Reputation

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Reputation Management
HB Schultz and A Werner

Learning outcomes

Key words and concepts

At the end of this chapter the learner should
be able to demonstrate the following outcomes:

Explain the importance and objectives of
reputation management.

Discuss sources of reputational risk.

Discuss the role of the HRM department
in reputation management.

Develop a strategy for introducing a reputation programme.

Discuss the role and use of electronic
media in reputation management.

Recommend guidelines for management
to act appropriately during a crisis.

Propose a plan for dealing with an office
emergency.

Recommend a communication strategy to
be used during a crisis.

Discuss the impact of ethics on organisational reputation.

Discuss the management of ethics in the
workplace.









reputation management consulting
reputational risk
crisis response and communication plan
domino theory
ethics
office emergency
whistle-blowing

Illustrative case
John feels so despondent. His best friend has
borrowed a huge amount of money from him,
with a sincere promise to repay it within two
months. Four months have passed and John
has heard nothing from his friend. He phones,
leaves messages, but gets no response at all.
John himself is getting into trouble now, as he
has bought a new computer for his son, and
cannot make the repayments without the
money his friend has borrowed. His house
rent is also in arrears. John has been informed
that the computer will be removed from his

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H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

home this afternoon. John is thinking: ‘What
am I going to tell my son? And if I get blacklisted for not meeting my financial obligations? How will it affect my future chances of
securing a loan?’ John decides to speak to his
neighbour about his problems, only to find
out that the neighbour too has also lent
money to his friend, and that his friend has
used it to pay a gambling debt. John feels
totally shocked and decides to go to his
friend’s house to confront him. He rings the
door bell, and as nobody responds, he opens
the door himself — only to find his friend in a
warm embrace with his neighbour’s wife.
How many other people do you think will
eventually hear about what has happened to
John and his neighbour? How will it affect
their perceptions of John’s friend? How long
will it take John’s friend to repair his reputation? Will giving the money back to John and
apologising to the neighbour be enough? How
long will it take John and his neighbour to forgive and forget? Will John ever have the same
regard for his friend he had before?
In the same way that individuals develop a
reputation, organisations develop one too. It
takes years to build up a good reputation, and
it can be destroyed by a single event or act. In
order to build up and preserve a good reputation, organisations need to carefully consider
how their practices are viewed by all stakeholders. And lastly, companies need to clearly
define and appreciate the role of the human
recourses department in the management of
organisational reputation.

1

Introduction

Reputation entails two main components,
namely:
Perception — how the company is perceived
by all stakeholders; and
Reality — the truth about a company’s
policies, practices, procedures, systems and
performance.
Perception is thus closely related to the
image that a company projects.

Another way of defining the elements of
reputation is to represent it as consisting of:
Images — what stakeholders think of the
company.
Identity — what the company says it is.
Personality — what the company is all
about.
The alignment of these factors is vital if we
want to build, sustain and protect an organisation’s reputation.
Each one of us plays a part in this by representing the company we work for. The question is whether we project a positive or negative image. The way we dress, talk, act, and feel
expresses this reality of the company to the
outside community.
Specifically, what we say to others and how
we act adds to the image of the organisation.
It is therefore important to evaluate what
employees and stakeholders such as the media
say about the organisation. If we want to protect and build our company’s reputation
(image being just one element) we have to
influence this process. Employees and customers can be perceived as the two most
important groups in reputation management.
Figure xx.1 indicates how the complex interaction between the internal view (employees)
and external view (customers) influence the
performance of the organisation.
Identity and image are the most important
dimensions of corporate reputation, and
should be linked in a rational way. For example, if a pharmaceutical company sees itself as
the market leader in the development and
supply of antiretrovirals for the treatment of
HIV/AIDS, and the customer perceives it as a
competent supplier of medicine, harmony
between identity and image exists. This in
turn strengthens the brand. The objective of
reputation management is to foster this harmonious relationship between identity and
image.
One way to accomplish this is to reflect on
the values we should endorse and the actions
we should use to make employees become
loyal in an era of continual downsizing,
restructuring and competition. We should
also rethink the feelings we express about our

R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T

3

Figure 1 Interaction between the internal view (employees) and the external view
(customers)

Satisfaction

Employees’
perception of
the brand

THE BRAND

Customer’s
perception of
the brand

Retention

Satisfaction

Loyalty

Increased sales
Identity

company and what it is accomplishing in the
community. In this process we have to enlist
the support of all employees.
With the demise of huge corporations, such
as Enron, due to fraudulent practices, and the
exploitation of Pick ’n Pay South Africa
through the alleged poisoning of certain merchandise, it has become apparent that the
human resources department’s role in corporate governance has exploded with effective
human capital management strategies. This
role has not found priority with HR practitioners in the past, but has become a necessity
in managing corporate reputation.
The emphasis in this chapter is on what
reputational risk is, its importance, the
sources of reputational risk, and the role of
HRM in reputation management. Attention is
given to the development of strategies for a
reputation programme, the management of
crises, communication during a crisis, and
dealing with an office emergency. The role of
electronic media, especially the Internet, in
reputation management is explored. Lastly,
the impact of ethics on reputation management and the introduction of a whistle-blowing policy are also discussed.

Image

2

Reputational risk

Today’s enlightened companies have come to
realise that reputation is an asset that needs to
be managed proactively. These companies
have realised that the scrutiny under which
business operates today and the amount of
information in the hands of consumers and
other members of the public, make reputation
a vital asset, and in some industries, the most
important asset.
After all, what goes through the mind of a
stakeholder when he/she sees a company’s
secrets exposed on an investigative journalism
programme such as ‘Carte Blanche’, ‘60
Minutes’ or ‘World in Action’?
Recent incidents highlighted in the media
certainly show a need for more formalised
reputation management. Look at some of the
headlines:

‘North West Government tardy over
bookkeeping’

‘CEO charged with stealing $600-million
from Tyco’

‘Can’t anyone here run a railroad?’

‘Company fund derails’

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H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

The issue is clear: Companies need programmes and processes that will help them
manage their reputation proactively — after
all, their share price and community standing
is dependent upon it.
The objective of reputation management
consulting is to:

maintain a favourable reputation in the
workplace and marketplace;

enhance and build the organisation’s
good name and reputation;

establish acceptable practices, policies,
procedures, systems and standards that
will avoid damage to the organisation’s
reputation;

establish guidelines for dealing with situations where the company’s reputation
has been tarnished; and

prepare and equip the management team
to take full responsibility for managing
the company’s reputation.

Case-in-point
While South African companies may not yet
be experiencing the same degree of corporate
fallout as their counterparts in the United
States, CEOs would do well to avoid learning
those lessons and take heed of the recommendations of the King Report 2, says communication expert Johanna McDowell, MD of
Integrated Communications, and legal advisor Michael Judin of Goldman Judin Maisels
Incorporated.
According to McDowell and Judin, transparency is the key, and this, coupled with
ongoing communication with stakeholders
and the media, will ensure that in the
inevitable times of crisis that most large companies face, a certain amount of goodwill
towards the company will still exist, allowing
it to ride out the storm.
Says McDowell, ‘The worst thing to do in a
crisis is to batten down the hatches and to cut
off all communications with the outside
world. This leads to speculation and rumour-

mongering which is often more damaging
than the crisis itself. Through honest and
open communication with all parties, companies can often resolve these issues with minimal long-term damage.’
SOURCE:

www.biz-community.com/Article/196/18/927.html

Encounter 1
Nothing is more important to a business than its
reputation. Without a good reputation, success
is limited and a company’s long-term future is
cast in doubt. According to the second King
Report on Corporate Governance (King 2),
‘Reputation is a function of stakeholder perception of a company’s integrity and efficiency,
derived from many sources, such as customer
service, employee relations, ethical conduct and
environmental practices.’ So while good corporate governance should align the interests of
society with that of the business concerned, it is
also in the interest of the company itself.
The international prominence that King 2 has
brought to South Africa in this sophisticated field
is truly remarkable. Mervyn King, chairperson of
the committee, was elected president of the
Commonwealth Association for Corporate Governance (CACG), which provided guidelines for
56 countries in the commonwealth. King 2 has
been hailed by Sir Adrian Cadbury, author of the
original British Corporate Governance Report, as
being of the highest order.
‘Corporate governance is something that
applies to all companies but it must be accepted
that pragmatically small enterprises cannot comply from a financial viewpoint. As for unlisted
companies as a category, some of them are bigger than many listed companies, and corporate
governance applies as much to them as it does
to any listed company’, says King.
At the heart of corporate governance lies
responsibility to all stakeholders, employees,
suppliers, contractors and anyone else who has
a real stake in the success of a particular business.
The risk element includes employee health

R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T

and environmental issues. In South Africa,
specifically, emphasis has been placed on how
organisations manage HIV/AIDS. The inability to
deal effectively with this issue has severe implications for the organisation, including:

decreased productivity through death, sick
and compassionate leave;

increased overhead costs such as health
care and insurance;

reduction in the available skills base;

a contracting consumer base and changes in
consumer spending patterns;

reduced profitability; and

diminishing investor confidence.
Source: ‘King 2 applies to all’ (2002)

2.1

Sources of reputational risk

The sources of reputational risk are many and
varied. Managers need to receive training in
sustaining and protecting their organisation’s
reputation. HR Practitioners can only accept
this duty as part of their role once the reasons
for or sources of risk have been ascertained.
The following examples illustrate some of
these sources of reputational risk:

5

Impersonal and discourteous behaviour
Many job advertisements contain the following post-script: ‘Due to the high volume of
applications anticipated, applicants who have
not received a response from us by a certain
date, should consider their applications as not
being successful.’
This type of statement might be perceived
by the prospective applicant as a clear message
that the organisation does not value people.
The person might also anticipate that the
same kind of attitude exists towards people
already employed by the organisation.
The HR department might rationalise the
situation by referring to their workload.
However, a prospective applicant might not
have an understanding of, or care for, the
problems experienced by the department.
What this stakeholder is concerned about, is
whether he/she will fit into the organisation
and whether his/her needs will be met.
Other examples of impersonal and impolite behaviour include not returning phone
calls to customers, electronic answer
machines taking the customer through a
serious of actions with no personal contact,
failure to apologise for errors and general
rude behaviour.

Increasing exposure through an
expanding Internet

Acting too late

Bernstein (2002a) predicted the following:
‘The use of online tools for crisis prevention
and management will expand dramatically.’
Since then a number of South African corporate websites were hacked and defaced by an
unknown assailant, and numerous people and
companies such as ABSA Bank suffered from
renewed cyber attacks. Read more about these
cases by searching the following website:
www.sundaytimes.co.za.
Numerous other articles mention the
increased reputational risk of having a company’s name tarnished in cyberspace. On 13
November 2002, Reuters reported that the US
House of Representatives unanimously approved a measure that would triple federal
spending on a programme to increase computer security research.

The Sunday Business Times reports that the
National Lottery, Uthingo, has come under
severe criticism and has had to conduct a
massive public relations campaign to counter
negative public opinion after it became
known that only three per cent of the total lottery ticket sales had reached charities. A quote
from the CEO, Humphrey Khosa, stated that
the criticism was the result of a misunderstanding about how the lottery distribution
process works.
A similar situation occurred when the mineral water industry in South Africa was faced
with a crisis a few years back when it assumed
that the consumer would understand that its
products contained only a minimal amount of
e.coli bacteria. They could not find the time or
resources to communicate adequately before-

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H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

hand but could find time after the bubble
burst (Sunday Times, ‘Lifestyle’, 2 May 1999).
The lesson learnt from this is very clear: Do
not assume that stakeholders know how the
business model and processes work. Relevant
and timely information is imperative to keep
misconceptions at bay.
Rumours do not have to be true to be damaging. Many organisations have discovered this
long after rumours have surfaced. HR practitioners must communicate, measure perceptions, and intercept misinformation and rumours before they become public knowledge.
3

The management of
corporate reputation

3.1

Vulnerability audits: The
basis of a reputation
management programme

Any company’s reputation programme
should be based on an in-depth organisational audit. Bernstein (2002a) recommends that
vulnerability audits should include confidential interviews at all levels of the organisation
as well as both legal and ‘public relations’
reviews of all existing employment policies.
Recent vulnerability audits have revealed the
following:

perceptions of racial or sexual harassment
and discrimination;

employees accused of wrongdoing on and
off the job (sometimes accurately, sometimes not);

union actions and/or hostile attempts to
unionise;

blatant violations of customer confidentiality around the workplace and in public areas; and

damaging rumours — online and off-line
(www.bernstein.com.com/docs/germplers
020927.html).
The following questions could be included
during a vulnerability audit:

Do you think there is any discrimination
or harassment in our organisation?







Do our employees actually understand
this particular policy?
If we (management) think they do, how
do we know?
Do our employees think that we ‘walk our
talk’ regarding creating a friendly, rather
than a hostile environment?

Binneman (2002a) suggests the following
guidelines for a vulnerability audit:

Conduct research into what stakeholders,
such as employees, are saying about your
company.

Conduct research into the actions you
want from employees (such as the neutralising of any negative comments about
the company or work), the methods that
can be used to measure progress towards
projecting a positive company image, and
the incentives that might be used to help
employees project a positive company
image.

Develop a list of suggested actions on
how to project a positive image that can
be handed to each employee as part of an
outreach and training programme.

Include employees in the development of
such as list.

Launch a formal programme together
with incentives. This has to be a process
of selling the benefits to employees, not
just telling them what to say, otherwise it
will just be received as management
propaganda.
Binneman (2002a) suggests the following
items for the above-mentioned list:

Relate only positive stories or observations about the company, internally and
externally. This will prevent the spread of
inaccurate negative messages.

Relate details selectively. Encounters with
a customer or any other person should
not be relayed in detail in an attempt to
justify it.

Make a positive remark to counteract any
negative statement about the company.
Show your support for the company.

Decide which organisational values you

R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T



support, and work accordingly. Tell others
what you value and what your company
stands for.
Learn about and publicise the littleknown positive things the company is
involved in. Make it a point to discover
these and to spread the good word about
your organisation.





Influencing what employees say about an
organisation can directly affect the organisation’s reputation in the market and workplace.


The role of HR in introducing a reputation
auditing system
The HR department can coordinate or assist
in the following aspects:

The establishment of the necessary documentation, recording, reporting and safekeeping of data.

The conduct of reputation monitoring.

The presentation and coordination of relevant training courses to various levels in
the organisation.

The establishment, attendance and guidance of the company’s reputation committee meetings.

Reporting to and maintaining contact
with the CEO and person responsible for
reputation management.

The coordination and performing of a biannual reputation compliance audit of
the company’s reputation programme to
ensure that the standards and requirements are being maintained.
3.2

The management of corporate
reputation during a crisis

Binneman (2002b) has some substantial
thoughts on why an inevitable crisis should be
planned for:

Surviving the first two hours of an emergency or disaster can save assets, markets
and reputations.

Poorly handled crises can end careers.
The Ford/Bridgestone tyre withdrawal

7

and the 1999 contamination of CocaCola in Europe, both of which ended the
careers of the companies’ chairpersons,
are excellent high-profile examples.
The expectations of outsiders and various
stakeholders will control the perception
of how a crisis is managed.
Handling a crisis insensitively, or not at
all, can escalate visibility, cost, and reputational damage. (Search the Internet for
Dow-Corning’s handling of the breast
implant disaster.)
The timing of communication profoundly affects the organisation’s reputation for
some period after the crisis subsides.

If an organisation is worthy of its reputation
and is interested in maintaining its credibility,
then crises management preparations are an
absolute necessity. When bad news occurs,
there are critical audiences, including the
company’s own employees, who have expectations of management’s ability to cope with
problems. Every stakeholder will focus on the
organisation’s response. Every perceived act or
word will contribute to the organisation’s reputation.
A crisis response and communication plan
When a crisis hits the company, such as in the
case when Pick ’n Pay was threatened by an
extortionist, the company better be ready to
react with speed and finesse to deal with the
reality and the perceptions that develop during the crisis. (Forensic investigations done
after the Pick ’n Pay crisis revealed that no
products were in fact contaminated by poison.) Foresight and planning are essential. No
company can afford to pay the price of complacency. The answer is to prepare and react.
A crisis response and communication plan is
a blueprint of the processes and actions that
need to be instituted depending on the type of
crisis the company is facing.

Constructing a crisis response and communication plan: The first step in solid
crisis management is to construct a well
thought through strategy for handling

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H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

crises. At best the strategy will prevent the
development of a crisis, and at worst it
will offer solid guidelines on how to
respond, manage and act when things
start getting urgent or messy.
The following are guidelines for putting together such a strategy:

Create a crisis team.

Construct a communications hierarchy to ensure the right people are
informed when a crisis hits.

Ensure that the crisis team, top management and workforce are wellversed at identifying a crisis and know
whom to contact when a crisis breaks.

Brainstorm various scenarios. These
might include an act of violence in
the workplace, an accident, contaminated products, customer dissatisfaction, customer injury due to the use
of the company’s products, a strike,
service interruptions, etc.

Create appropriate messaging and
response strategies for each of the
invented crises scenarios. Consider the
espoused values of the organisation as
a guide.

List appropriate actions and steps for
each potential crisis.

Ensure that all the relevant sources are
immediately known or available.

Document your contact list, policies,
strategies, potential crisis, messages
and suggested actions.

Practise.

Get professional assistance.
Health and Safety specialists use the
‘Domino Theory’ to illustrate how an
accident happens. Reputational Risk
Managers can use the same principles to
consider the management of risk in the
workplace. Dominos is a game in which
little rectangular blocks are lined up and
the first block is then pushed over to create a snowball effect that pushes over all
the other blocks in a sequential manner.
The ‘Domino Theory’ relating to risk
management could be understood as
follows:

the first domino is the failure to
actively build and protect the reputation of the company;

the second domino is an act or information that is potentially harmful to
the company;

the third domino is the inability to
identify and act upon such a potentially harmful act or behaviour;

the fourth domino is the spread of
harmful information about the company;

the fifth domino leads to a damaged
company reputation; and

without intervention this can lead to
the demise of an organisation.
The most important domino — lack of
management control — is the domino
that starts up the whole process.
Responding during a crisis: Often, organisations are prepared to respond to the
operational components of a crisis by, for
example, phoning the fire department or
evacuating the building, while ignoring
broader communication needs. There are
many audiences, potentially affected by
the crisis, and each of these will want to
know the facts as soon as possible; members of each audience will start to overreact or worry in the absence of such
facts. Typically audiences include
clients/patients/customers, the media,
employees, investors, community leaders,
and regulatory agencies. Each of them
requires a specific type of communication
(for example, a phone call, fax, mail, new
release, web posting) and has differing
information needs. If an organisation is
prepared, in advance, to respond to those
needs promptly, confusion and damage
are minimised.
Bernstein (2002b) suggests the following ten steps for communication during a
crisis:

Identify your crisis communication
team.

Identify spokespersons.

Train and brief spokespersons.

Establish communication protocols.




R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T

Identify your stakeholder groups and
their special communication needs.

Anticipate crises.

Assess the crisis situation.

Identify key messages.

Decide on communication methods
and media.

Ride out the storm
The following are guidelines for appropriate action when a crisis strikes:

Stay calm.

Get all the facts.

Prioritise.

Turn up and face the crisis. Do not try
to cover up.

Keep open lines with the media and
be truthful, frank and factual.

Communicate all the time.

Be human, kind, sympathetic and caring.

Get legal advice if needed, but don’t
become a lawyer.

Provide the crisis management team
with adequate capacity to handle the
event effectively from beginning to
end.

9



Case-in-point
Corporate communication during a crisis
During October 2003 employees at Delta
Motor Corporation embarked on a strike in
protest to the management of absenteeism at
the organisation. The management of Delta
responded to the strike, amongst others, by
placing a full-page advertisement in the local
newspaper (The Herald, 2 October 2003). The
title of the advertisement identified various
stakeholder groups:
‘Special communication to all Delta employees, their families, other stakeholders in the
automotive industry and concerned members
of the public.’
The advertisement contained the following information:











Background information to the development of the dispute.
The current sick leave situation in the
organisation.
Facts about the situation, such as the
absenteeism rate in comparison to that
of the rest of the industry.
Management’s commitment to the company, employees, the local community
and the industry.
A call to employees to return to work.

The following sentences, which appeared in
the advertisement, illustrate an attempt by
Delta to influence the perception of the
reader:
‘Disciplinary inquiries do not automatically result in dismissal — to date there has been
only one dismissal for incapacity (health reasons) since June 2003. This contrasts with
NUMSA’s allegation that 25 employees have
been dismissed this way’, and ‘The abusers
are a minority of our workforce.’
In addition, Delta employs the services of
a public relations officer who deals specifically with media releases and media inquiries.



Utilising the Internet as a tool to counteract rumours: In the first few hours after a
rumour or disaster hits your company, a
specific perception of your company can
be established. In the past it used to be
the news media (newspapers and television) that set the perception. Today, a
single message published by an unknown
and relatively insignificant person on the
right discussion board on the Internet
can cause havoc to a company’s hardearned reputation.
The world wide web can make or
break a company, as it provides for
immediate publication, and the message
spreads at an incredible speed. ‘Local’
issues can now quickly become ‘global’
issues, and can cross over to mainstream
media, much like a virus. An example of
this is the president Bill Clinton–Monica

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H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

Lewinski affair that first broke on the
Internet. The Internet has now become
the primary news source for journalists
and most organisations’ web sites are now
used widely by journalists. Another factor
contributing to the power of the Internet
is that, unlike in the case of newspapers,
which normally get discarded after some
time, the Internet is more permanent in
nature.
The ability to transmit news virtually
instantaneously has meant that the media
day has now become the media hour, and
even more likely, the media minute. The
available turnaround time in a crisis is
drastically reduced and lightning fast
action will be necessary to protect the
organisation’s reputation.
By definition, a crisis is only a crisis
when it becomes public, before that it is
simply a business problem. But in all crisis management the secret is not to have
one.
Some of the effective reputational
defense responses on the Internet are
therefore:

The implementation of an early
warning system: Ongoing monitoring
is essential — identify hostile messages, hostile cyber radio messages
and hate sites early so that misperceptions and false statements can
be corrected before they do untold
damage. Participate in newsgroups,
forums, bulletin boards, etc., to correct information that has been misquoted, wrongly excerpted or
fabricated.

Ongoing tracking: Crisis avoidance
continues with tracking. Watch key
sources of information, rumours and
discussions about your organisation,
its products, services, stakeholders
and employees, and track reporters
and others who use these sites for stories. Monitor issues to anticipate
crises before they occur and disseminate accurate, up-to-date information
via the web and other Internet vehi-



4

cles. Identify, track and correct misperceptions, rumours and false messages.
Act continually: The Internet can be
your first line of defense, and here lies
an important clue — it can allow you
to speak directly to your target audience and stakeholders with no media
filtering. Various technologies such as
e-mail, SMS and group bulk mailers
can be used. This also implies that the
company’s website should be updated
regularly and that it should be
designed in a user-friendly manner.

An office emergency plan

To develop a comprehensive office emergency
plan, a worse case scenario based on potential
hazards within the working environment,
realistic security risks and possible natural
disasters, should be considered.
The following checklist indicates appropriate planning for an office emergency. These
actions are often considered as the responsibility of the HR department:

Identify key people for an Emergency
Response Team.

Provide and maintain a well-stocked first
aid kit.

Conduct an inventory of the existing
emergency supplies, equipment and
information.

Plan for the provision of emergency
supplies in the case of emergencies that
require confinement to the building for
72 hours.

Survey company facilities to identify what
might cause a problem during an emergency situation.

Consider what training is necessary for
key safety personnel and then expand
emergency training to everyone else.
5

Corporate ethics and
whistle-blowing

Corporate ethics cannot be separated from
reputational risk management, as a damaged

R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T

reputation is often the result of what is
perceived as unethical conduct on the part of
the organisation. Organisations that have successfully demonstrated the importance of
ethics have linked ethics to real business issues
and actual processes.
Ethics refers to the study of moral principles or values that determine whether conduct or actions are right or wrong. Although
most people have a fair idea of what is
regarded as ethical or not, many gray areas
exist that could potentially cause conflict
(Schultz et al. 2003:29). Ethics relates to how
small or large a gap exists between actual corporate culture (enacted values and behaviour) and the behaviours a company must
demonstrate to meet compliance requirements in the marketplace (desired values and
behaviours).
Human Resources plays a vital role in any
organisation’s ethics programme. In an
organisation where management and employee view the ethics programme as unimportant, the role of HR becomes even more critical. HR professionals are in a position to see
the cost of labour turnover as a result of lack
of respect for the individual, harassment and
discrimination. HR can see whether people in
the organisation are rewarded for behaviour
that is contrary to the company’s values, and
whether people who seek to do what is right
are protected or victimised. How HR handles
ethical issues often determines whether an
organisation’s ethics programme is taken seriously or not.
Schultz et al. (2003:30) propose the following guidelines for establishing an ethical culture:

Develop a comprehensive code of ethics
for all relevant parties (managers,
employee groups, human resources management, salespeople, accountants, suppliers, customers, society in general, etc.).

The code should highlight specific unethical practices such as receiving paybacks,
doctoring facts or data, withholding
information, breaching confidentiality,
etc.).

The code should be communicated to all








5.1

11

relevant parties.
The code should be enforced consistently
through rewards for compliance and
penalties for non-compliance.
Top management and other role models
should set the example with exemplary
conduct.
Provide training in ethical issues.
Provide mechanisms to deal with ethical
issues, such as surveys, audits, confidential reporting mechanisms and whistlebloer protection systems.

Establishing a policy for
whistle-blowing

Employees are often the first to know of any
unethical, immoral or downright illegal dealings that go on within an organisation.
However, they also tend to be the last to speak
out, fearing the loss of their job, rebuke from
their friends, or forfeiture of their potential
for promotion.
Sherron Watkins has become a symbol of
whistle-blowing after she exposed unethical
behaviour at Enron, an act which eventually
brought the company to its knees. Watkins
wrote a seven-page memorandum to CEO
Kenneth Lay, detailing a number of causes for
concern within the company. When everything came to light five months later, she even
testified against him in front of a grand jury.

Encounter 2
ETH ICS: TH E PRICE OF SI LE NCE

In 1980 the merchant ship, Derbyshire, sank rapidly off the coast of Japan claiming the lives of all
44 people on board. The vessel was bigger than
the Titanic but sank so fast that it had no time to
even send out a distress signal, leading experts
to believe that human error was not to be
blamed.
A subsequent inquiry (in 1990) cited poor
structure as the reason for this disaster and it is
thought that girders may have been prematurely
stopped to ease construction pressures. It is
likely that the workmen who constructed the
Derbyshire knew of such cost cutting activities

12

H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

but failed to speak out. The question is: Could
this tragedy have been averted through the act
of whistle-blowing?
SOURCE:

www.managementfirst.com/articles/whistleblowing.htm

5.2

A whistle-blowing code
of ethics

A whistle-blowing code of ethics sets out
guidelines with regards to the whistle-blower
when reporting an issue, and for management
when dealing with the issue.
The following are some guidelines with
regards to the whistle-blower:

ascertain that the issue stems from appropriate moral motives of preventing
unnecessary harm to others;

ensure that the failure of whistle-blowing
could lead to serious danger;

use all available internal procedures for
rectifying the issue before public disclosure, although special circumstances
might preclude this requirement;

evidence that ‘would persuade the reasonable person’ should be furnished;

act in accordance with existing responsibilities for ‘avoiding and/or exposing
moral violations’; and

ascertain that the whistle-blower’s action
has some reasonable chance of success.
General guidelines for management in terms
of whistle-blowing are:

involve employees and listen to their
sense of right and wrong. Explain what
fraud entails, and its effect on the organisation, their jobs and the company’s
reputation;

discuss other forms of malpractice that
might seriously damage the organisation;

when finding malpractice, deal with it
openly and transparently;

make it clear that the organisation is
committed to tackle fraud and abuse,
whether the perpetrators are inside or
outside;

ascertain that employees know what prac-



tices are unacceptable (for example,
receiving gifts). Encourage them to ask
management if in doubt, and to seek
information prospectively; and
get staff unions to support and promote
this approach.

These are guidelines for dealing with a specific
issue:

management should be open to a concern
before it becomes part of a grievance and
should not let its lack of action or inaction in itself become a grievance;

remember that there are two sides to
every issue;

respect and heed legitimate employee
concerns about their own safety or career;

emphasise to both management and staff
that victimising employees or deterring
them from raising a concern about malpractice is a disciplinary offence;

make it clear that abusing the process by
raising unfounded allegations maliciously
is a disciplinary matter;

offer to report back to the employee
about the outcome of the investigation
and, where possible, on any action that is
proposed.
In South Africa, the Protected Disclosures Act
(No. 26 of 2000), protects the whistle-blower
(Molatudi 2001:36–7).

6

Reputation management
and quality assurance

Given the damage that unfavourable information or behaviour can cause an organisation,
reputation management cannot be left to
chance, but should be well-planned and executed. By implication, addressing issues that
could potentially be harmful to a company’s
reputation enhances organisational goalattainment. The HR department should play a
leading and monitoring role in the management of corporate reputation by conducting
regular vulnerability audits, and by offering
guidelines for the development of a holistic

R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T

reputation management strategy. A company
with a well-established reputation and reputation management programme is more likely
to survive a crisis.
7

Conclusion

Complete and effective reputation management requires a multi-disciplinary approach,
or a Total Reputation Management (TRM)
approach. Building a reputation, sustaining a
reputation, and protecting a reputation are
each different objectives and each require different techniques and capabilities. TRM
incorporates multiple disciplines and methods to meet multiple requirements.

Summary




















Reputation management entails perception as well as reality.
Reputation is an asset that should be
managed proactively.
The objectives of reputation management
relates to the establishment, maintenance
and protection of the organisation’s
image.
Organisational reputation is influenced
by Internet exposure, impersonal and discourteous behaviour, and acting too late
in a given situation.
The basis of reputation management is a
vulnerability audit, which can be coordinated by the HRM department. The aim
is to establish and maintain the organisation’s reputation.
A crisis response and communication
plan assists the organisation in dealing
constructively with crises.
Communication should be conducted in
line with the special communication
needs of various stakeholder groups.
The Internet, as a communication tool,
offers both challenges and opportunities
during a crisis.
An office emergency plan deals with
physical crisis situations such as a fire.
Corporate ethics cannot be separated
from reputation management.



13

Establishing an ethical culture and providing for a whistle-blowing policy contribute to corporate reputation.

Case study
You are the owner of a very popular supermarket group that caters specifically for the
rich and famous. Your company has developed a name for itself by being one of the first
supermarket groups to have its own website,
and on top of that, offers online ordering and
same-day delivery within a specific geographical radius. One morning, while on your way to
work, you spot the following newspaper
headline: ‘Up-market supermarket defrauds
customers’. Your stomach turns. You stop to
get the paper. Surely, it is your supermarket
that the headline is referring to. You feel your
blood pressure increasing as you scan the
report: ‘… complaints … wrong delivery …
incorrect invoice … cheap substitutes … fourteen phone calls … still no reply … warn others
… Internet.’
You rush to work, start yelling at people,
and make many frantic phone calls. It turns
out that the events are true but that they are
limited to one specific store. It seems very
likely that the manager of this store is the
main culprit. Various employees indicate that
they knew what was happening but that they
were too afraid to speak out.
Your company has no formal reputation
management programme and you are now in
crisis management.

Questions
1. How are you going to save your company’s reputation?
2. How are you going to prevent a similar
situation in the future?

14

H U M A N R E S O U R C E S M A N AG E M E N T

Experiential exercise No. 1
PURPOSE:

To identify situations that could
have been prevented through reputation
management.
I N T R O D U C T I O N : Reputation management
is a new field for most organisations.
However, pleading ignorance is not useful
when a crisis hits.
TA S K : Collect newspaper clippings to illustrate the following:

situations that could tarnish an
organisation’s reputation;

how organisations deal with these situations; and

how organisations could have prevented these situations through effective reputation management.

Experiential exercise No. 2
PURPOSE:

To develop an understanding of
the use of communication strategies in
reputation management.
I N T R O D U C T I O N : Disclosure analysis is a
systematic analysis of the language (content and word selection) used by people
in order to identify their motives, intentions or feelings.
TA S K : Collect various newspaper clippings
or visit websites that contain organisational press releases. Systematically
analyse the content of and language used
in these press releases to develop an
understanding of the role of communication in reputation management.
Specifically, give attention to:

the media used;

identified stakeholders;

the content of messages;

the selective use of language; and

the use of emotional language.

Chapter questions
1. Discuss how a company can cultivate a
bad reputation.
2. Outline the basic elements of a corporate
reputation management programme.

3. How can an organisation set up an ethical
programme for standards of conduct and
to protect whistle-blowers?
4. Outline a strategy for communicating
with various stakeholder groups during a
crisis.
5. Discuss various behaviours/events/incidents in your workplace that could
potentially harm the reputation of your
company. Suggest ways in which to deal
with these situations.

Bibliography
B E R N S T E I N , J.

2002a. ‘Crisis management and
the law’. Available at www.bernsteincom.com/
docs/gemplers020927.html.
B E R N S T E I N , J . 2002b. ‘The ten steps of crisis
communications’. Available at www.bernsteincom.com/docs/10steps.html.
B E R N S T E I N , J . 2002c. Powerlines Newsletter, No.
36 (28 February 2002).
B E R N S T E I N , J . 2002d. Powerlines Newsletter, No.
38 (26 September 2002).
B E R N S T E I N , J . 2002e. Powerlines Newsletter, No.
42 (8 May 2002).
B E R N S T E I N , J . 2002f. ‘Respond to crises before
they arise’. Available at
www.bernsteincom.com/docs.respond.html.
B E R N S T E I N , J . 2002g. ‘The price of complacency’.
Available at
www.bernsteincom.com/docs/priceofcomplacency.html.
B E Z U I D E N H O U T , J . 2002. ‘Lotto payout shock’.
Sunday Times (22 September 2002). Available
at www.sundaytimes.co.za/2002/09/22/news/
news01.asp.
B I N N E M A N , D . 2002a. ‘Analysis: Protecting
organisational reputation: Your role!’ Ethical
Corporation Magazine. Available at http://ethicalcorp.com/NewsTemplate.asp?IDNum=275.
B I N N E M A N , D . 2002b. ‘What is your organisation’s reputation worth to you?’ Available at
www.picsolutions.com/site/research_sub.asp?a
rtid=22.
D E WA A L , M . 2002. ‘Crisis calls — what will your
response be? Biz-community’. Available at
www.biz-community.com/Article/196/18/
1111.html.

R E P U TAT I O N M A N AG E M E N T

‘ E S TA B L I S H I N G a policy for whistleblowing’.
Available at www.managementfirst.com/
articles/whistleblowing.htm.
E T H I C A L C O R P O R AT I O N . n.d. ‘Protecting organisational reputation: Your rate’. Available at
www.ethicalcorp.com/NewsTemplate.asp?IDN
UM+275.
‘ K I N G 2 A P P L I E S TO A L L’. 2002. Succeed,
(September/October 2002).
M O L AT U D I , O . 2001. ‘Busting workplace crime’.
People Dynamics, 19(3).
P R I M E P O I N T P U B L I C R E L AT I O N S . 2002.
‘Managing the reputation — an interview
with Deon Binneman’. Available at
www.prpoint.com/INTERVIEWS/VOL_7_
2002-deon%20binneman.htm.
P U B L I C R E L AT I O N S C O M M U N I T Y O F S O U T H
AFRICA.

2002. ‘Open and frequent communication reduces fraud risk for companies’.

15

Available at www.biz-community.com/Article/
196/18/927.html.
R A N DA L L , S . 2003. ‘Emergency planning checklist’. Available at www.workforce.com/
archive/feature/22/27/72/index.php.
S C H U LT Z , H ., B AG R A I M , J ., P O TG I E T E R , T .,
V I E D G E , C . & W E R N E R , A . 2003.
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S O LO M O N , C . M . 1994. ‘Emergency plans begin
with the basics’. Available at
www.workforce.com/archive/feature/22/20/52/
223331.php.

Websites
Corporate reputation: www.bm.com/insights;
http://www.corp_rep.html
Media Reputation Index (Mri): www.reputationmeasurement.htm

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