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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For other uses, see Reputation (disambiguation).
The reputation of a social entity (a person, a social group, an organization, or a place) is an opinion about that entity typically as a result of social evaluation on a set of criteria, such as behaviour or performance.[1]
1 Corporate reputation
1.1 Reputation as a concept for companies
1.1.1 Academic literature
1.1.2 Practical measurement of reputation
1.2 Connections to related, company-level concepts
1.3 Consequences of reputation
1.3.1 Performance outcomes
1.3.2 Decision outcomes
2 Topics relating to reputation
2.1 Reputation management
2.2 Reputation capital
2.3 Building reputation through stakeholder management
2.4 Causes and consequences
2.5 Reputation recovery/repair
2.6 Reputation transfer
3 Cognitive view of reputation
3.1 Image
4 Online
5 See also
6 References
7 Further reading
Reputation as a concept for companies
Academic literature
Since 1980, the study of 'corporate reputation' has attracted growing scholarly attention from economics, sociology, and management.[6] The concept of reputation has undergone substantial evolution in the academic literature over the past several decades.[6][7][8] Terminology such as reputation, branding, image and identity is often used interchangeably in both the popular press and—until recently—in the academic literature, as well.