fbpx
Wikipedia

Reputation

The reputation or prestige of a social entity (a person, a social group, an organization, or a place) is an opinion about that entity – typically developed as a result of social evaluation on a set of criteria, such as behavior or performance.[1]

Reputation is a ubiquitous, spontaneous, and highly efficient mechanism of social control.[2] It is a subject of study in social, management,[3] and technological sciences.[4] Its influence ranges from competitive settings, like markets, to cooperative ones, like firms, organizations, institutions and communities. Furthermore, reputation acts on different levels of agency: individual and supra-individual. At the supra-individual level, it concerns groups, communities, collectives and abstract social entities (such as firms, corporations, organizations, countries, cultures and even civilizations). It affects phenomena of different scales, from everyday life[5] to relationships between nations. Reputation is a fundamental instrument of social order, based upon distributed, spontaneous social control.

The concept of reputation is considered important[citation needed] in business, politics, education, online communities, and many other fields, and it may be considered[citation needed] as a reflection of a social entity's identity.

Corporate reputation edit

Reputation as a concept for companies edit

Academic literature edit

Since 1980, the study of 'corporate reputation' has attracted growing scholarly attention from economics, sociology, and management.[6] The concept of reputation has undergone substantial evolution in the academic literature over the past several decades.[6][7][8] Terminology such as reputation, branding, image and identity is often used interchangeably in both the popular press and – until recently – in the academic literature, as well.

The academic literature has generally settled on a small cluster of perspectives on "what reputation is" in a company context.

Economists use game-theory to describe corporate reputations as strategic signals that companies use to convey to markets some of their qualities and abilities.[9] Sociologists view corporate reputation as descriptions of the relative status that companies occupy in an institutional field of rivals and stakeholders.[10] Management scholars describe corporate reputations in one of two main ways,[7] including:

  • the broad view: as an aggregation of perceptions that form as audiences judge the behaviors of companies.[11]
    • This is often evaluated by broad ranking measures of the company as a whole, such as the Fortune Most Admired Companies rankings[12][13]
  • the specific view: as an assessment, by some specific audience, of the company's ability to perform or behave in a certain way.[14][15] These are split into two broad categories: (a) outcome/capability reputation and (b) behavior/character reputation,[16] which is intended to capture both the economic and sociological forms of reputation.[16][17]
    • (a) outcome/capability reputation: this reputation type involves an assessment of how well the company performs on a certain dimension. The most common examples of these is performing well financially[18] or providing high quality products or services.[19][20] All of these dimensions can be objectively ordered, such as better/worse financial performance (as evaluated by objective, market-based measures of financial performance) or better/worse product quality (as evaluated by a collection of users).[19]
    • (b) behavior/character reputation: this reputation type is said to arise when a company is recognized as consistently behaving in a certain way,[21][22] in a manner that is relatively devoid of objectively identifiable performance. For instance, a company might prioritize investment in innovation, the improvement of its operational efficiency, or sourcing from local suppliers.[23][24]

Practical measurement of reputation edit

In practice, corporate reputations are revealed by the relative rankings of companies created and propagated by information intermediaries.[25] For example, business magazines and newspapers such as Fortune, Forbes, Business Week, Financial Times, and The Wall Street Journal regularly publish lists of the best places to work, the best business schools, or the most innovative companies. These rankings are explicit orderings of corporate reputations, and the relative positions of companies on these rankings are a reflection of the relative performance of companies on different cognitive attributes. Corporate reputations are found to influence the attractiveness of ranked companies as suppliers of products, as prospective employers, and as investments.[26] For those reasons, companies themselves have become increasingly involved with the practice of reputation management.

Connections to related, company-level concepts edit

Like any social construct, reputation is similar to (i.e., convergent with) certain concepts and different (i.e., discriminant) from others. Reputation can be compared to other "social evaluation" or "social judgment" constructs. For instance, reputation is said to be convergent with adjacent concepts like corporate image, identity, celebrity, status, legitimacy, social approval (likability), and visibility (prominence), but discriminant from related constructs like stigma and infamy.[6][27] Reputation is often considered to be a pragmatic evaluation – actors determine whether the target of the evaluation can be seen as useful to them.[28]

Until recently, the relationships with these adjacent constructs were merely theoretical; that is, they were not formally tested or empirically validated[29] for their "nomological relationships" with these other, related constructs.

  • Conceptual relationships: In 2012, the Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation[6] was released to provide some clarity to the increasingly fragmented field of social evaluation constructs, all of which had been referred to (either implicitly or explicitly) under an umbrella of "reputation" concepts. In 2020, the introductory part of The Power of Being Divisive: Understanding Negative Evaluations,[27] develops a framework to disentangle a variety of concepts in the field of social evaluations – in particular making the point that negative and positive evaluations can be on different continua, and social actors can be both positively and negatively evaluated at the same time. In this opus and in the Oxford handbook, scholars made incremental efforts to distinguish between handfuls of these constructs, such as:
    • reputation vs. celebrity[12]
    • reputation vs. status[30][31]
    • reputation vs. legitimacy vs. status[32]
    • reputation vs. social approval[33]
    • reputation vs. stigma[34]
    • reputation vs. status vs. celebrity vs. stigma[35]
  • Empirical relationships: In 2020, Bitektine and colleagues[36] conducted the first major construct validation study to: (a) create scales for the constructs of reputation, cognitive legitimacy, sociopolitical legitimacy, and status, and (b) empirically distinguish between them by undertaking a multiple studies involving several confirmatory factor analyses.
    • This construct validation effort addressed the "broad view" of reputation as a company-level evaluation (not an evaluation for specific attributes).[11] The scale items for reputation that resulted from this effort, as evaluated by an audience of respondents representing the general public, included: "The reputation of this company is excellent", "[this] is a reputable company", and "[this] is a dependable company".[36]
    • There still exists no construct validation effort for the "specific view" of reputation (i.e., that reputation is best understood as a specific audience's view of the company with respect to a specific attribute[15]).

Consequences edit

Performance outcomes edit

Myriad reputation studies from the 1980s to the 2000s demonstrated that a company's reputation was positively related to various performance measures, such as financial success and profitability.[37][11] However, more recent work demonstrated that reputation can be both "a benefit and a burden",[38] suggesting that "the bigger you are, the harder you (might) fall" with respect to reputation.[19]

Decision outcomes edit

Relatedly, researchers have theorized or demonstrated that a company's reputation could also influence the decisions and perceptions of its managers;[39] in some cases, reputation can promote the use of risk-reduction strategies by managers as they seek to preserve the reputation they have cultivated.[39] In other cases, researchers argue that reputation can embolden managers to take risks in areas unrelated to their reputation, since stakeholders may be focused on the reputation itself and inattentive to other areas of the company.[40][41]

Topics relating to reputation edit

Reputation management edit

Many organizations create public relations and corporate communication departments dedicated to assisting companies with reputation management. In addition, many public relations and consulting firms claim expertise in reputation management. The growth of the public relations industry has largely been due to the rising demand for companies to establish credibility and reputation.[42] Incidents which damage a company's reputation for honesty or safety may cause serious damage to finances. For example, in 1999 Coca-Cola lost $60 million (by its own estimate) after schoolchildren reported suffering from symptoms like headaches, nausea and shivering after drinking its products.[43]

Although most companies see reputation management as a central part of a CEO's role, managing reputation involves a set of ongoing activities that are best managed when they are delegated to a specific individual in the organization. This is why some companies have created the position of chief reputation officer (CRO). A growing number of people in the business world now have the word "reputation" in their titles – including Dow Chemical, SABMiller, Coca-Cola, Allstate, Repsol YPF, Weber Shandwick, and GlaxoSmithKline (although no longer). Hoover's shows a list of such officers.

Social media like Twitter, Linked In, and Facebook have made it increasingly important for companies to monitor their online reputations in order to anticipate and respond to criticisms of their actions. There are two main routes that customers can take when complaining about companies: individual-direct response or broadcast-based response. For a company, it takes a lot of time and effort to address individual-direct responses. One study showed that "...72% of customers expect a reply within one hour."[44] In order to best recover from negative complaints on social media, it is important for a company to prove its authenticity by providing more specific answers directly to its critics.

Reputation capital edit

A corporate reputation can be managed, accumulated and traded in for trust, legitimization of a position of power and social recognition, and people are prepared to pay a premium price for goods and services offered, which in turn generates higher customer loyalty, a stronger willingness from shareholders to hold on to shares in times of crisis, and greater likelihood to invest in the company's stock.[45] Therefore, reputation is one of the most valuable forms of "capital" of a company. "Delivering functional and social expectations of the public on the one hand and manage to build a unique identity on the other hand creates trust and this trust builds the informal framework of a company. This framework provides "return in cooperation" and produces reputation capital. A positive reputation will secure a company or organisation long-term competitive advantages. The higher a company's reputation capital, the lower the costs of supervising and exercising control."[46]

Building reputation through stakeholder management edit

According to stakeholder theory, corporations should be managed for the benefit of all their "stakeholders," not just their shareholders. Stakeholders of a company include any individual or group that can influence or is influenced by a company's practices.[47] The stakeholders of a company can be suppliers, consumers, employees, shareholders, financial community, government, and media. Companies must properly manage the relationships between stakeholder groups and they must consider the interest(s) of each stakeholder group carefully. Therefore, it becomes essential to integrate public relations into corporate governance to manage the relationships between these stakeholders which will enhance the organization's reputation. Corporations or institutions which behave ethically and govern in a good manner build reputational capital which is a competitive advantage. A good reputation enhances profitability because it attracts customers to products, investors to securities and employees to its jobs.[26] A company's reputation is an intangible asset and a source of competitive advantage against rivals because the company will be viewed as more reliable, credible, trustworthy and responsible to its employees, customers, shareholders and financial markets.

In addition, according to MORI's survey of about 200 managers in the private sector, 99% responded that the management of corporate reputation is very (83%) or fairly (16%) important. Reputation is a reflection of companies' culture and identity. Also, it is the outcome of managers' efforts to prove their success and excellence. It is sustained through acting reliably, credibly, trustworthily and responsibly in the market. It can be sustained through consistent communication activities both internally and externally with key stakeholder groups. This directly influences a public company's stock prices in the financial market. Therefore, this reputation makes a reputational capital that becomes a strategic asset and advantage for that company. As a consequence, public relations must be used in order to establish long lasting relationships with the stakeholders, which will enhance the reputation of the company.[48]

Causes and consequences edit

Reputation models can be placed in a broader framework that distinguishes reputation from its underlying causes and from its consequences. This approach is important to clarify the meaning of reputation.

  • Causes of reputation are seen to reside in stakeholder experiences. Stakeholder experiences relate to a company's day-to-day business operations, its branding and marketing and "noise" in the system, such as the media and word of mouth. Further causes of reputation may include the perceived innovativeness of a company, the customers' expectations, the (perceived) quality of the company's goods and services and the subsequent customer satisfaction, all of which differ according to the respective customers' cultural background.[49]
  • The consequences of reputation reside in the behaviors (supportive or resistant) that stakeholders demonstrate towards a company. Behaviors such as advocacy, commitment, and cooperation are key positive outcomes of a good reputation. Boycotts[50] and lawsuits are key negative outcomes of a bad reputation.

Reputation recovery/repair edit

Organizations frequently make missteps that cause them to lose the positive regard of stakeholders.[51] In the wake of studies addressing the disproportionate penalties that accrue to high reputation firms when they make such missteps,[19] reputation researchers have proposed models to account for both reputation damage and reputation repair, summarizing prior work in disciplines including economics, marketing, accounting, and management.[52]

Reputation transfer edit

In the context of brand extension strategies, many companies rely on reputation transfer as a means of transferring the good reputation of a company and its existing products to new markets and new products. Consumers who are already familiar with other products of an established brand, exhibiting customer satisfaction and loyalty, will more easily accept new products of the same brand. In contrast to brand extension, the general concept of reputation transfer also requires the transfer of a company's values and identity to the new products and/or services and the related brands when entering new markets. It is important, however, to pay attention to the image fit between preexisting and new brands, for this factor has been proven to be critical for the success of brand extensions.[53] In contrast to the special case of brand extension, the general concept of reputation transfer also requires the transfer of the values and identity of a company to the new products and/or services and the related brands when entering new markets. A strong image might therefore even hamper the introduction of new product lines if customers do not associate the competences relevant to the new market/category/product line with the existing company or brand. A company's reputation is furthermore influenced by culture, as nationalities differ with regard to how valued specific aspects of the company's brand identity are in the respective national culture (e.g. environmental concerns or work ethics) as well as with regard to popular cultural dimensions (e.g. Hofstede). Subsequently, these differences impact the success of reputation transfer significantly.[54]

Cognitive view of reputation edit

The cognitive view of reputation has become increasingly prominent in reputation research. It has led to improved understanding of the role played by reputation in a number of practical domains and scientific fields. In the study of cooperation and social dilemmas, for instance, the role of reputation as a partner selection mechanism started to be appreciated in the early 1980s.

Working toward such a definition, reputation can be viewed as a socially transmitted meta-belief (i.e., belief about belief) that is a property of an agent, that results from the attitudes other actors have about some socially desirable behaviour, be it cooperation, reciprocity, or norm-compliance. Reputation plays a crucial role in the evolution of these behaviours: reputation transmission allows socially desirable behaviour to spread. Rather than concentrating on the property only, the cognitive model of reputation accounts not only for reputation-formation but also for the propagation of reputation.

To model this aspect, it is necessary to specify and develop a more refined classification of reputation. In informal settings, gossip, although vague, may contain precious hints both to facts ("I've been told this physician has shown questionable behavior") and to conflicts taking place at the information level (if a candidate for a role spreads defamatory information about another candidate, whom should you trust?).

Moreover, the expression "it is said that John Smith is a cheater" is intrinsically a reputation spreading act, because on one hand it refers to a (possibly false) common opinion, and on the other the very act of saying "it is said" is self-assessing, since it provides at least one factual occasion when that something is said, because the person who says so (the gossiper), while appearing to spread the saying a bit further, may actually be in the phase of initiating it.

Gossip can also be used as an identifier only – as when gossiping about unreachable icons, like royalty or showbiz celebrities – useful only to show the gossiper belongs to the group of the informed ones. While most cases seem to share the characteristic of being primarily used to predict future behavior, they can have, for example, manipulative sub-goals, even more important than the forecast.

In the case of a communication between two parties, one (the advisee) that is requesting advice about the potential for danger in a financial transaction with another party (the potential partner, target), and the other (the adviser, evaluator) that is giving advice. Roughly speaking, the advice could fall under one of the following three categories :

  1. the adviser declares it believes the potential partner is (is not) good for the transaction in object;
  2. the adviser declares it believes another (named or otherwise defined) agent or set of agents believes the potential partner is (is not) good for the transaction in object;
  3. the adviser declares it believes in an undefined set of agents, hence there is a belief the potential partner is (is not) good for the transaction in object.

Note the care to maintain the possible levels of truth (the adviser declares – but could be lying – it believes – but could be wrong – etc..). The cases are listed, as it is evident, in decreasing order of responsibility. While one could feel most actual examples fall under the first case, the other two are not unnecessarily complicated nor actually infrequent. Indeed, most of the common gossip falls under the third category, and, except for electronic interaction, this is the most frequent form of referral. All examples concern the evaluation of a given object (target), a social agent (which may be either individual or supra-individual, and in the latter case, either a group or a collective), held by another social agent, the evaluator.

The examples above can be turned into more precise definitions using the concept of social evaluation. At this point, we can propose to coin a new lexical item, image, whose character should be immediately evident and is clearly linked to reputation.

Image edit

Image is a global or averaged evaluation of a given target on the part of an agent. It consists of (a set of) social evaluations about the characteristics of the target. Image as an object of communication is what is exchanged in examples 1 and 2, above. In the second case, we call it third-party image. It may concern a subset of the target's characteristics, i.e., its willingness to comply with socially accepted norms and customs, or its skills (ways), or its definition as pertaining to a precise agent. Indeed, we can define special cases of image, including third-party image, the evaluation that an agent believes a third party has of the target, or even shared image, that is, an evaluation shared by a group. Not even this last is reputation, since it tries to define too precisely the mental status of the group.

Reputation, as distinct from image, is the process and the effect of transmitting a target image. To be more precise, we call reputation transmission a communication of an evaluation without the specification of the evaluator, if not for a group attribution, and only in the default sense discussed before. This covers the case of example 3 above. More precisely, reputation is a believed, social, meta-evaluation; it is built upon three distinct but interrelated objects :

  1. a cognitive representation, or more precisely a believed evaluation – this could be somebody's image, but is enough that this consist of a communicated evaluation;
  2. a population object, i.e., a propagating believed evaluation; and
  3. an objective emergent property at the agent level, i.e., what the agent is believed to be.

In fact, reputation is a highly dynamic phenomenon in two distinct senses: it is subject to change, especially as an effect of corruption, errors, deception, etc.; and it emerges as an effect of a multi-level bidirectional process. Reputation is also how others know and perceive you as an individual.

While image only moves (when transmitted and accepted) from one individual cognition to another, the anonymous character of reputation makes it a more complex phenomenon. Reputation proceeds from the level of individual cognition (when is born, possibly as an image, but not always) to the level of social propagation (at this level, it not necessarily believed as from any specific agent) and from this level back to individual cognition again (when it is accepted).

Moreover, once it gets to the population level, reputation gives rise to a further property at the agent level. It is both what people think about targets and what targets are in the eyes of others. From the very moment an agent is targeted by the community, his or her life will change whether he or she wants it or not or believes it or not. Reputation has become the immaterial, more powerful equivalent of a scarlet letter sewed to one's clothes. It is more powerful because it may not even be perceived by the individual to whom it sticks, and consequently it is out of the individual's power to control and manipulate.

More simply speaking for those who want a working definition of reputation, reputation is the sum of impressions held by a company's stakeholders. In other words, reputation is in the "eyes of the beholder". It need not be just a company's reputation but could be the reputation of an individual, country, brand, political party, industry. But the key point in reputation is not what the leadership insists but what others perceive it to be. For a company, its reputation is how esteemed it is in the eyes of its employees, customers, investors, talent, prospective candidates, competitors, analysts, alumni, regulators and the list goes on.

Online edit

Online reputation is a factor in any online community where trust is important. Examples include eBay, an auction service that uses a system of customer feedback to publicly rate each member's reputation, or Amazon.com, which has a similar review system.[55] One study found that a good reputation added 7.6% to the price received.[56] In addition, building and maintaining a good reputation can be a significant motivation for contributing to online communities.[57]

Individuals employ monitoring to ensure that they keep up with their online reputation.[58] Given the number of sites on the Internet, it is impossible to manually monitor the entire web for pages that may affect one's online reputation. Free tools such as Google Alerts can be used to keep track of online reputations on a small scale,[59] while larger businesses and clients may use more powerful analytics to monitor online interactions and mentions.

Paid tools for online reputation management focus on either brand protection or online reputation. These tools track mentions of a brand or product on the Internet, on Facebook, Twitter, blogs, and other social networking sites and websites.

Online reputation can be evaluated by how well it is managed.[60] This form of reputation is usually called web or digital reputation to distinguish it from online reputation.[dubious ][citation needed] Indeed, digital or web reputation does not concern the virtual online reputation only, but the whole real reputation of a person or a company as it is affected by the Internet. Online reputation, furthermore, should not be confused with a company's digital identity.

An online reputation is the perception that one generates on the Internet based on their digital footprint. Digital footprints accumulate through all of the content shared, feedback provided, and information that is created online.[61] Due to the fact that if someone has a bad online reputation, they can easily change their pseudonym, new accounts on sites such as eBay or Amazon are usually distrusted. If an individual or company wants to manage their online reputation, they will face many more difficulties.

According to one study, 84% of responding business leaders saw the greatest reputation threat online to companies as negative media coverage.[citation needed] The next two greatest threats are customer complaints in the media or on grievance sites online (71%) and negative word of mouth (54%).[citation needed] This negative word of mouth could come not only from dissatisfied customers but from employees as well. With the power of business review websites and customer forums, a company's online reputation can be damaged anonymously.[62]

Employers have begun using the online reputations of job applicants to guide their hiring choices. By checking a candidate's social networking profiles on sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace, employers gain insight into a candidate's character and suitability for a job.[63]

Some individuals and organizations hire reputation management companies to attempt to hide truthful but unflattering information about themselves. A recent alleged example is that of Dr. Anil Potti, who resigned from Duke University after it was discovered that he had misrepresented himself on his resume and became the subject of a scientific misconduct investigation.[64]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Definition of REPUTATION". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2020-08-27. overall quality or character as seen or judged by people in general [...] recognition by other people of some characteristic or ability [...] a place in public esteem or regard : good name
  2. ^ Zhao, Bo (December 2015). "Reputation as Social Control in Present China: Use, Misuse, Abuse, and Bankruptcy". Asian Journal of Comparative Law. 10 (2): 359–379. doi:10.1017/asjcl.2015.16. ISSN 2194-6078.
  3. ^ Veh, Annika; Göbel, M arkus; Vogel, Rick (2019-12-01). "Corporate reputation in management research: a review of the literature and assessment of the concept". Business Research. 12 (2): 315–353. doi:10.1007/s40685-018-0080-4. ISSN 2198-2627. S2CID 158756791.
  4. ^ Höflinger, Patrick J.; Nagel, Christian; Sandner, Philipp (2018-01-01). "Reputation for technological innovation: Does it actually cohere with innovative activity?". Journal of Innovation & Knowledge. 3 (1): 26–39. doi:10.1016/j.jik.2017.08.002. hdl:10419/190727. ISSN 2444-569X.
  5. ^ Voswinkel, Stephan (2011), Helm, Sabrina; Liehr-Gobbers, Kerstin; Storck, Christopher (eds.), "Reputation: A Sociological View", Reputation Management, Management for Professionals, Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer, pp. 31–45, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-19266-1_5, ISBN 978-3-642-19266-1
  6. ^ a b c d Barnett, Michael; Pollock, Timothy (2012). Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 22–36. ISBN 9780199596706.
  7. ^ a b Lange, Donald; Lee, Peggy M.; Dai, Ye (2011-01-01). "Organizational Reputation: A Review". Journal of Management. 37 (1): 153–184. doi:10.1177/0149206310390963. ISSN 0149-2063. S2CID 143793428.
  8. ^ Money, K; Hillenbrand, C (2006). "Using reputation measurement to create value: An analysis and integration of existing measures". Journal of General Management. 32: 1–12. doi:10.1177/030630700603200101. S2CID 146416325.
  9. ^ Milgrom, P; Roberts, J (1982). "Predation, reputation, and entry deterrence". Journal of Economic Theory. 27 (2): 280–312. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(82)90031-X. hdl:10419/220787 – via Elsevier.
  10. ^ DiMaggio, PJ; Powell, WW (1983). "The iron cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields". American Sociological Review. 48 (2): 167–160. doi:10.2307/2095101. JSTOR 2095101. S2CID 22470481.
  11. ^ a b c Fombrun, CJ [in Haitian Creole]; Shanley, MS (1990). "What's in a name? Reputation building and corporate strategy". Academy of Management Journal. 33 (2): 233–258. doi:10.5465/256324.
  12. ^ a b Pfarrer, Michael D.; Pollock, Timothy G.; Rindova, Violina P. (2010-10-01). "A Tale of Two Assets: The Effects of Firm Reputation and Celebrity on Earnings Surprises and Investors' Reactions". Academy of Management Journal. 53 (5): 1131–1152. doi:10.5465/amj.2010.54533222. ISSN 0001-4273.
  13. ^ Brown, Brad; Perry, Susan (1994-10-01). "Removing the Financial Performance Halo From Fortune's "Most Admired" Companies". Academy of Management Journal. 37 (5): 1347–1359. doi:10.5465/256676. ISSN 0001-4273.
  14. ^ Rindova, Violina P.; Williamson, Ian O.; Petkova, Antoaneta P.; Sever, Joy Marie (2005). "Being Good or Being Known: An Empirical Examination of the Dimensions, Antecedents, and Consequences of Organizational Reputation". The Academy of Management Journal. 48 (6): 1033–1049. doi:10.2307/20159728. ISSN 0001-4273. JSTOR 20159728.
  15. ^ a b Jensen, Michael; Kim, Heeyon; Kim, Bo Kyung (2012-07-19). Pollock, Timothy G; Barnett, Michael L (eds.). "Meeting Expectations: A Role-Theoretic Perspective on Reputation". The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199596706.001.0001. ISBN 9780199596706. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  16. ^ a b Mishina, Yuri; Block, Emily S.; Mannor, Michael J. (2012). "The path dependence of organizational reputation: how social judgment influences assessments of capability and character". Strategic Management Journal. 33 (5): 459–477. doi:10.1002/smj.958. hdl:10044/1/15612. ISSN 1097-0266. S2CID 167766573.
  17. ^ Parker, Owen; Krause, Ryan; Devers, Cynthia E. (2019-04-22). "How Firm Reputation Shapes Managerial Discretion". Academy of Management Review. 44 (2): 254–278. doi:10.5465/amr.2016.0542. ISSN 0363-7425. S2CID 169617029.
  18. ^ Roberts, Peter W.; Dowling, Grahame R. (2002). "Corporate reputation and sustained superior financial performance". Strategic Management Journal. 23 (12): 1077–1093. doi:10.1002/smj.274. ISSN 1097-0266.
  19. ^ a b c d Rhee, Mooweon; Haunschild, Pamela R. (2006-02-01). "The Liability of Good Reputation: A Study of Product Recalls in the U.S. Automobile Industry". Organization Science. 17 (1): 101–117. doi:10.1287/orsc.1050.0175. ISSN 1047-7039.
  20. ^ Benjamin, Beth A.; Podolny, Joel M. (1999-09-01). "Status, Quality, and Social Order in the California Wine Industry". Administrative Science Quarterly. 44 (3): 563–589. doi:10.2307/2666962. ISSN 0001-8392. JSTOR 2666962. S2CID 143602162.
  21. ^ Milgrom, Paul; Roberts, John (1986). (PDF). Journal of Political Economy. 94 (4): 796–821. doi:10.1086/261408. ISSN 0022-3808. JSTOR 1833203. S2CID 154506015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-06. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  22. ^ Weigelt, Keith; Camerer, Colin (1988). "Reputation and corporate strategy: A review of recent theory and applications". Strategic Management Journal. 9 (5): 443–454. doi:10.1002/smj.4250090505. ISSN 1097-0266.
  23. ^ Ravasi, Davide; Rindova, Violina; Etter, Michael; Cornelissen, Joep (2018-04-11). "The Formation of Organizational Reputation". Academy of Management Annals. 12 (2): 574–599. doi:10.5465/annals.2016.0124. ISSN 1941-6520. S2CID 150287794.
  24. ^ Bitektine, Alex; Hill, Kevin; Song, Fei; Vandenberghe, Christian (2018-09-25). "Organizational Legitimacy, Reputation, and Status: Insights from Micro-Level Measurement". Academy of Management Discoveries. 6 (1): 107–136. doi:10.5465/amd.2017.0007. S2CID 149754189.
  25. ^ Deephouse, David L.; Heugens, Pursey P. M. A. R. (2009-06-01). "Linking Social Issues to Organizational Impact: The Role of Infomediaries and the Infomediary Process". Journal of Business Ethics. 86 (4): 541–553. doi:10.1007/s10551-008-9864-3. ISSN 1573-0697. S2CID 62806448.
  26. ^ a b Fombrun, Charles J [in Haitian Creole] (1996). Reputation: Realizing Value from Corporate Image. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 9780875846330.
  27. ^ a b Roulet, Thomas (Thomas J.) (September 2020). The power of being divisive : understanding negative social evaluations. Stanford, California. ISBN 978-1-5036-1390-4. OCLC 1143840507.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ Suchman, Mark C. (July 1995). "Managing Legitimacy: Strategic and Institutional Approaches". Academy of Management Review. 20 (3): 571–610. doi:10.5465/amr.1995.9508080331. ISSN 0363-7425. S2CID 168050730.
  29. ^ MacKenzie, Scott B.; Podsakoff, Philip; Podsakoff, Nathan (2011-06-01). "Construct measurement and validation procedures in MIS and behavioral research". MIS Quarterly. 35 (2): 293–334. doi:10.2307/23044045. JSTOR 23044045.
  30. ^ Stern, Ithai; Dukerich, Janet M.; Zajac, Edward (2014). "Unmixed signals: How reputation and status affect alliance formation". Strategic Management Journal. 35 (4): 512–531. doi:10.1002/smj.2116. ISSN 1097-0266.
  31. ^ Pollock, Timothy G.; Lee, Peggy M.; Jin, Kyuho; Lashley, Kisha (2015-09-01). "(Un)Tangled: Exploring the Asymmetric Coevolution of New Venture Capital Firms' Reputation and Status". Administrative Science Quarterly. 60 (3): 482–517. doi:10.1177/0001839215585602. ISSN 0001-8392. S2CID 54640595.
  32. ^ Bitektine, Alex (2011-01-01). "Toward a Theory of Social Judgments of Organizations: The Case of Legitimacy, Reputation, and Status". Academy of Management Review. 36 (1): 151–179. doi:10.5465/amr.2009.0382. ISSN 0363-7425.
  33. ^ Bundy, Jonathan; Pfarrer, Michael D. (2014-10-16). "A Burden of Responsibility: The Role of Social Approval at the Onset of a Crisis". Academy of Management Review. 40 (3): 345–369. doi:10.5465/amr.2013.0027. ISSN 0363-7425.
  34. ^ Mishina, Yuri; Devers, Cynthia E (2012-07-19). Pollock, Timothy G; Barnett, Michael L (eds.). "On Being Bad: Why Stigma is not the Same as a Bad Reputation". The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199596706.001.0001. ISBN 9780199596706. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  35. ^ Pollock, Timothy G.; Lashley, Kisha; Rindova, Violina P.; Han, Jung-Hoon (2019-04-08). "Which of These Things Are Not Like the Others? Comparing the Rational, Emotional, and Moral Aspects of Reputation, Status, Celebrity, and Stigma". Academy of Management Annals. 13 (2): 444–478. doi:10.5465/annals.2017.0086. ISSN 1941-6520. S2CID 150762458.
  36. ^ a b Bitektine, Alex; Hill, Kevin; Song, Fei; Vandenberghe, Christian (2018-09-25). "Organizational Legitimacy, Reputation, and Status: Insights from Micro-Level Measurement". Academy of Management Discoveries. 6 (1): 107–136. doi:10.5465/amd.2017.0007. S2CID 149754189.
  37. ^ Rao, Hayagreeva (1994). "The Social Construction of Reputation: Certification Contests, Legitimation, and the Survival of Organizations in the American Automobile Industry: 1895–1912". Strategic Management Journal. 15 (S1): 29–44. doi:10.1002/smj.4250150904. ISSN 1097-0266.
  38. ^ Zavyalova, Anastasiya; Pfarrer, Michael D.; Reger, Rhonda K.; Hubbard, Timothy D. (2015-07-24). "Reputation as a Benefit and a Burden? How Stakeholders' Organizational Identification Affects the Role of Reputation Following a Negative Event". Academy of Management Journal. 59 (1): 253–276. doi:10.5465/amj.2013.0611. ISSN 0001-4273.
  39. ^ a b Petkova, Antoaneta P.; Wadhwa, Anu; Yao, Xin; Jain, Sanjay (2013-05-28). "Reputation and Decision Making under Ambiguity: A Study of U.S. Venture Capital Firms' Investments in the Emerging Clean Energy Sector". Academy of Management Journal. 57 (2): 422–448. doi:10.5465/amj.2011.0651. ISSN 0001-4273. S2CID 167381065.
  40. ^ Barnett, Michael L. (2012-02-03). "Why Stakeholders Ignore Firm Misconduct". Journal of Management. 40 (3): 676–702. doi:10.1177/0149206311433854. ISSN 0149-2063. S2CID 146428499.
  41. ^ "APA PsycNet". psycnet.apa.org. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  42. ^ . Arun Sudhaman. Archived from the original on 15 January 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on May 3, 2008. Retrieved 2005-03-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  44. ^ "Tweeting your way out of disaster". Strategic Direction. 33 (8): 17–19. 2017-08-14. doi:10.1108/sd-05-2017-0079. ISSN 0258-0543.
  45. ^ Dierickx, I; Cool, K (1989). "Asset stock accumulation and sustainability of competitive advantage". Management Science. 35 (12): 1504–1511. doi:10.1287/mnsc.35.12.1504.
  46. ^ Klewes, Joachim & Wreschniok, Robert (2010). Reputation Capital: Building and Maintaining Trust in the 21st Century. Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-01629-5.
  47. ^ Freeman, R. Edward (1984). Strategic Management: A Stakeholder Approach. Boston, MA: Pitman. ISBN 9780521151740.
  48. ^ Özekmekçi, Abdullah Mert (2004) "The Correlation between Corporate Governance and Public Relations", Istanbul Bilgi University
  49. ^ Falkenreck, C. & Wagner, R.: The Impact of Perceived Innovativeness on Maintaining a Buyer-Seller Relationship in Health Care Markets: A Cross-Cultural Study. In: Journal of Marketing Management 3–4 (2011), Nr. 27, S. 225–242.
  50. ^ McDonnell, Mary-Hunter; King, Brayden (2013-08-09). "Keeping up Appearances: Reputational Threat and Impression Management after Social Movement Boycotts". Administrative Science Quarterly. doi:10.1177/0001839213500032. S2CID 145194950.
  51. ^ Gaines-Ross, Leslie (2 January 2008). Corporate Reputation: 12 Steps to Safeguarding and Recovering Reputation. Wiley. ISBN 978-0470171509.
  52. ^ Rhee, Mooweon; Valdez, Michael E. (2009). "Contextual Factors Surrounding Reputation Damage with Potential Implications for Reputation Repair". The Academy of Management Review. 34 (1): 146–168. doi:10.5465/amr.2009.35713324. ISSN 0363-7425. JSTOR 27759990.
  53. ^ Voelckner, F and Sattler, H. (2007) 'Empiric Generalizability of Consumer Evaluations of Brand Extensions', International Journal of Research in Marketing, 24, pp. 149–162.
  54. ^ Falkenreck, C. & Wagner, R.: Impact of Direct Marketing Activities on Company Reputation Transfer Success: Empirical Evidence from Five Different Cultures. Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Corporate Reputation, Brand Identity, and Competitiveness. Beijing: 2008
  55. ^ Anindya Ghose; Panagiotis G. Ipeirotis; Arun Sundararajan (February 2006). "The Dimensions of Reputation in Electronic Markets". NYU Center for Digital Economy Research. SSRN 885568. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  56. ^ "Why Reputation Management is Important". Iron Reputation. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  57. ^ Hendrikx, Ferry; Bubendorfer, Kris; Chard, Ryan (2015-01-01). "Reputation systems: A survey and taxonomy". Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing. 75: 184–197. doi:10.1016/j.jpdc.2014.08.004. ISSN 0743-7315.
  58. ^ "Keep Track of your Reputation Online". MyReputationRepair. 21 January 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  59. ^ Evans, Li (3 June 2009). . Search Marketing Gurus. Archived from the original on 6 June 2009. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  60. ^ Jantsch, John (3 March 2008). "34 Online Reputation Management Tools". Duct Tape Marketing. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  61. ^ "Online Reputation Management". SaveRepute. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  62. ^ "Help My Business is Under Attack". Reputation Station. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  63. ^ . Reputation.com. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24.
  64. ^ Doherty, Taylor (30 April 2018). "Potti hires online reputation manager". The Chronicle. Retrieved 15 December 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Alsop, R (2004). The 18 Immutable Laws of Corporate Reputation: Creating, Protecting, and Repairing Your Most Valuable Asset, ISBN 978-0-7432-3670-6
  • Barnett, M. et al. (2006). Corporate Reputation: The Definitional Landscape, in: Corporate Reputation Review, 1/2006
  • Bourne, P. E.; Barbour, V. (2011). "Ten Simple Rules for Building and Maintaining a Scientific Reputation". PLOS Computational Biology. 7 (6): e1002108. Bibcode:2011PLSCB...7E2108B. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002108. PMC 3127799. PMID 21738465.
  • Burkhardt, R. (2007). Reputation Management in Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, ISBN 978-3-8366-5825-6
  • Fombrun, C. (1996). Reputation. Realizing Value from the Corporate Image, ISBN 978-0-87584-633-0
  • Greco, M.; Branca, A. M.; Morena, G. (2010). An Experimental Study of the Reputation Mechanism in a Business Game, Simulation & Gaming, SAGE. Full text 2011-08-23 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Jackson, K.T. (2004). Building Reputational Capital: Strategies for Integrity and Fair Play that Improve the Bottom Line, ISBN 0-19-516138-6
  • Jazaieri, H., Logli Allison, M., Campos, B., Young, R. C., & Keltner, D. (2018). Content, structure, and dynamics of personal reputation: The role of trust and status potential within social networks. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations. [1]
  • Klewes, Joachim & Wreschniok, Robert (2010). Reputation Capital: Building and Maintaining Trust in the 21st Century. Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-01629-5.
  • McElreath, R. (2003). Reputation and the evolution of conflict. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 220(3):345–57.
  • Wilkinson, Shannon M. (2012). Online Reputation Management Frequently Asked Questions. Online Reputation Frequently Asked Questions

External links edit

  • Reputation by Roger Dingledine, Michael J Freedman, David Molnar, David Parkes, Paul Syverson

reputation, album, taylor, swift, album, other, uses, disambiguation, reputation, prestige, social, entity, person, social, group, organization, place, opinion, about, that, entity, typically, developed, result, social, evaluation, criteria, such, behavior, pe. For the album by Taylor Swift see Reputation album For other uses see Reputation disambiguation The reputation or prestige of a social entity a person a social group an organization or a place is an opinion about that entity typically developed as a result of social evaluation on a set of criteria such as behavior or performance 1 Reputation is a ubiquitous spontaneous and highly efficient mechanism of social control 2 It is a subject of study in social management 3 and technological sciences 4 Its influence ranges from competitive settings like markets to cooperative ones like firms organizations institutions and communities Furthermore reputation acts on different levels of agency individual and supra individual At the supra individual level it concerns groups communities collectives and abstract social entities such as firms corporations organizations countries cultures and even civilizations It affects phenomena of different scales from everyday life 5 to relationships between nations Reputation is a fundamental instrument of social order based upon distributed spontaneous social control The concept of reputation is considered important citation needed in business politics education online communities and many other fields and it may be considered citation needed as a reflection of a social entity s identity Contents 1 Corporate reputation 1 1 Reputation as a concept for companies 1 1 1 Academic literature 1 1 2 Practical measurement of reputation 1 2 Connections to related company level concepts 1 3 Consequences 1 3 1 Performance outcomes 1 3 2 Decision outcomes 2 Topics relating to reputation 2 1 Reputation management 2 2 Reputation capital 2 3 Building reputation through stakeholder management 2 4 Causes and consequences 2 5 Reputation recovery repair 2 6 Reputation transfer 3 Cognitive view of reputation 3 1 Image 4 Online 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCorporate reputation editReputation as a concept for companies edit Academic literature edit Since 1980 the study of corporate reputation has attracted growing scholarly attention from economics sociology and management 6 The concept of reputation has undergone substantial evolution in the academic literature over the past several decades 6 7 8 Terminology such as reputation branding image and identity is often used interchangeably in both the popular press and until recently in the academic literature as well The academic literature has generally settled on a small cluster of perspectives on what reputation is in a company context Economists use game theory to describe corporate reputations as strategic signals that companies use to convey to markets some of their qualities and abilities 9 Sociologists view corporate reputation as descriptions of the relative status that companies occupy in an institutional field of rivals and stakeholders 10 Management scholars describe corporate reputations in one of two main ways 7 including the broad view as an aggregation of perceptions that form as audiences judge the behaviors of companies 11 This is often evaluated by broad ranking measures of the company as a whole such as the Fortune Most Admired Companies rankings 12 13 the specific view as an assessment by some specific audience of the company s ability to perform or behave in a certain way 14 15 These are split into two broad categories a outcome capability reputation and b behavior character reputation 16 which is intended to capture both the economic and sociological forms of reputation 16 17 a outcome capability reputation this reputation type involves an assessment of how well the company performs on a certain dimension The most common examples of these is performing well financially 18 or providing high quality products or services 19 20 All of these dimensions can be objectively ordered such as better worse financial performance as evaluated by objective market based measures of financial performance or better worse product quality as evaluated by a collection of users 19 b behavior character reputation this reputation type is said to arise when a company is recognized as consistently behaving in a certain way 21 22 in a manner that is relatively devoid of objectively identifiable performance For instance a company might prioritize investment in innovation the improvement of its operational efficiency or sourcing from local suppliers 23 24 Practical measurement of reputation edit In practice corporate reputations are revealed by the relative rankings of companies created and propagated by information intermediaries 25 For example business magazines and newspapers such as Fortune Forbes Business Week Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal regularly publish lists of the best places to work the best business schools or the most innovative companies These rankings are explicit orderings of corporate reputations and the relative positions of companies on these rankings are a reflection of the relative performance of companies on different cognitive attributes Corporate reputations are found to influence the attractiveness of ranked companies as suppliers of products as prospective employers and as investments 26 For those reasons companies themselves have become increasingly involved with the practice of reputation management Connections to related company level concepts edit Like any social construct reputation is similar to i e convergent with certain concepts and different i e discriminant from others Reputation can be compared to other social evaluation or social judgment constructs For instance reputation is said to be convergent with adjacent concepts like corporate image identity celebrity status legitimacy social approval likability and visibility prominence but discriminant from related constructs like stigma and infamy 6 27 Reputation is often considered to be a pragmatic evaluation actors determine whether the target of the evaluation can be seen as useful to them 28 Until recently the relationships with these adjacent constructs were merely theoretical that is they were not formally tested or empirically validated 29 for their nomological relationships with these other related constructs Conceptual relationships In 2012 the Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation 6 was released to provide some clarity to the increasingly fragmented field of social evaluation constructs all of which had been referred to either implicitly or explicitly under an umbrella of reputation concepts In 2020 the introductory part of The Power of Being Divisive Understanding Negative Evaluations 27 develops a framework to disentangle a variety of concepts in the field of social evaluations in particular making the point that negative and positive evaluations can be on different continua and social actors can be both positively and negatively evaluated at the same time In this opus and in the Oxford handbook scholars made incremental efforts to distinguish between handfuls of these constructs such as reputation vs celebrity 12 reputation vs status 30 31 reputation vs legitimacy vs status 32 reputation vs social approval 33 reputation vs stigma 34 reputation vs status vs celebrity vs stigma 35 Empirical relationships In 2020 Bitektine and colleagues 36 conducted the first major construct validation study to a create scales for the constructs of reputation cognitive legitimacy sociopolitical legitimacy and status and b empirically distinguish between them by undertaking a multiple studies involving several confirmatory factor analyses This construct validation effort addressed the broad view of reputation as a company level evaluation not an evaluation for specific attributes 11 The scale items for reputation that resulted from this effort as evaluated by an audience of respondents representing the general public included The reputation of this company is excellent this is a reputable company and this is a dependable company 36 There still exists no construct validation effort for the specific view of reputation i e that reputation is best understood as a specific audience s view of the company with respect to a specific attribute 15 Consequences edit Performance outcomes edit Myriad reputation studies from the 1980s to the 2000s demonstrated that a company s reputation was positively related to various performance measures such as financial success and profitability 37 11 However more recent work demonstrated that reputation can be both a benefit and a burden 38 suggesting that the bigger you are the harder you might fall with respect to reputation 19 Decision outcomes edit Relatedly researchers have theorized or demonstrated that a company s reputation could also influence the decisions and perceptions of its managers 39 in some cases reputation can promote the use of risk reduction strategies by managers as they seek to preserve the reputation they have cultivated 39 In other cases researchers argue that reputation can embolden managers to take risks in areas unrelated to their reputation since stakeholders may be focused on the reputation itself and inattentive to other areas of the company 40 41 Topics relating to reputation editReputation management edit Main article Reputation management Many organizations create public relations and corporate communication departments dedicated to assisting companies with reputation management In addition many public relations and consulting firms claim expertise in reputation management The growth of the public relations industry has largely been due to the rising demand for companies to establish credibility and reputation 42 Incidents which damage a company s reputation for honesty or safety may cause serious damage to finances For example in 1999 Coca Cola lost 60 million by its own estimate after schoolchildren reported suffering from symptoms like headaches nausea and shivering after drinking its products 43 Although most companies see reputation management as a central part of a CEO s role managing reputation involves a set of ongoing activities that are best managed when they are delegated to a specific individual in the organization This is why some companies have created the position of chief reputation officer CRO A growing number of people in the business world now have the word reputation in their titles including Dow Chemical SABMiller Coca Cola Allstate Repsol YPF Weber Shandwick and GlaxoSmithKline although no longer Hoover s shows a list of such officers Social media like Twitter Linked In and Facebook have made it increasingly important for companies to monitor their online reputations in order to anticipate and respond to criticisms of their actions There are two main routes that customers can take when complaining about companies individual direct response or broadcast based response For a company it takes a lot of time and effort to address individual direct responses One study showed that 72 of customers expect a reply within one hour 44 In order to best recover from negative complaints on social media it is important for a company to prove its authenticity by providing more specific answers directly to its critics Reputation capital edit Main article Reputation capital A corporate reputation can be managed accumulated and traded in for trust legitimization of a position of power and social recognition and people are prepared to pay a premium price for goods and services offered which in turn generates higher customer loyalty a stronger willingness from shareholders to hold on to shares in times of crisis and greater likelihood to invest in the company s stock 45 Therefore reputation is one of the most valuable forms of capital of a company Delivering functional and social expectations of the public on the one hand and manage to build a unique identity on the other hand creates trust and this trust builds the informal framework of a company This framework provides return in cooperation and produces reputation capital A positive reputation will secure a company or organisation long term competitive advantages The higher a company s reputation capital the lower the costs of supervising and exercising control 46 Building reputation through stakeholder management edit According to stakeholder theory corporations should be managed for the benefit of all their stakeholders not just their shareholders Stakeholders of a company include any individual or group that can influence or is influenced by a company s practices 47 The stakeholders of a company can be suppliers consumers employees shareholders financial community government and media Companies must properly manage the relationships between stakeholder groups and they must consider the interest s of each stakeholder group carefully Therefore it becomes essential to integrate public relations into corporate governance to manage the relationships between these stakeholders which will enhance the organization s reputation Corporations or institutions which behave ethically and govern in a good manner build reputational capital which is a competitive advantage A good reputation enhances profitability because it attracts customers to products investors to securities and employees to its jobs 26 A company s reputation is an intangible asset and a source of competitive advantage against rivals because the company will be viewed as more reliable credible trustworthy and responsible to its employees customers shareholders and financial markets In addition according to MORI s survey of about 200 managers in the private sector 99 responded that the management of corporate reputation is very 83 or fairly 16 important Reputation is a reflection of companies culture and identity Also it is the outcome of managers efforts to prove their success and excellence It is sustained through acting reliably credibly trustworthily and responsibly in the market It can be sustained through consistent communication activities both internally and externally with key stakeholder groups This directly influences a public company s stock prices in the financial market Therefore this reputation makes a reputational capital that becomes a strategic asset and advantage for that company As a consequence public relations must be used in order to establish long lasting relationships with the stakeholders which will enhance the reputation of the company 48 Causes and consequences edit Reputation models can be placed in a broader framework that distinguishes reputation from its underlying causes and from its consequences This approach is important to clarify the meaning of reputation Causes of reputation are seen to reside in stakeholder experiences Stakeholder experiences relate to a company s day to day business operations its branding and marketing and noise in the system such as the media and word of mouth Further causes of reputation may include the perceived innovativeness of a company the customers expectations the perceived quality of the company s goods and services and the subsequent customer satisfaction all of which differ according to the respective customers cultural background 49 The consequences of reputation reside in the behaviors supportive or resistant that stakeholders demonstrate towards a company Behaviors such as advocacy commitment and cooperation are key positive outcomes of a good reputation Boycotts 50 and lawsuits are key negative outcomes of a bad reputation Reputation recovery repair edit Organizations frequently make missteps that cause them to lose the positive regard of stakeholders 51 In the wake of studies addressing the disproportionate penalties that accrue to high reputation firms when they make such missteps 19 reputation researchers have proposed models to account for both reputation damage and reputation repair summarizing prior work in disciplines including economics marketing accounting and management 52 Reputation transfer edit In the context of brand extension strategies many companies rely on reputation transfer as a means of transferring the good reputation of a company and its existing products to new markets and new products Consumers who are already familiar with other products of an established brand exhibiting customer satisfaction and loyalty will more easily accept new products of the same brand In contrast to brand extension the general concept of reputation transfer also requires the transfer of a company s values and identity to the new products and or services and the related brands when entering new markets It is important however to pay attention to the image fit between preexisting and new brands for this factor has been proven to be critical for the success of brand extensions 53 In contrast to the special case of brand extension the general concept of reputation transfer also requires the transfer of the values and identity of a company to the new products and or services and the related brands when entering new markets A strong image might therefore even hamper the introduction of new product lines if customers do not associate the competences relevant to the new market category product line with the existing company or brand A company s reputation is furthermore influenced by culture as nationalities differ with regard to how valued specific aspects of the company s brand identity are in the respective national culture e g environmental concerns or work ethics as well as with regard to popular cultural dimensions e g Hofstede Subsequently these differences impact the success of reputation transfer significantly 54 Cognitive view of reputation editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The cognitive view of reputation has become increasingly prominent in reputation research It has led to improved understanding of the role played by reputation in a number of practical domains and scientific fields In the study of cooperation and social dilemmas for instance the role of reputation as a partner selection mechanism started to be appreciated in the early 1980s Working toward such a definition reputation can be viewed as a socially transmitted meta belief i e belief about belief that is a property of an agent that results from the attitudes other actors have about some socially desirable behaviour be it cooperation reciprocity or norm compliance Reputation plays a crucial role in the evolution of these behaviours reputation transmission allows socially desirable behaviour to spread Rather than concentrating on the property only the cognitive model of reputation accounts not only for reputation formation but also for the propagation of reputation To model this aspect it is necessary to specify and develop a more refined classification of reputation In informal settings gossip although vague may contain precious hints both to facts I ve been told this physician has shown questionable behavior and to conflicts taking place at the information level if a candidate for a role spreads defamatory information about another candidate whom should you trust Moreover the expression it is said that John Smith is a cheater is intrinsically a reputation spreading act because on one hand it refers to a possibly false common opinion and on the other the very act of saying it is said is self assessing since it provides at least one factual occasion when that something is said because the person who says so the gossiper while appearing to spread the saying a bit further may actually be in the phase of initiating it Gossip can also be used as an identifier only as when gossiping about unreachable icons like royalty or showbiz celebrities useful only to show the gossiper belongs to the group of the informed ones While most cases seem to share the characteristic of being primarily used to predict future behavior they can have for example manipulative sub goals even more important than the forecast In the case of a communication between two parties one the advisee that is requesting advice about the potential for danger in a financial transaction with another party the potential partner target and the other the adviser evaluator that is giving advice Roughly speaking the advice could fall under one of the following three categories the adviser declares it believes the potential partner is is not good for the transaction in object the adviser declares it believes another named or otherwise defined agent or set of agents believes the potential partner is is not good for the transaction in object the adviser declares it believes in an undefined set of agents hence there is a belief the potential partner is is not good for the transaction in object Note the care to maintain the possible levels of truth the adviser declares but could be lying it believes but could be wrong etc The cases are listed as it is evident in decreasing order of responsibility While one could feel most actual examples fall under the first case the other two are not unnecessarily complicated nor actually infrequent Indeed most of the common gossip falls under the third category and except for electronic interaction this is the most frequent form of referral All examples concern the evaluation of a given object target a social agent which may be either individual or supra individual and in the latter case either a group or a collective held by another social agent the evaluator The examples above can be turned into more precise definitions using the concept of social evaluation At this point we can propose to coin a new lexical item image whose character should be immediately evident and is clearly linked to reputation Image edit Image is a global or averaged evaluation of a given target on the part of an agent It consists of a set of social evaluations about the characteristics of the target Image as an object of communication is what is exchanged in examples 1 and 2 above In the second case we call it third party image It may concern a subset of the target s characteristics i e its willingness to comply with socially accepted norms and customs or its skills ways or its definition as pertaining to a precise agent Indeed we can define special cases of image including third party image the evaluation that an agent believes a third party has of the target or even shared image that is an evaluation shared by a group Not even this last is reputation since it tries to define too precisely the mental status of the group Reputation as distinct from image is the process and the effect of transmitting a target image To be more precise we call reputation transmission a communication of an evaluation without the specification of the evaluator if not for a group attribution and only in the default sense discussed before This covers the case of example 3 above More precisely reputation is a believed social meta evaluation it is built upon three distinct but interrelated objects a cognitive representation or more precisely a believed evaluation this could be somebody s image but is enough that this consist of a communicated evaluation a population object i e a propagating believed evaluation and an objective emergent property at the agent level i e what the agent is believed to be In fact reputation is a highly dynamic phenomenon in two distinct senses it is subject to change especially as an effect of corruption errors deception etc and it emerges as an effect of a multi level bidirectional process Reputation is also how others know and perceive you as an individual While image only moves when transmitted and accepted from one individual cognition to another the anonymous character of reputation makes it a more complex phenomenon Reputation proceeds from the level of individual cognition when is born possibly as an image but not always to the level of social propagation at this level it not necessarily believed as from any specific agent and from this level back to individual cognition again when it is accepted Moreover once it gets to the population level reputation gives rise to a further property at the agent level It is both what people think about targets and what targets are in the eyes of others From the very moment an agent is targeted by the community his or her life will change whether he or she wants it or not or believes it or not Reputation has become the immaterial more powerful equivalent of a scarlet letter sewed to one s clothes It is more powerful because it may not even be perceived by the individual to whom it sticks and consequently it is out of the individual s power to control and manipulate More simply speaking for those who want a working definition of reputation reputation is the sum of impressions held by a company s stakeholders In other words reputation is in the eyes of the beholder It need not be just a company s reputation but could be the reputation of an individual country brand political party industry But the key point in reputation is not what the leadership insists but what others perceive it to be For a company its reputation is how esteemed it is in the eyes of its employees customers investors talent prospective candidates competitors analysts alumni regulators and the list goes on Online editThis article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Reputation system Reputation management and Online identity Online reputation is a factor in any online community where trust is important Examples include eBay an auction service that uses a system of customer feedback to publicly rate each member s reputation or Amazon com which has a similar review system 55 One study found that a good reputation added 7 6 to the price received 56 In addition building and maintaining a good reputation can be a significant motivation for contributing to online communities 57 Individuals employ monitoring to ensure that they keep up with their online reputation 58 Given the number of sites on the Internet it is impossible to manually monitor the entire web for pages that may affect one s online reputation Free tools such as Google Alerts can be used to keep track of online reputations on a small scale 59 while larger businesses and clients may use more powerful analytics to monitor online interactions and mentions Paid tools for online reputation management focus on either brand protection or online reputation These tools track mentions of a brand or product on the Internet on Facebook Twitter blogs and other social networking sites and websites Online reputation can be evaluated by how well it is managed 60 This form of reputation is usually called web or digital reputation to distinguish it from online reputation dubious discuss citation needed Indeed digital or web reputation does not concern the virtual online reputation only but the whole real reputation of a person or a company as it is affected by the Internet Online reputation furthermore should not be confused with a company s digital identity An online reputation is the perception that one generates on the Internet based on their digital footprint Digital footprints accumulate through all of the content shared feedback provided and information that is created online 61 Due to the fact that if someone has a bad online reputation they can easily change their pseudonym new accounts on sites such as eBay or Amazon are usually distrusted If an individual or company wants to manage their online reputation they will face many more difficulties According to one study 84 of responding business leaders saw the greatest reputation threat online to companies as negative media coverage citation needed The next two greatest threats are customer complaints in the media or on grievance sites online 71 and negative word of mouth 54 citation needed This negative word of mouth could come not only from dissatisfied customers but from employees as well With the power of business review websites and customer forums a company s online reputation can be damaged anonymously 62 Employers have begun using the online reputations of job applicants to guide their hiring choices By checking a candidate s social networking profiles on sites such as Facebook Twitter and MySpace employers gain insight into a candidate s character and suitability for a job 63 Some individuals and organizations hire reputation management companies to attempt to hide truthful but unflattering information about themselves A recent alleged example is that of Dr Anil Potti who resigned from Duke University after it was discovered that he had misrepresented himself on his resume and became the subject of a scientific misconduct investigation 64 See also editDigital identity Face sociological concept Governance Honour Id ego and super ego Reputation management Signaling game Reputation game Social capital Social map Social software Virtual communityReferences edit Definition of REPUTATION www merriam webster com Retrieved 2020 08 27 overall quality or character as seen or judged by people in general recognition by other people of some characteristic or ability a place in public esteem or regard good name Zhao Bo December 2015 Reputation as Social Control in Present China Use Misuse Abuse and Bankruptcy Asian Journal of Comparative Law 10 2 359 379 doi 10 1017 asjcl 2015 16 ISSN 2194 6078 Veh Annika Gobel M arkus Vogel Rick 2019 12 01 Corporate reputation in management research a review of the literature and assessment of the concept Business Research 12 2 315 353 doi 10 1007 s40685 018 0080 4 ISSN 2198 2627 S2CID 158756791 Hoflinger Patrick J Nagel Christian Sandner Philipp 2018 01 01 Reputation for technological innovation Does it actually cohere with innovative activity Journal of Innovation amp Knowledge 3 1 26 39 doi 10 1016 j jik 2017 08 002 hdl 10419 190727 ISSN 2444 569X Voswinkel Stephan 2011 Helm Sabrina Liehr Gobbers Kerstin Storck Christopher eds Reputation A Sociological View Reputation Management Management for Professionals Berlin Heidelberg Springer pp 31 45 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 19266 1 5 ISBN 978 3 642 19266 1 a b c d Barnett Michael Pollock Timothy 2012 Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation United Kingdom Oxford University Press pp 22 36 ISBN 9780199596706 a b Lange Donald Lee Peggy M Dai Ye 2011 01 01 Organizational Reputation A Review Journal of Management 37 1 153 184 doi 10 1177 0149206310390963 ISSN 0149 2063 S2CID 143793428 Money K Hillenbrand C 2006 Using reputation measurement to create value An analysis and integration of existing measures Journal of General Management 32 1 12 doi 10 1177 030630700603200101 S2CID 146416325 Milgrom P Roberts J 1982 Predation reputation and entry deterrence Journal of Economic Theory 27 2 280 312 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 82 90031 X hdl 10419 220787 via Elsevier DiMaggio PJ Powell WW 1983 The iron cage revisited Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields American Sociological Review 48 2 167 160 doi 10 2307 2095101 JSTOR 2095101 S2CID 22470481 a b c Fombrun CJ in Haitian Creole Shanley MS 1990 What s in a name Reputation building and corporate strategy Academy of Management Journal 33 2 233 258 doi 10 5465 256324 a b Pfarrer Michael D Pollock Timothy G Rindova Violina P 2010 10 01 A Tale of Two Assets The Effects of Firm Reputation and Celebrity on Earnings Surprises and Investors Reactions Academy of Management Journal 53 5 1131 1152 doi 10 5465 amj 2010 54533222 ISSN 0001 4273 Brown Brad Perry Susan 1994 10 01 Removing the Financial Performance Halo From Fortune s Most Admired Companies Academy of Management Journal 37 5 1347 1359 doi 10 5465 256676 ISSN 0001 4273 Rindova Violina P Williamson Ian O Petkova Antoaneta P Sever Joy Marie 2005 Being Good or Being Known An Empirical Examination of the Dimensions Antecedents and Consequences of Organizational Reputation The Academy of Management Journal 48 6 1033 1049 doi 10 2307 20159728 ISSN 0001 4273 JSTOR 20159728 a b Jensen Michael Kim Heeyon Kim Bo Kyung 2012 07 19 Pollock Timothy G Barnett Michael L eds Meeting Expectations A Role Theoretic Perspective on Reputation The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199596706 001 0001 ISBN 9780199596706 Retrieved 2020 08 25 a b Mishina Yuri Block Emily S Mannor Michael J 2012 The path dependence of organizational reputation how social judgment influences assessments of capability and character Strategic Management Journal 33 5 459 477 doi 10 1002 smj 958 hdl 10044 1 15612 ISSN 1097 0266 S2CID 167766573 Parker Owen Krause Ryan Devers Cynthia E 2019 04 22 How Firm Reputation Shapes Managerial Discretion Academy of Management Review 44 2 254 278 doi 10 5465 amr 2016 0542 ISSN 0363 7425 S2CID 169617029 Roberts Peter W Dowling Grahame R 2002 Corporate reputation and sustained superior financial performance Strategic Management Journal 23 12 1077 1093 doi 10 1002 smj 274 ISSN 1097 0266 a b c d Rhee Mooweon Haunschild Pamela R 2006 02 01 The Liability of Good Reputation A Study of Product Recalls in the U S Automobile Industry Organization Science 17 1 101 117 doi 10 1287 orsc 1050 0175 ISSN 1047 7039 Benjamin Beth A Podolny Joel M 1999 09 01 Status Quality and Social Order in the California Wine Industry Administrative Science Quarterly 44 3 563 589 doi 10 2307 2666962 ISSN 0001 8392 JSTOR 2666962 S2CID 143602162 Milgrom Paul Roberts John 1986 Price and Advertising Signals of Product Quality PDF Journal of Political Economy 94 4 796 821 doi 10 1086 261408 ISSN 0022 3808 JSTOR 1833203 S2CID 154506015 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 08 06 Retrieved 2020 09 04 Weigelt Keith Camerer Colin 1988 Reputation and corporate strategy A review of recent theory and applications Strategic Management Journal 9 5 443 454 doi 10 1002 smj 4250090505 ISSN 1097 0266 Ravasi Davide Rindova Violina Etter Michael Cornelissen Joep 2018 04 11 The Formation of Organizational Reputation Academy of Management Annals 12 2 574 599 doi 10 5465 annals 2016 0124 ISSN 1941 6520 S2CID 150287794 Bitektine Alex Hill Kevin Song Fei Vandenberghe Christian 2018 09 25 Organizational Legitimacy Reputation and Status Insights from Micro Level Measurement Academy of Management Discoveries 6 1 107 136 doi 10 5465 amd 2017 0007 S2CID 149754189 Deephouse David L Heugens Pursey P M A R 2009 06 01 Linking Social Issues to Organizational Impact The Role of Infomediaries and the Infomediary Process Journal of Business Ethics 86 4 541 553 doi 10 1007 s10551 008 9864 3 ISSN 1573 0697 S2CID 62806448 a b Fombrun Charles J in Haitian Creole 1996 Reputation Realizing Value from Corporate Image Cambridge MA Harvard Business School Press ISBN 9780875846330 a b Roulet Thomas Thomas J September 2020 The power of being divisive understanding negative social evaluations Stanford California ISBN 978 1 5036 1390 4 OCLC 1143840507 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Suchman Mark C July 1995 Managing Legitimacy Strategic and Institutional Approaches Academy of Management Review 20 3 571 610 doi 10 5465 amr 1995 9508080331 ISSN 0363 7425 S2CID 168050730 MacKenzie Scott B Podsakoff Philip Podsakoff Nathan 2011 06 01 Construct measurement and validation procedures in MIS and behavioral research MIS Quarterly 35 2 293 334 doi 10 2307 23044045 JSTOR 23044045 Stern Ithai Dukerich Janet M Zajac Edward 2014 Unmixed signals How reputation and status affect alliance formation Strategic Management Journal 35 4 512 531 doi 10 1002 smj 2116 ISSN 1097 0266 Pollock Timothy G Lee Peggy M Jin Kyuho Lashley Kisha 2015 09 01 Un Tangled Exploring the Asymmetric Coevolution of New Venture Capital Firms Reputation and Status Administrative Science Quarterly 60 3 482 517 doi 10 1177 0001839215585602 ISSN 0001 8392 S2CID 54640595 Bitektine Alex 2011 01 01 Toward a Theory of Social Judgments of Organizations The Case of Legitimacy Reputation and Status Academy of Management Review 36 1 151 179 doi 10 5465 amr 2009 0382 ISSN 0363 7425 Bundy Jonathan Pfarrer Michael D 2014 10 16 A Burden of Responsibility The Role of Social Approval at the Onset of a Crisis Academy of Management Review 40 3 345 369 doi 10 5465 amr 2013 0027 ISSN 0363 7425 Mishina Yuri Devers Cynthia E 2012 07 19 Pollock Timothy G Barnett Michael L eds On Being Bad Why Stigma is not the Same as a Bad Reputation The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Reputation doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199596706 001 0001 ISBN 9780199596706 Retrieved 2020 08 25 Pollock Timothy G Lashley Kisha Rindova Violina P Han Jung Hoon 2019 04 08 Which of These Things Are Not Like the Others Comparing the Rational Emotional and Moral Aspects of Reputation Status Celebrity and Stigma Academy of Management Annals 13 2 444 478 doi 10 5465 annals 2017 0086 ISSN 1941 6520 S2CID 150762458 a b Bitektine Alex Hill Kevin Song Fei Vandenberghe Christian 2018 09 25 Organizational Legitimacy Reputation and Status Insights from Micro Level Measurement Academy of Management Discoveries 6 1 107 136 doi 10 5465 amd 2017 0007 S2CID 149754189 Rao Hayagreeva 1994 The Social Construction of Reputation Certification Contests Legitimation and the Survival of Organizations in the American Automobile Industry 1895 1912 Strategic Management Journal 15 S1 29 44 doi 10 1002 smj 4250150904 ISSN 1097 0266 Zavyalova Anastasiya Pfarrer Michael D Reger Rhonda K Hubbard Timothy D 2015 07 24 Reputation as a Benefit and a Burden How Stakeholders Organizational Identification Affects the Role of Reputation Following a Negative Event Academy of Management Journal 59 1 253 276 doi 10 5465 amj 2013 0611 ISSN 0001 4273 a b Petkova Antoaneta P Wadhwa Anu Yao Xin Jain Sanjay 2013 05 28 Reputation and Decision Making under Ambiguity A Study of U S Venture Capital Firms Investments in the Emerging Clean Energy Sector Academy of Management Journal 57 2 422 448 doi 10 5465 amj 2011 0651 ISSN 0001 4273 S2CID 167381065 Barnett Michael L 2012 02 03 Why Stakeholders Ignore Firm Misconduct Journal of Management 40 3 676 702 doi 10 1177 0149206311433854 ISSN 0149 2063 S2CID 146428499 APA PsycNet psycnet apa org Retrieved 2020 08 25 Global PR Industry Growth Surges To 11 in 2013 Arun Sudhaman Archived from the original on 15 January 2015 Retrieved 3 January 2015 Share price is always vulnerable Archived from the original on May 3 2008 Retrieved 2005 03 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Tweeting your way out of disaster Strategic Direction 33 8 17 19 2017 08 14 doi 10 1108 sd 05 2017 0079 ISSN 0258 0543 Dierickx I Cool K 1989 Asset stock accumulation and sustainability of competitive advantage Management Science 35 12 1504 1511 doi 10 1287 mnsc 35 12 1504 Klewes Joachim amp Wreschniok Robert 2010 Reputation Capital Building and Maintaining Trust in the 21st Century Springer ISBN 978 3 642 01629 5 Freeman R Edward 1984 Strategic Management A Stakeholder Approach Boston MA Pitman ISBN 9780521151740 Ozekmekci Abdullah Mert 2004 The Correlation between Corporate Governance and Public Relations Istanbul Bilgi University Falkenreck C amp Wagner R The Impact of Perceived Innovativeness on Maintaining a Buyer Seller Relationship in Health Care Markets A Cross Cultural Study In Journal of Marketing Management 3 4 2011 Nr 27 S 225 242 McDonnell Mary Hunter King Brayden 2013 08 09 Keeping up Appearances Reputational Threat and Impression Management after Social Movement Boycotts Administrative Science Quarterly doi 10 1177 0001839213500032 S2CID 145194950 Gaines Ross Leslie 2 January 2008 Corporate Reputation 12 Steps to Safeguarding and Recovering Reputation Wiley ISBN 978 0470171509 Rhee Mooweon Valdez Michael E 2009 Contextual Factors Surrounding Reputation Damage with Potential Implications for Reputation Repair The Academy of Management Review 34 1 146 168 doi 10 5465 amr 2009 35713324 ISSN 0363 7425 JSTOR 27759990 Voelckner F and Sattler H 2007 Empiric Generalizability of Consumer Evaluations of Brand Extensions International Journal of Research in Marketing 24 pp 149 162 Falkenreck C amp Wagner R Impact of Direct Marketing Activities on Company Reputation Transfer Success Empirical Evidence from Five Different Cultures Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Corporate Reputation Brand Identity and Competitiveness Beijing 2008 Anindya Ghose Panagiotis G Ipeirotis Arun Sundararajan February 2006 The Dimensions of Reputation in Electronic Markets NYU Center for Digital Economy Research SSRN 885568 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Why Reputation Management is Important Iron Reputation Retrieved 12 April 2013 Hendrikx Ferry Bubendorfer Kris Chard Ryan 2015 01 01 Reputation systems A survey and taxonomy Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing 75 184 197 doi 10 1016 j jpdc 2014 08 004 ISSN 0743 7315 Keep Track of your Reputation Online MyReputationRepair 21 January 2015 Retrieved 22 January 2015 Evans Li 3 June 2009 Online Marketing Tips Video Online Reputation Management Search Marketing Gurus Archived from the original on 6 June 2009 Retrieved 15 December 2012 Jantsch John 3 March 2008 34 Online Reputation Management Tools Duct Tape Marketing Retrieved 15 December 2012 Online Reputation Management SaveRepute Retrieved 7 June 2023 Help My Business is Under Attack Reputation Station Retrieved 15 April 2015 How Your Online Social Network Could Cost You a New Job Reputation com Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Doherty Taylor 30 April 2018 Potti hires online reputation manager The Chronicle Retrieved 15 December 2012 Further reading editAlsop R 2004 The 18 Immutable Laws of Corporate Reputation Creating Protecting and Repairing Your Most Valuable Asset ISBN 978 0 7432 3670 6 Barnett M et al 2006 Corporate Reputation The Definitional Landscape in Corporate Reputation Review 1 2006 Bourne P E Barbour V 2011 Ten Simple Rules for Building and Maintaining a Scientific Reputation PLOS Computational Biology 7 6 e1002108 Bibcode 2011PLSCB 7E2108B doi 10 1371 journal pcbi 1002108 PMC 3127799 PMID 21738465 Burkhardt R 2007 Reputation Management in Small and Medium sized Enterprises ISBN 978 3 8366 5825 6 Fombrun C 1996 Reputation Realizing Value from the Corporate Image ISBN 978 0 87584 633 0 Greco M Branca A M Morena G 2010 An Experimental Study of the Reputation Mechanism in a Business Game Simulation amp Gaming SAGE Full text Archived 2011 08 23 at the Wayback Machine Jackson K T 2004 Building Reputational Capital Strategies for Integrity and Fair Play that Improve the Bottom Line ISBN 0 19 516138 6 Jazaieri H Logli Allison M Campos B Young R C amp Keltner D 2018 Content structure and dynamics of personal reputation The role of trust and status potential within social networks Group Processes amp Intergroup Relations 1 Klewes Joachim amp Wreschniok Robert 2010 Reputation Capital Building and Maintaining Trust in the 21st Century Springer ISBN 978 3 642 01629 5 McElreath R 2003 Reputation and the evolution of conflict Journal of Theoretical Biology 220 3 345 57 Full text Wilkinson Shannon M 2012 Online Reputation Management Frequently Asked Questions Online Reputation Frequently Asked QuestionsExternal links editReputation by Roger Dingledine Michael J Freedman David Molnar David Parkes Paul Syverson nbsp Look up reputation in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Reputation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reputation amp oldid 1195766237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.