
Reputation is important to all of us. Reputations at Stake provides evidence-based and engaging examples that reveal a compelling story about the phenomenon of reputation. Organisations cannot ignore reputation because it impacts the sales of its products or services, its share price if publicly listed, and the types of employees it can attract and retain. Reputation is relevant for governments and politicians because it influences public perceptions and voting. It also relates to us at an individual level and impacts on how we can operate and integrate within our home, work, and social lives. Reputation is not merely a macro-level strategic issue (e.g., for governments, corporations, or charities), a meso-level intermediation issue (e.g., for mass media, social media, and PR agencies) or a micro-level operational issue (e.g., for leaders, managers, or employees), but it is a multi-scale phenomenon that impacts everyone. The multiple ways that different and often conflicting reputations are playing out are articulated through research and examples, from the British royal family, libraries during lockdown, the world of influencers, Rio Tinto in Madagascar, white collar inmates in a US Federal Prison, and companies including BP, VW, and McKinsey & Company.
How does reputation function as a multi-scale phenomenon that influences outcomes for individuals, organizations, and governments? William S. Harvey, a scholar specializing in reputation and leadership, synthesizes academic research with real-world case studies to demonstrate that reputation is not a static asset but a dynamic, multi-layered force. The book argues that reputation operates simultaneously across macro, meso, and micro levels, requiring a sophisticated understanding of how perceptions are formed, managed, and challenged in diverse environments.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a comprehensive examination of reputation as a complex, multi-dimensional social construct. Readers frequently note the balance between rigorous academic research and accessible, illustrative examples that clarify the mechanics of reputation in modern society.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2023-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192886541
ISBN-13:
9780192886545
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