As the media landscape looks increasingly diverse and anarchic, individuals, organisations and governments should not waste time wondering whether they have lost control of their reputations. The simple fact is that they have never had control. The question is what they can do about it now, and what they need to consider for the future.

The fragmentation of media and the rise of social media has brought brand and personal reputational risk into sharp focus like never before. Disaffected shareholders, customers and staff are voicing their opinions to a global internet audience. In a brand context, it's reputation anarchy.

In Brand Anarchy, Steve Earl and Stephen Waddington draw on insight from opinion-makers and shapers such as Greg Dyke, Alastair Campbell, Mark Thompson and Seth Godin to explore how reputations can be better managed and the new challenges that the future of media may bring.

This plain-speaking, shrewd book pulls no punches. It's a survival guide for anyone concerned what others think or say about them.



Autorentext

Stephen Waddington is also a joint Managing Director of Speed. As well as his client work, he speaks regularly at business and marketing conferences about reputational risk, media change and how brands can best change their approach to communication in order to be more successful today. He is a former technology and regional journalist.



Inhalt

About the authors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1.Corporate reputation
2. Media: traditional versus digital
3. Cutting out the middleman
4. The end of spin and the need for authentic
communication
5. The audience answers back
6. On the inside
7. Monitoring and the management of risk
8. Measuring reputation
9. Participation: the future of organisational
communication
10. Reskilling for the future
Index

Titel
Brand Anarchy
Untertitel
Managing corporate reputation
EAN
9781408159699
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
29.03.2012
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
272