Top 100 Most Visible Companies Ranked

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    The Harris Poll released its 17th annual Reputation Quotient® (RQ®) Summary Report, revealing corporate reputation ratings for the 100 most visible companies in the U.S., as perceived by the general public. Amazon reclaimed the top spot, marking the eighth consecutive year the online retailer has ranked in the top ten, while Volkswagen Group dropped to the bottom.

    The top ten companies for corporate reputation in 2016 are (in order): Amazon, Apple, Google, USAA, The Walt Disney Company, Publix Super Markets, Samsung, Berkshire Hathaway, Johnson & Johnson, and Kellogg Company. USAA and Kellogg Company are newcomers to the RQ top ten, while Berkshire Hathaway returns to the top ten for the first time since 2008 and The Walt Disney Company returns after slipping to #12 in 2015. The Harris Poll 2016 Reputation Quotient Summary Report can be found at www.theharrispoll.com/reputation-quotient.

    “Best-in-class companies demonstrate that corporate reputation matters – to your customers, employees, potential hires, business partners and investors,” said Sarah Simmons, senior reputation consultant at Nielsen, which owns The Harris Poll. “Not only does it matter, but corporate reputation is critically important to measure and understand in the context of your company’s business goals. A positive reputation can provide competitive advantages and help your company achieve its objectives while a poor one can obstruct your ability to execute against your business plan.”

    The RQ, an important baseline for managing reputation and identifying new market risks and opportunities, measures companies’ reputation strength based on the perceptions of more than 23,000 Americans across 20 attributes classified into six corporate reputation dimensions: Social Responsibility, Emotional Appeal, Products and Services, Vision and Leadership, Financial Performance, and Workplace Environment. The reputations of the 100 most visible U.S. companies range from “excellent” (scores of 80+) to “very poor “(scores of 50 to 54). In this year’s study, the top nine companies earned “excellent” scores and 35 companies received “very good” scores.


    Most Prominent Declines
    In light of its recent emissions scandal, Volkswagen Group declined steeply, dropping 20.5 points overall from a “very good” (75.21) score in 2015[1] to a “very poor” (54.75) rating in 2016. The only company to receive a “very poor” RQ rating this year, Volkswagen Group also fell more than 25 points on Emotional Appeal (includes attributes of trust, admiration and respect) and 20 points on Social Responsibility (includes attributes of environmental and community responsibility).
    CVS (-5.0) and Starbucks (-4.6) also experienced declines, dropping from “very good” to “good” ratings. JCPenney, which showed the largest RQ increase in 2015, fell four points to a “poor” RQ score.

    Opinion Elites = Information Seekers and Proactive Influencers
    Each company in the RQ study was also rated by Opinion Elites, a sub-segment of the general public who are more informed, more engaged and more involved in current issues. Because of this interest, Opinion Elites tend to exert influence over the general public. UPS, Costco, Meijer, The Coca-Cola Company, and BMW have a better reputation among Opinion Elites than the general public and all appear on the Opinion Elites’ top ten. USAA, The Walt Disney Company, Publix Super Markets, Samsung and Johnson & Johnson — companies on the general public’s top ten list — do not appear on the Opinion Elites’ top ten.

    “Eighty percent of the companies in the RQ study have a better reputation with Opinion Elites than among the general public,” said Simmons. “Companies that have a lower RQ rating with Opinion Elites than with the general public have had significant and high-profile reputational issues in recent times, reinforcing the lesson that having a plan and managing communications with this highly influential audience is essential.”
    The Harris Poll 2016 Reputation Quotient Top Ten

    General Public

    Opinion Elites

    1. Amazon

    1. Apple

    2. Apple

    2. Amazon

    3. Google

    3. Google

    4. USAA

    4. Kellogg Company

    5. The Walt Disney Company

    5. UPS

    6. Publix Super Markets, Inc.

    6. Costco

    7. Samsung

    7. Meijer

    8. Berkshire Hathaway

    8. The Coca-Cola Company

    9. Johnson & Johnson

    9. Berkshire Hathaway

    10. Kellogg Company

    10. BMW

    Companies that have a lower RQ score with Opinion Elites than the general public include: Hobby Lobby, Halliburton, Bank of America and Walmart.

    Consumers are Doing their Homework
    According to the RQ study, nearly three-fourths (72%) of Opinion Elites say they investigate corporate behavior before buying, while more than half (53%) of the general public indicated they proactively seek information about the companies they do business with. Fifty-seven percent of Opinion Elites say they’ve decided not to do business with a company because of something they learned about how it conducts itself while more than one-third (37%) of the general public indicated the same.

    “Corporate America take note: the majority of U.S. consumers are seeking information about your practices, and in some cases, rejecting companies they interact with because of what they learn,” said Simmons. “Putting muscle behind messages that support your reputational equity with the public has never been more important.”

    Most Damaging, Least Damaging Scenarios to Corporate Reputation
    According to Harris Poll’s report, the biggest risks to corporate reputation are lying or misrepresenting facts about a product or service, or intentional wrongdoing or illegal actions by corporate leaders; both scenarios were cited by 80 percent of Americans surveyed. Other risks to reputation damage include security or data breaches (74%), product recalls due to contamination that may cause illness (66%) and unfair workplace conditions and culture (64%).

    Twenty-five percent of Americans say that employee strikes or work stoppages are “not at all damaging” or “not very damaging” to corporate reputation. Other scenarios that are less damaging include employee conduct (20%), a product recall due to technical or equipment failure (15%), negative financial news about the company (12%) and safety-related product recalls (11%).

    Methodology
    The 2016 Harris Poll Reputation Quotient was conducted online in English, among more than 23,000 U.S. respondents from November 13 – December 24, 2015, with preliminary nominating waves of research conducted among 4,078 respondents from September 8 -10 and October 6 – 8, 2015. The Annual RQ study begins with a Nomination Phase, which is used to identify the companies with the most “visible” reputations. All respondents are asked, unaided, to name companies that stand out as having the best and worst reputations.

    Online nominations are summed to create a total number of nominations for each company. The final list of the 100 most visible companies in the U.S. is measured in the RQ Ratings Phase. In the ratings phase, respondents are randomly assigned to rate two of the companies with which they are “very” or “somewhat” familiar.  After the first company rating is completed, the respondent is given the option to rate the second company. Companies are rated on their reputation on 20 different attributes that comprise the Reputation Quotient instrument. The attributes are grouped into six different reputation dimensions: Emotional Appeal, Financial Performance, Products and Services, Social Responsibility, Vision and Leadership, and Workplace Environment.

    Respondents for this survey were selected from among those who have agreed to participate in Harris Poll and sample partner surveys. The data have been weighted to reflect the composition of the adult population. Because the sample is based on those who agreed to participate in an online panel, no estimates of theoretical sampling error can be calculated.

    The Harris Poll 2016 Reputation Quotient
    The Reputations of the 100 Visible Companies in the U.S. Among the General Public

    Guide to RQ Scores: 80 & above: Excellent | 75-79: Very Good | 70-74: Good | 65-69: Fair
    55-64: Poor | 50-54: Very Poor | Below 50:  Critical

     

    2016 RQ Rank

    RQ Score

    1

    Amazon.com

    83.96

    2

    Apple

    83.03

    3

    Google

    82.97

    4

    USAA

    81.27

    5

    The Walt Disney Company

    81.18

    6

    Publix Super Markets

    80.94

    7

    Samsung

    80.44

    8

    Berkshire Hathaway

    80.37

    9

    Johnson & Johnson

    80.23

    10

    Kellogg Company

    79.92

    11

    The Vanguard Group*

    79.76

    12

    FedEx Corporation

    79.60

    13

    Costco

    79.53

    14

    The Clorox Company*

    79.40

    15

    Procter & Gamble Co.

    79.39

    16

    General Mills

    79.18

    17

    Honda Motor Company

    79.16

    18

    The Coca-Cola Company

    78.96

    19

    Nestle

    78.83

    20

    Microsoft

    78.57

    21

    Meijer

    78.50

    22

    UPS*

    78.22

    23

    Chick-fil-A

    78.18

    24

    Netflix*

    77.98

    25

    The Kraft Heinz Company**

    77.94

    26

    Lowe’s

    77.65

    27

    Sony

    77.58

    28

    Nike

    77.50

    29

    Aldi

    77.49

    30

    Whirlpool Corporation

    77.23

    31

    eBay

    76.51

    32

    Best Buy

    76.46

    33

    BMW*

    76.37

    34

    Fidelity Investments

    76.26

    35

    The Kroger Company

    75.68

    36

    Southwest Airlines

    75.64

    37

    Nordstrom

    75.58

    38

    The Home Depot

    75.55

    39

    American Express

    75.53

    40

    IBM

    75.43

    41

    LG Corporation

    75.32

    42

    Kohl’s

    75.04

    43

    Yum! Brands

    75.00

    44

    Whole Foods Market

    75.00

    45

    CVS (CVS Health)

    74.88

    46

    Kaiser Permanente*

    74.83

    47

    Unilever

    74.82

    48

    Walgreens

    74.69

    49

    Target

    74.24

    50

    Ford Motor Company

    74.10

    51

    Tyson Foods*

    74.09

    52

    General Electric

    73.97

    53

    Hobby Lobby

    73.37

    54

    Hewlett-Packard Company

    72.93

    55

    The Allstate Corporation

    72.80

    56

    Dell

    72.76

    57

    State Farm Insurance

    72.73

    58

    Macy’s

    72.40

    59

    PepsiCo

    72.22

    60

    Facebook

    72.09

    61

    Discover Financial Services*

    71.67

    62

    Starbucks Corporation

    71.67

    63

    Toyota Motor Corporation

    71.50

    64

    Chipotle*

    71.00

    65

    Safeway

    70.88

    66

    United States Postal Service

    70.86

    67

    Verizon Communications

    70.30

    68

    21st Century Fox

    70.28

    69

    AT&T

    69.74

    70

    Wells Fargo & Company

    69.73

    71

    Chevron

    69.20

    72

    Walmart

    69.09

    73

    T-Mobile

    68.46

    74

    Royal Dutch Shell

    68.24

    75

    Delta Air Lines

    68.13

    76

    JPMorgan Chase & Co.

    67.93

    77

    JCPenney

    67.64

    78

    Capital One Financial Corp.*

    67.47

    79

    Burger King

    67.16

    80

    Cox Enterprises*

    67.02

    81

    General Motors

    66.27

    82

    Fiat Chrysler Automobiles

    66.07

    83

    United Airlines

    65.99

    84

    McDonald’s

    65.78

    85

    ExxonMobil

    65.42

    86

    Koch Industries

    65.32

    87

    Sprint Corporation

    65.18

    88

    Time Warner Cable**

    64.85

    89

    Citigroup

    64.80

    90

    Charter Communications

    64.78

    91

    Sears Holdings Corporation

    64.69

    92

    Bank of America

    64.26

    93

    Dish Network

    62.22

    94

    AIG

    61.15

    95

    Goldman Sachs

    60.44

    96

    Monsanto

    60.43

    97

    Comcast

    60.21

    98

    BP

    59.13

    99

    Halliburton

    56.26

    100

    Volkswagen Group*

    54.75

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