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Companies are increasingly competing in a Reputation Economy —a world where value is created, less by what you make and sell, and more by what you stand for and how you behave.  That requires of corporate executives heightened sensitivity, not just to customers and investors, but to all stakeholders, their needs and expectations.  And that means learning to navigate a complex new world of emotions, perceptions, values, and conflicts.  

In his newly-released book, Wharton School Professor Witold Henisz provides a powerful introduction to the emergent discipline of “corporate diplomacy,” one that has gone largely un-taught in our business schools, and yet is at the heart of value-creation in the Reputation Economy.  With detailed case studies of corporate failures and successes in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America, in mining and construction and by the military,  Vit reveals the much-needed skills required of companies struggling to do business in a multi-stakeholder world —and the need for diplomacy and finesse in handling the vagaries of reputation management.  

Of particular interest is the framework he distills from his interviews and experiences —one that points to six all-important topics of managerial skill-building: Diligence in stakeholder mapping, Integration within the organization, Personalization of relationships, Learning from feedback, Openness in communications, and adoption of a long-term oriented Mindset.  The six skills spell out his  framework’s acronym DIPLOM —to which one could wish he had added missing -AT to round things out (sic)! Perhaps that would have led to two more chapters that would have highlighted A for the Active orientation required in stakeholder initiatives and T for the all-important TRUST needed to create and defend reputation.

All told, I enjoyed the book, and I believe Corporate Diplomacy should be must-reading for all CEOs and forward-thinking C-suite executives concerned with creating and defending the inherent value of their corporate and personal reputations in the Reputation Economy.  

 

Dr. Charles J. Fombrun

Chairman, Reputation Institute

 

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In his new book, Corporate Diplomacy: Building Reputations and Relationships with External Stakeholders, Wharton management professor Witold Henisz advises senior managers to build the capability to strategically develop their most important relationships — before it’s too late. In an interview with Wharton management professor Stephen J. Kobrin, Henisz explains how to determine who are the most important stakeholders to focus on and how to avoid the mistakes made by companies that have lost more than $100 million by failing to develop relationships with external stakeholders. To view, click here

In a world of viral digital media, external stakeholders can dramatically influence corporate reputations, dramatically impacting shareholder value. In his informative new book, Corporate Diplomacy, author Witold Henisz — Deloitte & Touche Professor of Management at The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School — outlines the competitive need for a strategic integration of stakeholder-facing functions, to create value for society as well as shareholders.

In the book, Henisz highlights six elements of corporate diplomacy. He uses a series of case studies to illustrate the challenges facing corporate stakeholder-engagement practitioners, whose value is often underappreciated, and offers helpful tools and guidance for how practitioners can bolster their influence and better communicate their value in bottom-line numbers.

The world needs corporate diplomats now, more than ever, to build the bridges needed to harness market forces that can drive systemic, positive change. Relationships do matter. Companies that excel in prioritizing the right strategic relationships and nurturing them well, will more likely win in a competitive marketplace

At Future 500 — where we practice stakeholder engagement between corporations and NGOs and the right and the left — Henisz’s book captures immense wisdom, balancing a scientific, analytical approach with an understanding of the importance of behavioral dynamics.

See full review here

We provide direct empirical evidence in support of instrumental stakeholder theory’s argument that increasing stakeholder support enhances the financial valuation of a firm, holding constant the objective valuation of the physical assets under its control. We undertake this analysis using panel data on 26 gold mines owned by 19 publicly traded firms over the period 1993–2008. We code over 50,000 stakeholder events from media reports to develop an index of the degree of stakeholder conflict/cooperation for these mines. By incorporating this index in a market capitalization analysis, we reduce the discount placed by financial markets on the net present value of the physical assets controlled by these firms from 72 percent to between 37 and 13 percent.

Access paper here

See the press coverage at Wharton@Work, Brunswick Review, Investor Relations Web ReportK@W , TriplePundit, and the PennGazette