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 Leading through the mists of uncertainty can feel formidable; yet, it unveils a chance to display resilience, adaptability, and visionary leadership. Here are a tapestry of strategies to amplify your prowess in traversing unpredictable realms: Embrace Flexibility and Adaptability Stay Agile: Nurture a malleable work atmosphere that empowers teams to swiftly shift and respond to emerging insights and changing tides. Iterative Planning: Break down long-term visions into smaller, manageable milestones that can be recalibrated as needed, allowing for continual reassessment and evolution. Communicate Transparently Honest Updates: Keep your team apprised of the current landscape, even when the news is less than favorable. Transparency begets trust and ensures collective alignment. Open Dialogue: Foster a space where team members feel emboldened to express their concerns and ideas, enriching insights and uplifting morale. Focus on What You Can Control Identify Priorities: Direct your ene...

The World's Most Reputable Companies In 2017

For the second year in a row, Rolex has topped the list of the most reputable companies on the planet. The Swiss watchmaker’s retention of the top position comes on the back of strong scores in various categories but most remarkably in the perception of its performance, and products and services.
The ranking, which highlights the top 100 most reputable companies based on feedback collected from some 170,000 respondents familiar with them, is compiled annually by The Reputation Institute (RI), a reputation management consulting firm based in Boston that launched in 1997. Since its founding the firm has offered corporate clients strategies and insights into how they might gauge and improve their reputation among customers in various markets.


RI records companies’ scores using its proprietary RepTrak Pulse measurement system, tracking company perception in seven categories: products & services, innovation, workplace, governance, citizenship, leadership and performance. This latest ranking is based on surveys collected in Q1See above for a slideshow of the top 15 and scroll to the end of this post for the full list of 100.
Why does perception matter to global companies? According to RI, reputation drives business. The higher the score a firm receives, the more likely its products are to be purchased or recommended. Respondents also said they would be more likely to say positive things about or even work for a given firm.
Rolex’s result this year marks the first time a top-ranked company has recorded an overall excellent score, or a score of over 80 points (Rolex scored 80.38). Respondents perceive the Geneva-based firm as having high-quality products that it stands behind that meet customers’ needs. Respondents also see the company as being well-organized and profitable.
Other top performers in this year’s ranking include Lego, which jumped up to second place from the sixth position last year. Aside from being a well-known, internationally operating toy company with one foot in play and another in education, the firm has in recent years ventured out to produce films based on its wares. That sojourn into entertainment has driven the perception that it is a cutting edge digital player. It performed strongest in the products and services category this year, ending with an overall RepTrak Pulse score of 79.46.
In the third spot we find The Walt Disney Company, down one place from last year. The entertainment firm made the biggest impression on respondents’ perceptions in the performance category, showing that people believe the company to be profitable. It received an overall score of 79.19.
Some of the biggest movers on this year’s list include ABInBev, the world’s largest beer company with brands like Budweiser, Corona and Becks. The company jumped 4.5 points and landed at 72nd place. Bosch climbed 4.4 points and broke into the top-10, nestled in sixth place, right behind Google.

The two farthest-fallers, point-wise, are Samsung and Daimler. Samsung’s dip, which landed it in 70th place, is due in no small measure to the fallout from its Galaxy Note 7 crisis—a mobile phone with a tendency to explode. It could have been worse for Samsung had it not accrued so much goodwill among consumers in prior years.

Daimler’s star dimmed thanks to an investigation into its emissions certification process.  In the auto industry in general, several non-luxury brands saw an increase in scores. Toyota, Honda, Ford, Renault, GM and even VW – climbing back from its emissions scandal – showed improvements over last year. Luxury brands Daimler and BMW group fell a few points. BMW’s brand carries with it the perception of great products and innovation. But that’s not everything, says Stephen Hahn-Griffiths, RI’s managing director in North America. “It’s a brand that has relied on innovation and performance, but is fast coming to the realization that focusing on corporate social responsibility is equally if not more important.”
But performance, products, proper corporate governance and citizenship are only part of the battle to changing the public’s perception. The other part of the equation is communicating those high-points. RI found that companies at the top of the list, in general, tend to understand this. Rolex, Lego and Disney all place emphasis on expressing what they stand for and touting, in one way or another, their virtues. All prioritize communication, all provide information on their activities and all seem to welcome discussions about what they’re up to.
And why shouldn’t they? How they are perceived depends on it. And business, in large measure, depends on perception.
Rank     Company             RepTrak Pulse Score
1Rolex80.38
2LEGO Group79.46
3The Walt Disney Company79.19
4Canon78.28
5Google78.22
6Bosch78.13
7Sony77.74
8Intel77.74
9Rolls-Royce Aerospace77.66
10Adidas77.27
11Microsoft77.12
12BMW Group76.93
13Michelin76.75
14Levi Strauss & Co.76.70
15Nike, Inc.75.74
16Nintendo75.72
17Ferrero75.45
18Amazon.com75.33
19IBM75.29
20Apple74.94
21Philips Electronics74.94
223M74.82
23Barilla74.74
24Cisco Systems74.72
25Colgate-Palmolive74.64
26Visa74.54
27Daimler74.52
28Giorgio Armani74.44
29Goodyear74.40
30Bridgestone74.12
31Mastercard74.12
32Pirelli74.11
33Caterpillar74.06
34Toyota73.98
35Panasonic73.88
36HP Inc.73.73
37The Estée Lauder Companies73.71
38Danone73.54
39BBC73.50
40Netflix73.35
41Whirlpool73.30
42Emirates73.29
43Hugo Boss73.27
44Johnson & Johnson73.27
45Ralph Lauren Corporation73.20
46L'Oréal73.18
47Siemens73.14
48Honda Motor73.13
49Boeing73.02
50Hilton Worldwide73.00
51Airbus72.96
52The Kraft Heinz Company72.90
53DHL72.85
54Nestlé72.63
55FedEx72.59
56British Airways72.59
57Kellogg's72.48
58IKEA Group72.46
59Heineken72.41
60Fujifilm72.32
61Procter & Gamble72.30
62Hershey Company72.28
63LG Corporation72.05
64Oracle71.90
65SAP71.86
66Campbell Soup Company71.86
67Xerox71.67
68Dell71.60
69Ford71.42
70Samsung Electronics70.98
71General Electric70.98
72Anheuser-Busch InBev70.90
73Electrolux70.87
74Unilever70.84
75Toshiba70.74
76Nokia70.71
77Air France-KLM70.63
78Virgin Group70.62
79UPS70.61
80Nissan Motor69.95
81Hitachi69.95
82The Coca-Cola Company69.53
83eBay69.30
84Bacardi69.22
85PSA Peugeot-Citroën69.15
86LinkedIn68.82
87Groupe Renault68.71
88Sharp68.65
89American Express68.36
90Fujitsu68.14
91Ericsson67.99
92Zara67.76
93PepsiCo67.71
94ING67.46
95Starbucks Coffee Company67.36
96General Motors67.28
97Delta Air Lines67.11
98FCA (Fiat Chrysler Automobiles)66.58
99Hyundai66.12
100Volkswagen64.73
by Forbes

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