establishing a reputation council or team responsible for reputation management activities.

  3. Stakeholder engagement:

    Proactively engaging with stakeholders to understand their perceptions and expectations.

  4. Monitoring and measurement:

    Continuously tracking reputation-related metrics using various tools and surveys.

  1. Risk management:

    Identifying, assessing and mitigating potential reputation risks.

  2. Crisis management:

    Preparing and executing effective crisis response plans to protect the organization’s reputation during adverse events.

  3. Communication strategy:

    Developing consistent, transparent and honest communication with both internal and external stakeholders.

  4. Proactive initiatives:

    Implementing CSR and sustainability practices to build a positive reputation over time.

The reputation management framework should feed directly into a reputation resilience framework to help build enduring trust.

Crafting reputation resilience: A strategic framework for enduring trust 

Reputation resilience framework

A robust reputation resilience framework integrates proactive reputation management with crisis preparedness and long-term strategic planning. The framework focuses on the integration of internal and external elements to build, maintain and protect an organization’s reputation.

This framework provides a structured, holistic approach, aimed to ensure that both internal and external drivers of reputation are strategically managed for long-term resilience.

Consider your own ability to drive preparedness across this framework:

Internal dimension: Building a strong core
 
External dimension: Strengthening stakeholder relationships

The internal dimension of reputation resilience focuses on strengthening the organization from within. This includes leadership, culture, processes, and employee engagement.

A strong internal core supports ethical behavior, innovation, and operational excellence, laying the foundation for external trust and reputation.

The external dimension of reputation resilience focuses on engaging with stakeholders outside the organization, including customers, investors, regulators, partners and the community.

External resilience relies on proactive engagement, strong relationships, and the ability to manage public perception effectively.

1. Leadership and governance

Are you able to cultivate leadership that embodies ethical behaviors, prioritizes reputation resilience in decision-making and can implement clear governance structures?

1. Stakeholder engagement and trust

Can you identify and prioritize key stakeholders and build a program of proactive engagement with them?
 

2. Culture and values

Do you foster a culture of open communication that encourages all employees to embed core values such as integrity into their decision-making?

2. Customer experience and satisfaction

Are you focused on the customer experience and the brand promise, and willing to develop strong feedback channels to address reputational concerns?

3. Processes and risk management

Are you capable of integrating reputation risk and crisis preparedness with wider risk management and internal controls?

3. Media and public relations

Are you willing to develop a clear communication strategy that aligns with organization values and reputation goals?

4. Employee engagement

Are you ready to invest in employee training and feedback mechanisms as well as help them become reputation ambassadors?

4. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) and sustainability

Do you have effective corporate social responsibility and sustainability initiatives that will make a positive contribution to your public reputation?


A step-by-step approach to framework implementation

To implement your reputation resilience framework to manage internal and external dimensions, we suggest a four-stage approach:

  1. Assessment and baseline establishment

    This includes conducting an internal assessment of the current reputation landscape, establishing a baseline of external stakeholder perceptions and identifying key risks.

  2. Strategy development

    Develop a comprehensive reputation resilience strategy that aligns with the organization’s business goals, set clear objectives for improving internal processes, engage with stakeholders and integrate sustainability (aligning the organization’s operations with sustainable practices).

  3. Implementation and integration

    Integrate reputation resilience strategies into day-to-day operations, align the reputation resilience framework with existing risk management, develop a crisis response plan and perform regular training and drills.

  4. Monitoring and adjustment

    Continuously monitor both internal and external indicators of reputation resilience, and regularly review and adjust the framework based on performance data, feedback, and evolving market conditions.

By focusing on both internal and external dimensions, the reputation resilience framework creates a holistic approach that builds a strong internal foundation while reinforcing relationships with external stakeholders.

This dual focus enables organizations to not only respond more effectively to crises but also proactively manage reputation, helping to ensure long-term success and stakeholder trust.

Quantifying reputation resilience: The data-driven path to measurable integrity 

Having established a reputation management and reputation resilience framework, how do you know they are being effective? The answer is to be able to measure your progress against a series of metrics.

This is known as quantitative reputation resilience.

Quantitative reputation resilience involves the use of data, metrics and analytical tools to assess and manage reputation. This approach provides a measurable, data-driven foundation for reputation management, enabling organizations to track changes in reputation over time, correlate reputation with financial performance and predict potential impacts of reputational events.


Key measures and metrics should include:

Reputation index:

A composite score derived from sentiment analysis, media coverage and stakeholder surveys.

Organization culture assessment:

Assessment and profiling of dominant organizational cultures, along with the generation of insights for the development of culture change programs.

Brand perception and brand value:

Metrics related to how the brand is perceived by various stakeholder groups, and the value attached to the brands of the business.

Media sentiment:

Analysis of the tone and sentiment of media coverage regarding the organization.

Customer satisfaction:

Surveys, feedback scores and behavior analysis reflecting customer satisfaction and loyalty.

Crisis response effectiveness:

Metrics assessing the speed and effectiveness of the organization’s response to a crisis.

Employee engagement and behavior:

Internal surveys assessing employee satisfaction, behavior, and alignment with corporate values.

Sustainability performance:

Measurement of the organization’s sustainability practices and their impact on reputation.



Data sources will likely include:
  1. Social media monitoring tools
  1. Media analysis platforms
  1. Stakeholder surveys
  1. Internal metrics

Being able to effectively measure and track reputation resilience can help increase stakeholder confidence and will help maintain management buy-in to the topic.

Further reading on the contribution that quantifying reputation resilience to reputation management can be found in this helpful article: Resilience amid complexity – Quantifying disruption to help drive agility and sustainable growth.

Conclusion: Navigating complexity for long-term success

There are a number of challenges to overcome in building reputation resilience:

  1. Complexity of measurement:

    Quantifying reputation and its impact can be challenging due to its intangible nature and the variability in stakeholder perceptions.

  2. Rapid information dissemination:

    The speed at which information spreads in the digital age can amplify reputational risks, making real-time monitoring and response critical.

  3. Integration across functions:

    Ensuring that reputation management is integrated across all functions of the organization requires coordination and alignment, which can be difficult to achieve.

  4. Balancing short-term and long-term objectives:

    Organizations must balance the need for immediate crisis response with long-term strategies to build and sustain reputation.

Despite the challenges, reputation resilience is an essential capability for modern organizations, enabling them to better protect and enhance their reputation in the face of challenges and crises. By implementing a broad reputation management framework that integrates both qualitative and quantitative approaches, organizations can proactively manage risks, respond effectively to crises and build a reputation that supports long-term success.

But it won’t happen without top-level commitment and without following some key principles of developing reputation resilience:

  1. Leadership commitment:

    Securing top management’s commitment to prioritize reputation resilience as a strategic objective.

  2. Cross-functional collaboration:

    Ensuring collaboration across various functions within the organization, such as risk management, communication and operations.

  3. Data-driven decision-making:

    Utilizing data and analytics to inform reputation management strategies and actions.

  4. Employee involvement:

    Engaging employees in reputation management efforts through training, communication and empowerment.

Continuous improvement, stakeholder engagement and data-driven decision-making are key elements in achieving and maintaining reputation resilience. Through a strategic and integrated approach, organizations can not only safeguard their reputation but also turn it into a source of competitive advantage.

Learn more:

Reputation resilience forms part of KPMG firms’ wider risk and regulatory management capabilities that we call The Trusted Imperative.

The Trusted Imperative is designed to foster and enhance trust in the digital era. Follow the link to find out more.


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Frank Mei

Head of Risk Consulting

KPMG in China


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