11 January 2023
At the turn of the year, we asked members of our Client Advisory Board for their opinion on what will be the principal reputational drivers in 2023. We had a strong and insightful response which we summarise below. This 19-strong group have set out some important markers for the year ahead.
Overall, all agree that from a greater focus on expectation management and risk assessment, to the need for speed, acting according to established values will help build resiliency in the face of challenges ahead.
Against a backdrop of a struggling world economy, the continuing fallout from the pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine, sound reputation management - to those organizations that consciously focus on it - will depend on attention to performance and careful explanation of reasons why performance may fall short of commitments and expectations.
How organizations treat their customers, as well other stakeholders such as staff and suppliers, in the context of the cost-of-living crisis will also have a significant reputational impact. The active support we saw for those facing the greatest difficulties in the pandemic has to a degree set a behavioural expectation against that benchmark will be a driver of reputation.
The biggest reputational risk for many businesses will be how to balance investor expectations against the increasing expectations of the ESG agenda. At a Board level, we have to ask ourselves, can we issue dividends or senior exec pay increases if our least well paid staff, our customers or other stakeholders are struggling to make ends meet?
Beyond managing reputation around their own direct business engagements, CEOs and their senior teams will be increasingly called on by employees and external stakeholders to engage on significant social matters. It will be critical for senior leaders to have principles and a process for determining when and with what matters to engage, and to consider how the enterprise's words will be supported by tangible and measurable actions.
Organizations need to know themselves and the values that make up their distinct character and culture. With a clear understanding of who they actually are, their actions consistently need to line up directly to that character and culture and in all that they do - in service to customers and all stakeholders, and of course in talent recruitment and retention. As always, good, principled leadership sets the tone for managing any organization's reputation.
Reputations will continue to be intrinsically linked to the most pressing challenges that businesses face and especially the ones that put them under increased scrutiny from their key stakeholders.
Questions to consider:
We see a continuing trend:
Expect:
Specifically on Environment, Social and Governance (ESG):
Overall, the fast-changing political, economic and social environment world-wide will continue to pose some serious challenges for reputation management. First, the rapid changes in the expectations and priorities of stakeholders requires detailed monitoring and a process to continuously re-balance responses to these changing and often conflicting demands. Secondly, third-party risk and the link to reputation is increasing, with supply chain players being subject to new pressures relating to ESG factors, new laws, sanctions, political changes, etc. all over the world.
Finally, the principles of sound reputation management remain valid, but the context is evolving - and quickly. Organizations in 2023 are surrounded by (and may contain) a society of increasing conflict, geographical and generational fragmentation, disputes, shortages of resource, frequent emergencies and rising anger. Moreover, many audiences or stakeholders are faster to reach their judgements and the time offered for delivery is shortening. Organizations that understand - and feel - this context will do better.
The last few years have just emphasised the need for deeper thinking and advanced preparation for the challenges you can identify and prepare for, so you have the time and space to also respond to what you couldn’t predict but comes to pass. Leaders need to give more time and resource for this, even though they are fully occupied with the current crises marathon.
In sum, as we look into this year, the need for professional and sound guidance across these many conflicting dimensions is greater than ever before.
To help navigate the issues and opportunities ahead, do contact us at Echo. Preparedness is all.