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La stratégie de réputation dans un monde repensé
Rédigé par
Directrice générale, Dublin

Lorna Jennings

Directrice générale, Dublin

La gestion de la réputation a fondamentalement changé au cours de la dernière décennie, passant d'un objectif principal de protection et de facilitation de la croissance de l'entreprise à celui d'un apport de valeur plus largement définie.

Notre collègue de Hanover, Lorna Jennings, directrice générale à Dublin, présente des points importants à la gestion de la réputation.

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Reputation management has fundamentally shifted in the last decade—from a primary focus on protecting and facilitating business growth (and the profit margin), to driving the delivery of a much broader definition of value.

Many corporate affairs teams end up managing multiple campaigns, launching new initiatives and firefighting never-ending issues without a solid, unimpeachable strategy underlying their efforts.

Likewise, the role of the corporate affairs person has expanded, now taking in sustainability, purpose and values and social issues as well as communication and advocacy. These broader, more challenging roles operate in a world where multiple, fast-changing and interconnected issues span audiences and time zones.

This requires a fresh approach to strategy. Many corporate affairs teams end up managing multiple campaigns, launching new initiatives and firefighting never-ending issues without a solid, unimpeachable strategy underlying their efforts.

As a result, we work hard, we produce outputs, but we never achieve the outcome we desire—because we don’t really know what that outcome is and we haven’t defined how we’ll know when we get there.

Three features should define your reputation strategy in a rewired world:

  • Simplicity: The temptation to try to solve every problem and take every opportunity in an incredibly frenetic landscape often leads corporate affairs teams into an overly complex ‘strategy’—which is actually just a list of tactics. Your job is to define your strategy in the most simple and clear way possible, to take your complex issues, challenges and aims and distill them into the purest expression of who you want to reach, what you want them to think, feel and do as a result and how you’re going to do that. The marketing professor Mark Ritson explains this brilliantly: “Complexity is what you dealt with, not what you deliver. It took brains, training, complexity and intelligence to work out your strategy. So much so that your strategy now appears to be that incredibly rare and difficult thing: simplicity itself. Don’t worry, it’s not. You made it look that way.”

  • Focus: Focus and simplicity go hand in hand. The often-repeated quote that strategy is knowing when to say no has never been more pertinent. When your house is on fire, you save the most important things. 

    In this regard, data is your friend. As the world becomes more and more rich in information, data shouldn’t just inform your reputation strategy, it helps keep it focused on the most important priorities over time and helps you understand how best to achieve them.

  • Agility: The average lifespan of a company on the US S&P500 has plummeted from over 60 years in the 1950s to less than 20 years today. The average tenure of a FTSE100 CEO is now just 6 years. A recent article in MIT Sloan Review which we share elsewhere on this REWIRE hub says: “The most successful businesses today are those that identify when and how to change to improve their strategic advantage.” 

    Making sure that your strategy builds in the agility and responsiveness, your need to adjust to changing times is essential.

This article was initially published by our sister company Hanover on their blog

——— Lorna Jenninga est directrice générale, Dublin chez Hanover, société sœur du Cabinet de relations publiques NATIONAL

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