From the monthly archives:

July 2009

Am late blogging our own data. Travel does that.

The FT coverage of the first ever midyear Edelman Trust Barometer correctly took us back to the last study and the fevered and frightened days of January and Davos when trust in business scored pretty low everywhere and had fallen spectacularly by 20% in the US. I won’t say the gasps were audible when Richard and I presented those numbers, but everyone seemed to think they captured the mood of a world about to enter recession and maybe worse.

And so perhaps it is natural to declare as the FT has with this midyear re-appraisal that ‘faith in business is returning’. In some markets there is a statistically significant rebound, but I don’t think the numbers actually bear that optimism out across the six markets as a whole.

As you can see from the key chart in the study above, trust in business in the US with 12% and France with 11% has indeed risen. But given that France was at a very low point of 30% (our world record is 28% also for France) and that the new US score of 48% still only puts it in the medium of the last ten years of sceptical European market levels, it is probably best to leave the champagne on ice for a while longer.

Another reason for my more pessimistic take is that the Trust Barometer is a little bit of a blunt instrument with a statistical variation of around 6% based on the sample size we can afford to poll (hence why the trends over so many years are important). The increase in the trust score for business across all markets averages at 4.3% and so is well below a number you would bet the mortgage on. And finally, all of the US, UK, France and Germany score below 50%. That’s right, when we asked opinion formers “do you trust business to do the right thing” less than 50% said “yes”. That’s a pretty feeble green shoot of trust.

But the numbers are massively useful for taking to the boss and the board, as is the list of solutions, none of which are rocket science, but again do have easy to grasp percentages attached to.

UK version of the data here. Reproduce as you like, but please credit Edelman Trust Barometer (especially if you work for another agency).


The best I have seen from Gordon Brown since he talked about the reform needed to global institutions at Davos last year.

Gordon’s Rainbow Bridge to a Better World

July 22, 2009

Gordon Brown’s surprise descent into the world of TED Global was a clear coup for the Curators but left the audience – sceptical Brits at least – with a sense that this was more a pitch for life after the Premiership than it was a genuine strategy for wellbeing reform.
Certainly, the words were right and [...]

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Here I go again…

July 16, 2009

What better way to return to the blogosphere than on the back of this classic piece of pomp rock from Whitesnake (and by the way a special nod to the friend who suggested ‘Hello, Hello I’m back again’ (by convicted paedophile Gary Glitter)…I make my living advising people not to fall into precisely that kind of [...]

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United breaks guitars

July 8, 2009

We all get to do a Jarvis now, but few can pull it off like this. Lesson to service providers? Don’t piss off musicians.

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Circular Paralysis, Constitutional Crisis & The Final Act of Monarchy

July 6, 2009

Transition towards a Civic Republic
Jeff Immelt, addressing the Global Leadership Summit at the London Business School last week, spoke passionately about those companies who sit at “the front seat of history”. An hour later, Stephen Hester, in between fielding the obvious questions surrounding his alleged £9.6 million bonus scheme, said a stark choice now lay [...]

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