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Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

All about Approaching The Future 2023: trends in reputation and intangible asset report

Approaching the Future 2023. Trends in Reputation and Intangible Asset Management is the eighth edition of this annual report, created by Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership in collaboration with CANVAS Sustainable Strategies and worldwide partner Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management. This report aims to deepen business practices and drive innovation in reputation and intangible asset management. This study was developed using a methodology that combines qualitative and quantitative techniques to explore the key trends that are driving the corporate agenda.Professionals agree that the most relevant trends are related to the raison d’être of organisations and corporate values. This result reflects an increased awareness of the strategic role of companies as social, responsible, and transformative agents in the environments in which they operate. Approaching the Future 2023 presents 10 major trends that are shaping the business agenda, offering a cross-cutting and interconnected view of all analysed trends: Sustainability and ESG integrated into business models Responsible leadership for social cohesion Corporate reputation: a strategic priority Corporate communication in the face of new challenges Technology as a transformative lever for organisations Corporate purpose at the heart of business strategy The era of hybrid and flexible work The role of the corporate brand in contexts marked by uncertainty and constant change Corporate governance and the role of the board of directors in ESG management Last call to respond to the climate emergencyExecutive summary, video launch and top learning points are available under free access. Full report required a Reputation Knowledge Centre+ access.Impact and effects of these trends will be presented at WPRF 2023 in Chennai.Write us if you need further info. > Here you can find all the materials of the report in both Spanish and English:

Conference




13/07/2023

Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

Approaching the Future 2022 Report. Trends in Reputation and Intangible Asset Management

The biggest trends in intangible asset management: Approaching the Future 2022 is already available Society demands greater commitment from companies, and managing reputation and intangibles is now a strategic must for all businesses Close to 50% of companies are working to define and integrate purpose in their business, and four in ten are working to drive responsible leadership and improve diversity, equity, and inclusion. The 2030 Agenda has regained relevance among organisations as compared to last year, with a commitment to aligning sustainability strategies with the SDGs, while climate action and ESG investment are of less interest. The 7th edition of this annual report, produced by Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership, CANVAS Estrategias Sostenibles and Global Alliance as worldwide partner, brings together the biggest trends in intangible asset management that organisations are concerned about and working on. Madrid, June 16th, 2022. Companies play an increasingly important role in societies, and their own evolution, priorities and decisions depend to a large extent on the socio-economic context. Faced with the recent crisis and uncertainty, citizens are demanding greater involvement, commitment, and social and environmental activism from organisations, and topics such as purpose, reputation and responsible leadership are taking on unprecedented dimensions, forcing companies to integrate them into their business management strategies. This finding has been revealed in the report Approaching the Future 2022: Trends in Reputation and Intangible Asset Management, produced by Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership, CANVAS Estrategias Sostenibles and Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management.Now in its 7th edition, this study has established itself as an essential tool for analysing the biggest global trends in reputation and intangible asset management that impact the business agenda, both from the point of view of issues considered most relevant and those that organisations are working on as a priority. This year, for the first time in the entire series, there is a generalised synchrony and coherence between both perspectives: "The global trends that companies consider most important coincide with those to which they are devoting the most efforts, in an attempt to adapt their corporate reality to the new realities and challenges of the current context", says Angel Alloza, CEO at Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership.Top 5 trends being worked on the most by organisationsApproaching the Future 2022 identifies 16 global trends that are impacting the business agenda. The first of these is corporate purpose, which has been consolidated, climbing four positions as compared to 2021 and becoming not only the trend that organisations are working on the most, but also the most relevant on the map of organisational priorities. Purpose is consolidated as a key business transformation asset in a context of increasing social and regulatory expectations. As a result, almost half of organisations (48.2%) are already working on the integration of purpose in their business, compared to less than 36% in the previous edition. "There is an increasing need for an integrated vision of the value that a company brings to the world and managing the definition and activation of purpose provides that coherence, long-term vision, trust, and reputation, both within and outside of organisations. Purpose is no longer "for" stakeholders; it is something that is created "with" stakeholders, fostering the creation of a collective identity that provides meaning and a force for mass transformation towards a common goal", explains Justin Green, President and CEO at Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management.The second trend being worked on the most by companies is digitalisation. Although there has been a decrease in relevance as compared to the previous edition (from 61.4% to 48.1%), when new working and relationship models imposed by the pandemic forced companies to prioritise this trend, it is still relevant, and it has acquired a degree of consolidation. The third trend that organisations are focusing on is diversity, equity, and inclusion, which has increased in relevance the most as compared to the previous edition of the report, rising eight positions. Compared to 26.5% in 2021, in 2022, 42.8% of companies are dedicating their efforts to driving inclusive growth at a global level in order to move towards more diverse, inclusive, and equitable working environments.The fourth trend being prioritised is responsible leadership, which has increased from 25.3% to 43.3% of companies that are committed to new forms of leadership capable of providing trust and commitment to society, and of becoming drivers of transformation and generators of positive impact. Finally, the management of communication completes the Top 5 trends being worked on the most by companies, with 41.7% of organisations making progress in this area. In the last year, communication has evolved towards increasingly digital and innovative formats with the arrival of disruptive technologies such as the metaverse and advances in artificial intelligence. These technologies offer new immersive and unique experiences, as well as providing organisations with personalised information about their stakeholders. New trends: the importance of trust In the 7th edition of Approaching the Future, two new trends which have never been included in past editions have been introduced: stakeholder trust, in eighth position, and CEO reputation, which is becoming increasingly visible and recognised as a reputational platform, now ranking in fourteenth position. "Trust is an essential factor for business growth and sustainability. While trust in governments has been declining in recent years, for many citizens, companies are positioning themselves as the only trustworthy institution. Companies are aware of the opportunity this represents, and 35.5% are already working on strengthening stakeholder trust through the practice of active listening and dialogue in order to understand what matters most to them and what concerns them", highlights Clara Fontan, Director of Intelligence and Knowledge at Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership. Concern for sustainability is rising againAfter overcoming the worst of the pandemic, when companies prioritised adapting to an unknown reality (as indicated in the previous edition of this report), the 2030 Agenda, as a framework for action for sustainable development, has regained its position of relevance in the list of priorities highlighted by organisations. In fact, it has risen four places and 29.6% of organisations claim to be focusing efforts on contributing to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).However, although the public is increasingly aware that climate change is one of the greatest threats to humanity, and, according to the World Economic Forum, the failure of climate action is the risk with the greatest potential for negative impact on people and the planet, the proportion of organisations working on climate action has reduced from 25.9% in 2021 to 17.7% in 2022. Most companies have not yet set initial targets to reduce their emissions, and only 36.8% have announced plans to tackle their direct emissions or those associated with their energy consumption.Something similar occurs with sustainable and ESG investment (environmental, social and governance), which continues to grow in the biggest international markets, already representing 35.9% of total assets according to Global Sustainable Investment Alliance. Despite this fact, only 9.9% of organisations are working on investing in and attracting sustainable funding.The challenge of measuring and demonstrating business impactWhen organisations were asked about the challenges that they face in terms of implementing measures related to intangible asset management and the trends that are marking their business agenda, two aspects recurred across the board. On the one hand is the ability to measure the impact of actions taken, whether related to driving corporate purpose, responsible leadership, or reputation management. On the other is the ability to demonstrate the scope or impact that these actions have on business activities."Undoubtably, although there is still some way to go, big efforts are being made to integrate intangibles as a strategic element of business management, from the development of reputational metrics to aligning them with employee remuneration systems", explains Clara Fontan, Director of Intelligence and Knowledge at Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership.The report incorporates over 400 national and international sources and studies, a survey of over 600 professionals from 55 countries, and interviews with 9 international experts in the fields studied in this report. In addition, the report has relied on the support of worldwide partner Public Relations and Communication Management; the participation of partner and market research experts Punto de Fuga; and the Chair of Metrics and Management of Intangibles from the Centre for Applied Social Research (CISA) at the University of Malaga. It has also benefited from the expert vision of the following professionals: Aitor Jauregui, Country Head for BlackRock in Iberia (Spain, Portugal and Andorra); Andrea-Bonime Blanc, CEO GEC Risk Advisory; Farid Baddache, CEO Ksapa Sustainability; Gabriela González-Valdés, General Director at the Institute of Internal Auditors in Spain; Italo Pizzolante, Executive Chair and Founding Partner Pizzolante; José Luis Fernández, Director of the Iberdrola Chair of Economic and Business Ethics; Oriol Iglesias, Professor of Brand Management at ESADE Business School, Co-Director of the executive programme The Global CCO, and member of the think tank for brands with a conscious, Medinge Group; Perrine Bouhana, Managing Director GlobeScan; and, Silvina Bacigalupo, President Transparencia Internacional.Furthermore, the report has received support from the following collaborating entities: Association of Public Relations Professionals of Puerto Rico (ARPPR); Marketing Association of Spain; Association for Progressive Communications (APC); B Lab Spain; DCH - International Organization of Human Capital Managers; Association of Communication Directors (Dircom Spain); Association of Communication Directors (Dircom Panama); Spanish Association of Sustainability Managers (ASG), DIRSE; the Iberdrola Chair of Economic and Business Ethics (Comillas Pontifical University); ESADE Business School; Corporate Communication Forum (FOCCO); Leading Brands of Spain Forum; Máshumano Foundation; Forética; GEK Risk Advisory; GlobeScan; Institute of Internal Auditors; International Public Relations Network (IPRN); KANTAR; KPMG; Ksapa; Pizzolante institute of brands with values; Mexican Association of Public Relations Professionals (PRORP); Reputation Lab; University of Navarra - Master in Corporate Reputation (MERC); Weber Shandwick; World Compliance Association; Villafañe & Associates; and Women Action Sustainability (WAS). More information: www.approachingthefuture.com Consult here all the materials of the report.


Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

Approaching The Future 2022. Full report materials and presentations

Do you know the trends that set the business agenda in 2022?Approaching the Future 2022 is the seventh consecutive edition of a study that has established itself as an essential tool for discovering the main global trends in reputation and management of intangibles.In this new edition we observe how, after the impact of the pandemic, organizations are redefining their priorities to respond to a reality in full transformation characterized by social and economic instability generated largely by the war in Ukraine, the growing social inequality or the climate emergency.Faced with this uncertain and unstable reality, the answer seems clear: advance in the activation and implementation of the corporate purpose and in the promotion of responsible leadership. These are the two trends that lead the ranking of priorities for this edition, which act as responses to urgent challenges and the need to positively impact the environments in which it operates.What materials will you find in this package?Below you can find all the materials of both the report itself and its presentation: Full report (only available for subscription plus members) Executive Summary Trend Map Infographic Top Key Findings from the study Video teaser about trends 2022 Presentation of global results Video Launch of global resultsDo you want us to present these trends to your employees or allies?Write to us at info@corporateexcellence.org and request your personalized express session Here you can find all the materials of the report in both Spanish and English:

Conference




26/05/2022

Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

Corporate Excellence presenta junto a Global Alliance el informe “Top 15 Trends Worldwide: A Global Perspective”

90% of organizations consider that responsible leadership is strategic for their future Corporate Excellence presents, together with the Global Alliance, the report "Top 15 Trends Worldwide: A Global Perspective", which identifies the key issues for the present and future of the management of intangibles, as well as the actions that organizations are implementing to respond to these challenges. Reputation management (8.32 out of 10) and new communication models (8.18 out of 10) are among the most relevant issues and the ones that organizations worldwide are working on the most. Madrid, March 18, 2022–. Promoting more responsible leadership, adapting to the COVID-19 context, and reputation and reputational risk management are the three main trends of companies globally in intangible management, according to the report 'Top 15 Trends worldwide : a global perspective', prepared by Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership together with the Global Alliance, based on a survey of professionals and members of the confederation of associations of communication and PR managers, which brings together more than 300,000 professionals throughout the world. For Ángel Alloza, CEO of Corporate Excellence – Center for Reputation Leadership, “reputation management and intangibles such as sustainability or the brand have gained notoriety in companies due to the impact that the pandemic has had on the economy, which in many cases, it has accelerated their integration into the business, in addition to promoting a more human leadership on a global level that takes into account the social and environmental impact of companies, as stated in the report 'Top 15 Trends worldwide: a global perspective'. 90% of professionals consider it "relevant" or "very relevant" to move towards a more responsible leadership, which remains at the same level of priority and increases by 0.3 points compared to the previous edition. For its part, adaptation to the COVID-19 context (8.44 out of 10) continues to be the second most relevant, followed by key aspects for the management of intangibles: management of reputation and reputational risks (8.32) , the new ways of working (8.28), the new communication models (8.18), the corporate purpose (8.05) and the governance of ESG issues in the boards of directors (8.01). This last aspect grows in importance, with a significant increase in the case of Europe where it becomes the second most relevant issue after leadership. The report, which has the collaboration of CANVAS Sustainable Strategies and the participation of the Global Alliance Regional Councils, places special focus on the most relevant trends in reputation, brand, sustainability, transparency and ethics, and is presented as a practical and essential for making informed decisions. Areas in which organizations are working the most In relation to the areas in which organizations are working the most, adaptation to the social and economic context (60%) along with digitization (47%) emerges as the main focus. The new communication models are a priority for 41% of the companies and it is worth noting that there is an increase in companies that focus their efforts on managing reputation and reputational risks, going from 33.7% in the previous edition to 40% this year. In fifth place, professionals are focusing on defining and activating the corporate purpose (33%). It should be noted that some issues marked as priorities by organizations, such as cybersecurity or corporate governance, do not appear, later, among the issues on which most work is being done. Therefore, a gap is identified between the existing concern on the part of professionals to address these aspects that are at a time of profound transformation and development, as is the case in Europe with advances in regulation and new demands on these areas. , and the little attention, at the same time, that is being given to it in the day-to-day activities of companies by prioritizing other issues. It is also observed how digitization and the development of technological solutions play a key role among the priorities of organizations in the future. Thus, 47% of organizations are working in this field and it is the area to which they plan to allocate more resources in the next three years (79%), along with cybersecurity (78%). Priorities by regions In the case of North America, diversity and inclusion stands out as the topic that organizations are working on the most (29%) and cybersecurity as the area to which they expect to dedicate the most resources (80%). In Europe, responsible leadership is "relevant" or "very relevant" for 82% of companies, and it is the only region in which ESG governance on boards leads the ranking of priorities in second position , being key for 79% of organizations. In turn, it can be seen how digitization is a priority and 40% are working in this field, to which they plan to allocate more resources in the future. Also noteworthy is the progress made by organizations in activating the corporate purpose (38%). In the case of Asia, 95% of organizations focus their efforts on adapting to the pandemic context and among the key issues for the future is digitization, an area in which 60% of organizations are working and to which the 95% expect to allocate more resources in the coming years. In Latin America, it also leads the imposition of responsible leadership as the main priority for 92% of organizations, 72% of organizations are working on adapting to the COVID-19 context and 84% will allocate more resources to digitization. Methodology The report has been built on the trends identified in Approaching the Future 2021 and has combined quantitative and qualitative research techniques to identify the most important issues in intangible management in the international arena. The study incorporates a survey of professionals through an online questionnaire in which 510 professionals from 44 countries around the world participated during October and November 2021. About Corporate Excellence – Center for Reputation Leadership Corporate Excellence – Center for Reputation Leadership is an accelerator for innovation, knowledge and training in reputation, brand, communication, sustainability and other intangibles. It is a collaborative ecosystem in which companies participate, but also a wide network of business schools and consultancies. It was born in 2011, from the integration of the Corporate Reputation Forum and the Institute for the Analysis of Intangibles. It is currently made up of large companies that represent 47% of the IBEX 35 by market capitalization.Enjoy the report here.


Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

Approaching The Future 2021. Materials of the report and presentation

Do you know the trends that mark the business agenda in 2021?One year after the start of the pandemic, we published a new edition of Approaching the Future 2021: Trends in reputation and management of intangibles, with the aim of helping companies and all professionals to discover the evolution of the main trends that mark the present and future of organizations and to make decisions in an uncertain, complex and changing world that requires a profound transformation.Approaching the Future is presented as a practical and essential tool to know and navigate correctly in this new reality, identifying the 15 most important issues today and in the future, as well as the procedures that organizations are implementing to respond to these challenges, with special focus on Spain and Latin America.We have had the contributions of more than 500 professionals, as well as in-depth interviews with 8 great experts in reputation, brand, sustainability, ethics and transparency. In addition, we have incorporated the prospective of social trends from Punto de Fuga and the analysis of digital ecosystems of the Aula de Mecenazgo para la Innovación de Metrics y Gestión de Intangibles of the University of Malaga.It has been developed by Corporate Excellence - Centre for Reputation Leadership, a leading think tank that focuses on reputation, communication, and intangible assets management, and CANVAS Estrategias Sostenibles, a consultancy company specialized in sustainability, in partnership with Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management as "worldwide partner".Now is your turn! We need your feedback to discover the relevance of this major trends in your country. Participate in the TOP 15 Trends Worldwide Survey: A Global Perspective. As a recognittion for your contribution you will have the opportunity to win two signed hardcopy of Corporate Reputation Handbook and Purpose-Driven Organizations Handbook.

Conference




27/07/2021

Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

The Biggest Companies in the World

Since the COVID-19 crash, global equity markets have seen a strong recovery. The 100 biggest companies in the world were worth a record-breaking $31.7 trillion as of March 31 2021, up 48% year-over-year. As a point of comparison, the combined GDP of the U.S. and China was $35.7 trillion in 2020. In today’s graphic, we use PwC data to show the world’s biggest businesses by market capitalization, as well as the countries and sectors they are from. The Top 100, Ranked PwC ranked the largest publicly-traded companies by their market capitalization in U.S. dollars. It’s also worth noting that sector classification is based on the FTSE Russell Industry Classification Benchmark, and a company’s location is based on where its headquarters are located. Here is the top 100 ranking of the biggest companies in the world, organized from the biggest to the smallest. Search: Rank Company name Location Sector Market Capitalization 1 APPLE INC United States Technology $2.1T 2 SAUDI ARAMCO Saudi Arabia Energy $1.9T 3 MICROSOFT CORP United States Technology $1.8T 4 AMAZON.COM INC United States Consumer Discretionary $1.6T 5 ALPHABET INC United States Technology $1.4T 6 FACEBOOK INC United States Technology $839B 7 TENCENT China Technology $753B 8 TESLA INC United States Consumer Discretionary $641B 9 ALIBABA GRP China Consumer Discretionary $615B 10 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY United States Financials $588B Showing 1 to 10 of 100 entries PreviousNext Note: Data as of March 31, 2021. Within the ranking, there was a wide disparity in value. Apple was worth over $2 trillion, more than 16 times that of Anheuser-Busch (AB InBev), which took the 100th spot at $128 billion. In total, 59 companies were headquartered in the United States, making up 65% of the top 100’s total market capitalization. China and its regions was the second most common location for company headquarters, with 14 companies on the list. Risers and Fallers What are some of the notable changes to the biggest companies in the world compared to last year’s ranking? Tesla’s market capitalization surged by an eye-watering 565%, temporarily making Elon Musk the richest person in the world. Food delivery platform Meituan and PayPal benefited from growing e-commerce popularity with their market capitalizations growing by 221% and 151% respectively. Tech companies TSMC and ASML Holdings were also among the top 10 risers, thanks to a shortage of semiconductor chips and growing demand. On the other end of the scale, Swiss companies Nestlé, Novartis, and Roche Holding were all among the bottom 10 companies by market capitalization growth. China Mobile was the only company to decline with a -12% change. The company was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange as a result of an executive order issued by former president Donald Trump, and recently announced its intention to list on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. A Sector View Across the 100 biggest companies in the world, some sectors had higher weightings. Sector Total Market Cap in Top 100 % of Top 100 Market Cap Number of Companies in Top 100 Technology $10.5T 33.0% 20 Consumer Discretionary $6.0T 18.9% 17 Financials $3.4T 10.8% 14 Health Care $3.3T 10.5% 16 Energy $2.7T 8.5% 5 Consumer Staples $2.0T 6.4% 9 Industrials $2.0T 6.4% 9 Telecommunications $1.3T 4.1% 7 Basic Materials #0.3T 1.0% 2 Utilities #0.1T 0.5% 1 Technology had the highest market capitalization and was also the most common sector, with Big Tech dominating the top 10. Companies in the consumer discretionary, financials, and health care sectors also had a strong representation in the ranking. Despite having only five companies on the list, the energy sector amounted to almost 10% of the top 100’s market capitalization, mostly due to Saudi Aramco’s whopping valuation. An Uncertain Recovery From near market lows on March 31, 2020, all sectors saw increases in their market capitalization. However, top 100 companies in some sectors outperformed their respective industry index, while others did not. Basic materials and industrials, both cyclical sectors, were high performers in the top 100 and outperformed their respective industry indexes. Technology companies also outperformed, and accounted for $255 billion or 31% of all shareholder distributions by the top 100, far more than any other sector. Apple alone spent $73 billion on share buybacks and $14 billion in dividends in the 2020 calendar year. On the other hand, the worst-performing sectors in the top 100 were health care, utilities, and energy. While the index performance for health care and utilities was also relatively poor, the wider energy sector performed fairly well. It’s perhaps not surprising that all sectors saw positive returns since their low levels in March 2020, buoyed by fiscal stimulus and central bank policies. As countries begin to reopen, will the value of the biggest companies in the world continue to climb? Ross, J. (june 10, 2021). The Biggest Companies in the World. Visual Capitalist. Recoverd from de: https://www.visualcapitalist.com/


Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

The promoters of the new communication model offer exclusive express sessions to members of the Global Alliance associations

Are you a member of The Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management association? The creators of the new global communication model offer an Express Live Session about the 2021 Global PR and Communication Model. Global Alliance, in collaboration with Corporate Excellence - Center for Reputation Leadership, developed a model that defines the roadmap and the building blocks of the PR and Communication functions, to promote its contribution to the creation of differentiation, reputation, trust, and social legitimacy of organizations. This model has been built with the collaborative and participatory effort of a network of 1,400 professionals from 46 countries in 5 different regions, through research based on global consensus on the present and future of the role and value of public relations and communication management. After the process of research, analysis, definition, and presentation with international participation, the developers of the model are trying to give back to its of the members of the Global Alliance by offering them exclusive express sessions on the bases and benefits of the model. With this, they aspire that organizations and professionals worldwide are capable of improving the business decision-making process, promoting a real and authentic connection with their stakeholders, and promoting differential leadership in the future post-COVID-world. Global Alliance has offered, with great success, Express Live Sessions for all the regional councils of the international association: Africa, Europe, North America, Latin America, Asia Pacific and India & Middle East. We want to invite you to organize this Express Live Session webinar for your professional community, as one of the benefits for being a GA member. Topic: Express Live Session about the 2021 Global PR & Communication Model + Q&A session. Duration: 30 minutes Date: To be confirmed with each GA local member Platform: Zoom: It will be hosted by Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership Agenda: Welcome & Introduction Video about the Global PR & Comms Model (12 minutes) Q&A session Speakers:​ ​​Dr. Ángel Alloza Academic & Research Director, Global Alliance & Director of "The Global PR & Communication Model 2021" CEO, Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership Dr. Clara Fontán Director of Intelligence & Knowledge of Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership Member of the research team "The Global PR & Communication Model 2021" This offer is free as one of the benefits of being a member of Global Alliance. If your association is a member, now is your opportunity to take advantage and learn from the new communication and public affairs model. More information at prcommsmodel.com or by contacting us at info@corporateexcellence.org


Published by Unai Admin

18/07/2025

Global Alliance launches, The 2021 Global PR & Communication Model

A new roadmap for enhancing the role of PR and Corporate Communication Structure the PR & Comm job around five strategic building blocks A practical guide for achieving the most relevant outcomes for operating in every market in the 21st century: differentiation, reputation, trust with stakeholders. With the collaborative and participatory efforts of a network of 1,400 professionals on 5 different regions Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management and Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership has unveiled today The Global PR and Communication Model, a new way to guide the job or PR and Communication professionals all over the world.The Model is structured around five strategic Building Blocks that generate and protect value in today’s world: corporate purpose, brand and corporate culture, reputation and reputational risks, communications and connected intelligence and intangible asset metrics. These Building Blocks enable organizations to achieve the differentiation, engagement, advocacy, trust and social legitimacy that they now require in order to maintain their license to operate.“With the collaborative and participatory efforts of a network of 1,400 professionals on five different regions, this has been a global consensus-based research on the present and future of the role and value of public relations and communications management. The core of our professions strength is our ability to build relationships, that connect us everywhere around the world” said Justin Green, President of Global Alliance. “The world is in a period of complete transformation because of the new intangible economy, and we needed a new direction by taking reputation and intangible assets as its focus” stated Ángel Alloza, CEO Corporate Excellence and Academic Research Director of Global Alliance. According to Alloza, who led the project, the research and the report, together with Clara Fontán and the great team at Corporate Excellence, “the Model emerges as a practical roadmap to help organisations and professionals achieve their most important and relevant outcomes for operating in every market in the 21st century: to achieve lasting differentiation, build a solid reputation, and consolidate trust with stakeholders, which means at the end of the day broadening your licence to operate”.“Developing this model, which is an evolution of the Melbourne Mandate, the Global Alliance is serving its mission: to create global standards to elevate our profession”, stated José Manuel Velasco, Immediate Past Chair and leader of the steering committee of the project. “The Model looks at the future of our function providing strong reasons to deserve a position in the executive committee of any kind of organizations”, added.The Model also consolidates the Stockholm Accords (2010) and the Melbourne Mandate (2012) and integrates the Global Capability Framework developed in partnership with Huddersfield University in 2018.The Model aims to enable organisations and professionals worldwide to improve their leadership and business decision-making process while promoting a real and authentic connection with their stakeholders for the post-COVID-19 world.The project today unveiled has the support of LLYC, the leading PR company in Spain and Latin America. LLYC “strive to improve the world around us, firmly believing honest, intelligent, innovative and efficient communications foster confidence and understanding among people, companies and institutions—in other words, the foundations of economic and social progress. In this way, we contribute to solving many of the challenges of our times”. The full report and executive summary of the Global PR and Communication Model can be found here: https://www.prcommsmodel.com/Developed by Global Alliance in partnership with Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership, as knowledge partner, a leading research, knowledge and training non-profit organisation specialised in the management and measurement of intangible assets, and with the sponsor contribution of LLYC, a global communications and public affairs consulting firm, this model defines the roadmap and building blocks of the functions of PR and Communications that contributes to the creation of differentiation, reputation, trust and social legitimacy.


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