Trust in Business on Upswing

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Thu Jul 30, 2009 7:00am EDT

Trust in Business up 12 Points in United States, 11 Points in France




NEW YORK, July 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Trust in business has stabilized and is
recovering significantly in some of the world's largest markets. Nearly
one-half of informed publics (48%) in the United States trust business to do
what is right, up from a low of 36% in January. France saw an 11-point jump,
from 30% to 41%, according to a six-country midyear Edelman Trust Barometer.
Previous results, released in January 2009, showed a devastating loss in trust
in the private sector. Trust in government is also on the ascent, with a
12-point increase in the U.S. (30% to 42%) and a 13-point jump in India (42%
to 55%).  

"Trust in business is on the way back, but we're still in the middle of the
game," said Richard Edelman, president and CEO, Edelman. In the United States,
only 30% describe the overall reputation of large multinational corporations
as either good or excellent, compared with 52% who describe it as fair or
poor. The numbers are similar (22% and 55%, respectively) for the U.K.,
France, and Germany combined.     

"Expectation of business has expanded, supplanting Milton Friedman's famous
1970's assertion that the social responsibility of business is to increase
profits," said Mr. Edelman. "It's a stakeholder, not a shareholder, world."
The most important stakeholders are customers (70%), followed by employees
(58%) and investors (49%), the survey found.

 "Trust in business and trust in government are now moving synchronously,
unlike previous years where they tended to move in opposing directions. The
expectation today is for these two institutions to work collaboratively to
tackle economic and societal challenges," said Mr. Edelman. Fifty-five percent
(55%) say business hasn't done enough to cooperate with government to solve
the global economic crisis while far fewer (38%) say the same about
government.

Informed publics attribute increased trust in business to tangible actions
that companies have taken in the past six months, giving the highest marks to
repaying bailout money (81%), reducing CEO pay (80%), and firing
non-performing management teams (78%). When asked what companies could do to
rebuild trust in the long run, survey respondents put a mix of "hard and soft
power" items at the top the list: treating employees well (94%), having
transparent business practices (93%), and communicating frequently and
honestly (91%) -- along with maintaining quality products and services (93%),
all of which far surpass increasing shareholder value (66%).   

 "The data indicate that business wins when it takes on the big societal
challenges and engages in private sector diplomacy," said Neal Flieger, chair
of StrategyOne, the research firm that conducted the survey. Informed publics
place great importance on business's commitment to finding solutions for
global issues like global warming, energy costs, and access to affordable
healthcare but say business has not done enough to create solutions for these
causes (71%, 70%, and 64%, respectively). 

India and China are the most positive about business. At 75%, India recorded
the highest level of trust in business of any of the six countries surveyed.
China followed with 60% saying they trust business to do what is right. "The
private sector is perceived as enabling an economic growth that has led to
healthier living standards. The survey numbers reflect a high degree of
national pride in the accomplishments of business," said Alan VanderMolen,
president, Asia Pacific, Edelman.  

In China and India, 96% and 81% of informed publics, respectively, say their
country is headed in the right direction, compared with 47% of Americans and
Germans, 37% of British, and 31% of French. In another marked contrast to the
West, nearly seven out of 10 informed publics in India and China rate the
reputation of large multinational corporations as good or excellent, compared
with 30% of Americans, 29% of Germans, 24% of French, and 13% of British.  

After a sharp decline in January 2009, trust among the younger population of
25- to 34-year-olds rebounded. In the United States, 58% in this age group say
they trust business to do what's right--up by 26 points and nearly back to its
high of 60% in January 2008. Germany also saw a rise among this age group,
with a 16-point increase in six months.

Trust in all the major industries routinely surveyed in the Barometer went up
across the six countries, with technology now 15 points ahead of the next most
trusted industry--biotech/life sciences. Eighty-nine percent (89%) of informed
publics said they would trust companies that drive better innovation by
investing in research and development. Troubled sectors such as banks,
automotive, and insurance stabilized in the period. In China and India, banks
are the No. 2 most trusted industry. In the U.S., trust in every industry
experienced double-digit growth, except technology, which was already high but
climbed another eight points (from 72% to 80%). Trust in the pharmaceutical
and auto industries each jumped by 14 points, from 39% to 53% and from 32% to
46%, respectively.

In a recessionary time, cost is only a marginally more important factor than
trust in determining people's product choices, with 53% saying that in the
past six months they switched brands for a lower cost and 45% saying they
switched because they lost trust. "Trust is now a tangible in both corporate
reputation and product marketing," said Mr. Edelman.

Follow the midyear Trust conversation at twitter.com/Edelman_Trust and through
#edeltrust.

About the Edelman Trust Barometer 
The 2009 Midyear Edelman Trust Barometer is an abridged version of the firm's
annual trust and credibility survey. The survey was conducted by research firm
StrategyOne and consisted of 15-minute telephone interviews using the fielding
services of World One from May 26 to July 3, 2009. The survey sampled 1,675
informed publics in two age groups (25-34 and 35-64) in six countries: the
United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, India, and China. All
informed publics met the following criteria: college-educated; household
income in the top quartile for their age in their country; read or watch
business/news media at least several times a week; and follow public policy
issues in the news at least several times a week.

About Edelman  
Edelman is the world's leading independent public relations firm, with 3,200
employees in 51 offices worldwide. Edelman was named PRWeek's "2009 Agency of
the Year," PRWeek's "Large Agency of the Year" (for the third time in the last
four years), and Holmes Report's "2009 Best Large Agency to Work For" and was
listed as a top-10 firm by Advertising Age in 2007 and 2008. Edelman owns
specialty firms Blue (advertising), StrategyOne (research), and BioScience
Communications (medical education and publishing). Visit
http://www.edelman.com for more information.


SOURCE  Edelman

Latraviette Smith, +1-212-704-4530, latraviette.smith@edelman.com
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