How to see the unseen variables of your organization's reputation
November 10, 2020
Gail Bower in COVID-19, Coronavirus, Customer Experience, Leadership, Money + Mission
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Your organization’s ability to accomplish its mission and revenue goals hinges on several factors, not the least of which is your organization’s reputation.
 
That takes us to today’s topic on reputation and specifically perceptions about your organization. 
 
As you know since the dawn of social media and particularly during the last four years’ divisiveness in the U.S., wide swaths of individuals are seeing reality differently. 
 
Therefore, it is incumbent on every organization—nonprofit and for-profit alike—to minimize any program/product/service delivery ambiguities to ensure integrity. 
 
Your organization’s reputation counts on it.
 
The public forms perceptions of your organization through numerous variables—your messaging, imagery, value of your program/product/service, media coverage, the look and feel of your physical location, and—a big one—their experience of your organization through their interactions with your team.
 
The biggest risk happens when the experience of your organization is out of whack with the messaging. When you say one thing, but your customer sees something different, you’ve got a problem.
 
These instances are more critical right now in a pandemic. And of course, every business is pledging its commitment to the CDC’s COVID-19 guidelines. But are we all committed?
 
A death in the family caused my partner and me late last week to travel out of state.

What does this mean for your organization?

We notice when what you say (or don’t say) doesn’t match what we experience.

We notice when an organization doesn’t really care

We notice when businesses carve out a picture of the truth and hope we won’t notice what they left out.

We notice when a business’ representative repeats the company line but fails to acknowledge the humanity.

We notice when your operations and practices are out of alignment with your mission

Maybe organizations could get away with these discrepancies before. Now, in the middle of the pandemic, these half-truths and obfuscations could cost lives.

 

Article originally appeared on Gail Bower (https://gailbower.com/).
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