Microsoft Jumps to No. 1 in National Corporate Reputation
Survey
Johnson & Johnson is No. 2 and 3M ranks No.3, according to
the Annual RQ 2006 by Harris Interactive
ROCHESTER, N.Y. – February 1, 2007 – The Annual RQ 2006 study
conducted by Harris Interactive® measures the corporate reputations
of the most visible companies in the United States. According to this year’s Annual
RQSM survey, Microsoft jumps seven places over last year to rank
No. 1 with a Reputation Quotient® (RQSM) score of
80.74. Johnson & Johnson ranks second with an RQ score of 80.44, and 3M
ranks third, with an RQ score of 80.09.
The Wall Street Journal published these results in its feature
article "How Boss’s Deeds Buff Firm’s Reputation" on
January 31, 2007 and included the list of the "60 Most Visible
Companies" in the United States. The study, conducted by the Harris
Interactive Brand and Strategy Consulting Group, evaluates companies along six
key dimensions that comprise a company’s corporate reputation: vision and
leadership, social responsibility, emotional appeal, products and services,
workplace environment and financial performance.
This year, the Annual RQ further examined some subgroups of the general
public – in particular influentials* and general investors*–
to determine their views of corporate reputation. The research demonstrates that
influentials’ view of corporation reputation and which companies are excelling
and which are not differs from the overall results. The company rankings, based
only on influentials’ scores would have shifted the rankings to Microsoft
remaining at number one, but followed by the 3M Company, General Mills, Johnson
& Johnson, Google, UPS, Amazon.com, Whole Foods, Coca-Cola and Toyota in the
top ten. Influentials tend to be more pessimistic about the state of corporate
reputation today with 53 percent saying it has declined versus 44 percent of the
non-influentials saying the same.
The rankings by general investors alone would have been very different as
well. General Mills would be number one, followed by Google, 3M, Toyota,
Microsoft, J&J, P&G, Coca-Cola, Intel and UPS.
According to Robert Fronk, Senior Vice President for the Brand and Strategy
Consulting Group at Harris Interactive, "Sixty-nine percent of respondents
rated the reputation of corporate America as ‘not good’ or ‘terrible’.
This context makes the significant RQ score increases among companies like
Merck, Royal Dutch Shell, AT&T, Apple, Microsoft, 3M and others that much
more impressive. Corporations today need to measure, understand and holistically
manage their corporate reputation and leverage it as an asset. Those who do,
find that ratings and rankings take care of themselves."
"In the case of Microsoft, we find a company that, while always scoring
well in our annual study, there were certainly perceptual challenges regarding
elements of its reputation," Fronk continued. "By focusing on the root
causes of these perceptions and not just imagery or messaging, they were able to
achieve higher levels of credibility with the general public. These types of
perception shifts are not accidental and the value is nearly immeasurable."
For complete results to this study and previous RQ studies, go to
www.harrisinteractive.com/rq.
Annual RQ 2006 Corporate Reputation Scores for the 60 Most
Visible Companies
Base: All Adults
|
Rank in 2006 |
Company |
RQ Score 2006 |
RQ Score 2005 |
|
1 |
Microsoft Corporation |
80.74 |
78.11 |
|
2 |
Johnson & Johnson |
80.44 |
80.56 |
|
3 |
3M Company |
80.09 |
78.78 |
|
4 |
Google |
79.81 |
79.52 |
|
5 |
The Coca-Cola Company |
79.52 |
79.69 |
|
6 |
General Mills |
79.38 |
78.03 |
|
7 |
United Parcel Service (UPS) |
79.07 |
79.37 |
|
8 |
Sony Corporation |
78.58 |
78.75 |
|
9 |
Toyota Motor Corporation |
78.14 |
77.27 |
|
10 |
The Procter & Gamble Company |
77.99 |
75.91 |
|
11 |
Amazon.com, Inc. |
77.66 |
NA |
|
12 |
Whole Foods Market |
77.58 |
NA |
|
13 |
The Walt Disney Company |
77.49 |
75.88 |
|
14 |
Honda Motor Co. |
77.26 |
75.60 |
|
15 |
FedEx Corporation |
76.69 |
77.79 |
|
16 |
Intel Corporation |
76.36 |
77.27 |
|
17 |
Lowe's |
75.86 |
NA |
|
18 |
Home Depot |
75.34 |
76.50 |
|
19 |
General Electric Company |
75.25 |
73.39 |
|
20 |
Costco |
75.14 |
74.03 |
|
21 |
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. |
74.68 |
NA |
|
22 |
Apple Computer |
74.59 |
70.59 |
|
23 |
Dell, Inc. |
74.22 |
75.73 |
|
24 |
PepsiCo |
73.88 |
75.26 |
|
25 |
Nike |
73.73 |
72.11 |
|
26 |
IBM Corporation |
73.56 |
73.42 |
|
27 |
The Boeing Company |
73.52 |
73.10 |
|
28 |
Starbucks Corporation |
73.25 |
72.93 |
|
29 |
Southwest Airlines |
72.92 |
73.21 |
|
30 |
Target Corporation |
72.64 |
71.83 |
|
31 |
Nordstrom |
71.97 |
NA |
|
32 |
Best Buy Co. |
71.93 |
69.74 |
|
33 |
Unilever |
71.74 |
70.28 |
|
34 |
American Express Company |
71.48 |
NA |
|
35 |
J.C. Penney Company |
71.45 |
68.81 |
|
36 |
Wells Fargo & Company |
69.81 |
NA |
|
37 |
Verizon Communications |
69.43 |
67.01 |
|
38 |
Hewlett-Packard |
69.14 |
69.44 |
|
39 |
Merck |
69.01 |
64.07 |
|
40 |
Wal-Mart Stores |
68.28 |
69.99 |
|
41 |
Sears Holdings Corporation |
67.64 |
65.26 |
|
42 |
State Farm Insurance |
67.55 |
NA |
|
43 |
Bank of America Corporation |
67.55 |
66.00 |
|
44 |
SBC Communications |
66.83 |
66.67 |
|
45 |
Citigroup Incorporated |
66.69 |
65.00 |
|
46 |
AT&T Inc. |
66.60 |
62.37 |
|
47 |
McDonald's |
66.43 |
66.83 |
|
48 |
Time Warner, Inc. |
65.57 |
63.85 |
|
49 |
DaimlerChrysler |
65.22 |
64.47 |
|
50 |
Royal Dutch/Shell |
64.22 |
59.45 |
|
51 |
Allstate Corporation |
64.16 |
65.82 |
|
52 |
BP |
63.97 |
NA |
|
53 |
Chevron Corporation |
63.42 |
62.46 |
|
54 |
Sprint Corporation |
62.88 |
61.01 |
|
55 |
Ford Motor Company |
62.74 |
66.14 |
|
56 |
Altria Group |
62.58 |
61.62 |
|
57 |
General Motors Corporation |
62.50 |
66.07 |
|
58 |
Comcast Corporation |
61.49 |
62.08 |
|
59 |
ExxonMobil Corporation |
60.65 |
59.57 |
|
60 |
Halliburton Company |
52.48 |
52.22 |
Methodology
The Harris Interactive® corporate reputation study was carried
out in two phases: a nominations phase, which occurred in July and August, 2006
and a ratings phase, which occurred from September 21 to October 23, 2006.
In the nominations phase, Harris Interactive conducted 7,886 interviews
throughout the U.S. using a combined online and telephone methodology. The
online respondents were randomly selected from the Harris Interactive online
panel of multimillion members. All respondents were asked to nominate two
companies that they feel have the best reputations overall and two companies
that they feel have the worst reputations overall. Nominations were open-ended
and all responses were tallied, placing subsidiaries and brand names within the
parent company.
By totaling the mentions for best and worst companies provided during the
nominations phase, Harris Interactive identified the list of 60 most visible
companies in the U.S. to be measured in the ratings phase.
In the ratings phase, 22,480 respondents were randomly selected to complete a
detailed rating of one or two companies with which they were "very or
somewhat familiar." All interviews were conducted online. Respondents rated
companies on 20 attributes in six key dimensions which comprise the Harris
Reputation QuotientSM (RQ) including, products and services,
financial performance, workplace environment, social responsibility, vision and
leadership, and emotional appeal. After the first company rating was completed,
the respondent was given the option to rate a second company.
Each of the 60 companies was rated by at least 279 people; the average number
of respondents per company was 596. All data were weighted to be representative
of the U.S. adult (aged 18 and over) population. Weighting variables for this
study included demographic variables (i.e., age, sex, education, race,
ethnicity, household income and region), and some nondemographic variables to
project findings to the U.S. adult population.
Finally, reputation quotient (RQ) figures were calculated for each company to
determine the rankings. Each company's RQ is based on the respondents' ratings
of each company on the 20 attributes. RQ scores are calculated by summing the
ratings on the individual RQ attributes, dividing by the total possible score
(i.e., 7 x the total number of attributes answered) and multiplying by 100. The
highest possible score is 100. In comparing any two RQ scores, a T-test was used
to determine statistically significant differences at a confidence level of 95%.
*Respondents qualified as influential if either of the following were
true: they are very knowledgeable or somewhat knowledgeable of the company they
were rating AND consider themselves very informed or informed of the company
they were rating AND have voted in the last Presidential election. OR the have
participated in at least three of the following advocacy activities:
- Written or called any politician at the state, local, or national level
- Attended a political rally, speech, or organized a protest of any kind
- Attended a public meeting on town or school affairs
- Held or run for a public office
- Served on a committee for some local organization
- Served as an officer for some club or organization
- Written a letter to the Editor of a newspaper or magazine or called a live
radio or TV show to express an opinion
- Signed a petition
- Worked for a political party
- Made a speech
- Written an article for a magazine or newspaper
- Been an active member of any group that tries to influence public policy
or government
To be considered a general investor a respondent must have long-term
financial services investments other than simply a 401(k).
About Harris Interactive
Harris Interactive is the 12th largest and fastest-growing market
research firm in the world. The company provides innovative research, insights
and strategic advice to help its clients make more confident decisions which
lead to measurable and enduring improvements in performance. Harris Interactive
is widely known for The Harris Poll, one of the longest running,
independent opinion polls and for pioneering online market research methods. The
company has built what it believes to be the world’s largest panel of survey
respondents, the Harris Poll Online. Harris Interactive serves clients worldwide
through its United States, Europe and Asia offices, its wholly-owned subsidiary
Novatris in France and through a global network of independent market research
firms. The service bureau, HISB, provides its market research industry clients
with mixed-mode data collection, panel development services as well as
syndicated and tracking research consultation. More information about Harris
Interactive may be obtained at www.harrisinteractive.com.
Press Contact:
Nancy Wong
Harris Interactive
585-214-7316
|