
Over half (54%)
of companies on the Accenture Competitive Agility Index
experienced a major drop in trust, resulting in the loss of $180 billion in potential revenue.
A decrease in stakeholder trust can have a substantial impact on a company’s
competitiveness, according to the research, which examined 7,000 companies in 20 industries and 4 million data points. Accenture Strategy worked with Arabesque to source data and create a new
proprietary measure of trust.
Trust can no longer be considered a “soft” issue for companies, says Bill Theofilou, senior managing director, Accenture Strategy. From product
recalls and data breaches to C-suite missteps, trust incidents present an ever-increasing risk to the financial well-being of companies, he adds.
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Today’s leaders must deliver on
their company’s promises if they want to limit the lasting impact a major trust incident can have on their competitiveness.
“Managing trust can’t be relegated to simply
addressing individual incidents with public relations,” Theofilou tells Marketing Daily. “To regain trust and also mitigate financial loss, companies need to intentionally create a
culture that builds, maintains and preserves trust—so that if and when a trust incident does occur, impact is minimized.”
Being transparent about a trust incident with all key
stakeholders—from employees, to customers, suppliers, investors, analysts and the media—is critical after such a problem occurs, he says.
“Companies also need to immediately
develop and communicate a clear, actionable strategy for how they plan to address the incident, maintain frequent communications on progress with all key stakeholders—and follow through on
it,” Theofilou says.
According to the research, when a company faces a material loss of trust among its key stakeholders, the result is a drop in that company’s Index score by two
points on average across industries. Every one-point drop in an Index score equals a negative impact on revenue growth by 3% and EBITDA by 5%, on average across all industries.
“Across
industries, our research proves that those companies who prioritize stakeholder trust as part of their competitive strategy are much better positioned to weather trust incidents,” Theofilou
says. “Companies must bake trust into their DNA, strategy, and day-to-day operations so they can shield against financial impact if and when an event does strike.”
While it can be
nearly impossible to prevent trust incidents completely, companies can prepare by having a strategy that balances growth, profitability, sustainability and trust, he says.
“And
when an incident does strike, this balanced strategy helps minimize its impact," Theofilou says.