The 10 US Companies With the Best Reputations – and the 10 Worst

The 10 US Companies With the Best Reputations – and the 10 Worst·The Fiscal Times

Amazon is so pleased with its performance in a new ranking of corporate reputations that it is giving customers a discount on Wednesday to celebrate its top-place finish.

The online retail giant is offering an $8.62 discount on purchases of $50 or more to commemorate the 86.27 score it received in the annual Harris Poll survey on corporate reputation. The score is not only the best among 100 top companies, it is also the highest score the survey has ever recorded.

Amazon has ranked in the top 10 for nine straight years. The survey of the 100 most visible U.S companies has been occurring annually for the past 18 years.

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This year, only 17 companies earned “excellent” reputation scores of 80 and over, while 34 companies received “very good” scores between 74 and 77. The companies with the most improved reputation scores are Volkswagen, which dealt with an emissions scandal early last year, and Toyota, which suffered several recalls in past years. Both UPS and 3M returned to the top ten after multi-year absences.

Top Ten

Companies

Score

1. Amazon.com

86.27, Excellent

2. Wegmans

85.41, Excellent

3. Publix Super Markets

82.78, Excellent

4. Johnson & Johnson

82.57, Excellent

5. Apple

82.07, Excellent

6. UPS

82.05, Excellent

7. The Walt Disney Company

82.04, Excellent

8. Google

82.00, Excellent

9. Tesla Motors

81.70, Excellent

10. 3M Company

81.50, Excellent

Several of the companies that populate the bottom 10 on the list were plagued by scandal. Wells Fargo posted the largest decline ever, dropping 20.6 points, to “critical” level after it became known that company employees created two million unauthorized bank and credit card accounts to boost sales figures. The scandal resulted in the resignation of the company CEO and several high-level managers. Account openings have suffered enormously since the scandal broke in September, plummeting 44 percent year over year in October, 41 percent in November and 31 percent in December.

Takata was the only other company with a “critical” rating. It was the first time the airbag supplier appeared on the list, with its visibility increasing among consumers after its airbags had to be recalled from several makes of cars.

Bottom Ten

Companies

Score

91. Volkswagen Group

63.46, Poor

92. AIG

63.22, Poor

93. Charter Communications

62.80, Poor

94. Sears Holdings Corporation

62.74, Poor

95. Bank of America

59.69, Poor

96. Halliburton

58.30, Poor

97. Monsanto

56.61, Poor

98. Goldman Sachs

56.32, Poor

99. Wells Fargo & Company

49.11, Critical

100. Takata

48.70, Critical

Other companies that declined significantly — but remained out of the bottom 10 — included Procter & Gamble Co. (-5.3), Samsung (-5.3), Chipotle (-4.6) and Bank of America (-4.6). Samsung’s reputation took a hit after it had to recall its Galaxy Note 7 due to fires from faulty batteries. Chipotle is still recovering from E. coli outbreaks at its restaurants and Bank of America got dinged after paying $415 million for misusing brokerage customers’ cash.

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Harris also noted that some companies fared better with Republicans or Democrats, depending on how they appeared to stand on certain issues. For instance, Chick-fil-A and Hobby Lobby -- both with more conservative views — earn higher reputation scores among Republicans than among Democrats. Target, which opposed North Carolina’s bathroom bill, scored higher among Democrats than Republicans.

The Harris Poll Reputation Quotient (RQ) measures corporate reputation strength based on how 23,000 Americans perceive six factors: social responsibility, emotional appeal, products and services, vision and leadership, financial performance and workplace environment.

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