articleJournal of Management StudiesApr 24, 2006Closed access

Corporate Reputation and Social Performance: The Importance of Fit

University of Bath · University of Reading

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Abstract

Abstract Utilizing data on a sample of large firms, we estimate a model of corporate reputation. We find reputation, derived from the assessments of managers and market analysts, to be determined by a firm's social performance, financial performance, market risk, the extent of long‐term institutional ownership, and the nature of its business activities. Furthermore, the reputational effect of social performance is found to vary both across sectors, and within sectors across the various types of social performance. Specifically, our results demonstrate the need to achieve a ‘fit’ among the types of corporate social performance undertaken and the firm's stakeholder environment. For example, a strong record of…

Citation impact

1,057
total citations
FWCI
39.15
Percentile
100%
References
79
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Reputation
  • Business
  • Stakeholder
  • Sample (material)
  • Accounting
  • Marketing
  • Corporate social responsibility
  • Reputation management
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