The Risk Few Companies Know How To Measure

Reputation may not appear on a balance sheet, but its impact is felt in customer loyalty, employee trust, investor confidence, and crisis resilience.

For something that cannot be found on a balance sheet, reputation occupies a surprising amount of space in the minds of business leaders.

Ask any chief executive what keeps them awake at night, and reputation will almost always make the list. It sits alongside cybersecurity threats, regulatory changes, supply chain disruptions, economic uncertainty, and increasingly, artificial intelligence. Yet when global professional services firm Aon released its study, “Damage to Reputation or Brand: A Critical Risk,” one finding stood out. While organizations consistently rank reputation among their most important risks, only a small minority have actually attempted to quantify their exposure to it.

That finding should give business leaders pause.

Many companies know reputation matters. Far fewer know how to measure it, monitor it, or manage it with the same discipline they apply to finance, operations, or compliance. Reputation remains one of the most discussed assets in business and one of the least understood.

Part of the problem is that reputation is often mistaken for communications.

When organizations discuss reputation, the conversation quickly turns to media coverage, public relations campaigns, social media engagement, and crisis statements. Those things matter. They are simply not where reputation is built. Communications can amplify reputation, but it cannot create trust where none exists.

A company’s reputation is formed by thousands of decisions made across the organization. Customers experience it through service quality. Employees experience it through workplace culture. Investors experience it through governance and transparency. Regulators experience it through compliance. Communities experience it through corporate behavior. By the time a communications team is asked to defend a reputation, the factors shaping public perception have often been accumulating for years.

This is why reputational crises are rarely about a single incident.

Take the case of service disruptions. Whether involving an airline, a bank, a telecommunications provider or a utility company, public reaction is often shaped less by the event itself than by what people already believe about the organization. A delayed flight, a system outage, or a customer complaint does not automatically become a reputational crisis. What determines the outcome is whether stakeholders see the incident as an exception or as evidence of a deeper pattern.

The same dynamic plays out in the Philippines. Product recalls, data privacy breaches, customer complaints and regulatory investigations become reputational issues when they reinforce existing doubts about competence, transparency, or accountability. Stakeholders do not evaluate incidents in isolation. They connect them to previous experiences and perceptions.

This helps explain why some companies emerge from crises relatively intact while others struggle to recover despite deploying similar communications strategies. Reputation functions much like organizational resilience. It absorbs shocks and creates room for recovery when mistakes occur.

Aon’s research arrives at a time when reputational risk is becoming more complex.

A decade ago, companies worried primarily about media coverage and customer complaints. Today, a reputational issue can emerge from almost anywhere. A cybersecurity breach can become a trust issue overnight. A supplier’s conduct can affect perceptions of the brands it serves. A governance concern can quickly become a shareholder concern. An employee’s social media post can trigger public scrutiny. The boundaries that once separated operational risks from reputational risks have largely disappeared.

Digital platforms have accelerated this shift. Information moves faster than investigations. Public opinion forms before official statements are released. Stakeholders no longer wait for organizations to explain what happened. They often draw their own conclusions in real time.

The instinctive response is often to focus on visibility. Companies invest heavily in content, campaigns, and digital engagement. There is nothing wrong with that. The danger lies in assuming that visibility and reputation are the same thing.

They are not.

Some of the most visible organizations in the country continue to struggle with public trust. At the same time, some of the most respected companies rarely dominate headlines. One measures awareness. The other measures confidence.

That distinction matters because stakeholder expectations continue to rise. Customers expect responsiveness. Employees expect authenticity. Investors expect governance. Regulators expect accountability. Communities expect responsible corporate behavior. Meeting those expectations requires more than a communications strategy. It requires organizational alignment.

Perhaps the most revealing aspect of the Aon study is that so few organizations have attempted to quantify reputational risk. That suggests many companies still treat reputation as an outcome rather than a capability. Yet measuring reputation requires looking at customer experience, employee sentiment, governance standards, operational performance, stakeholder trust, and crisis preparedness together rather than in separate silos.

The companies that will thrive in the years ahead are unlikely to be those with the loudest voices or the most creative campaigns. They will be the organizations that understand reputation as an enterprise-wide responsibility and manage trust with the same rigor they apply to financial performance.

There is a tendency in business to view reputation as something intangible and therefore difficult to manage. Aon’s findings challenge that assumption. Reputation may be difficult to value precisely, but its consequences are increasingly measurable. Customer loyalty, employee retention, investor confidence, regulatory relationships, and market value can all be affected by the strength of an organization’s reputation.

The lesson is straightforward. Reputation is not a communications concern waiting to be activated during a crisis. It is a business asset that must be cultivated long before a crisis occurs.

The greatest reputational risk facing many organizations is not public criticism, social media outrage, or negative headlines. It is the mistaken belief that reputation can be managed only after it has already been put at risk.

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