Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?

This study sets out to investigate the value that perceived corporate reputation brings to organizations. Positive corporate reputation enables organizations to command price premiums for products, yet is this translatable to the labour market? In this study, we examine the value of possessing each...

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Main Authors: Ooi, Wei Kang, Lim, Seok Hui, Lai, Desmond Yibing
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48268
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-482682023-05-19T06:09:05Z Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings? Ooi, Wei Kang Lim, Seok Hui Lai, Desmond Yibing Nanyang Business School Khoo Hong Meng DRNTU::Business::Public relations::Corporate communication This study sets out to investigate the value that perceived corporate reputation brings to organizations. Positive corporate reputation enables organizations to command price premiums for products, yet is this translatable to the labour market? In this study, we examine the value of possessing each of the 7 drivers of corporate reputation: Innovation, Workplace Well-being, Corporate Governance, Corporate Leadership, Organizational Performance, Corporate Citizenship, and Product and Service Quality. The study aimed to determine whether when an organization was perceived to possess these elements, a potential employee would exhibit willingness to accept a lower mean salary as compared to organizations that are perceived to be without these elements. Additionally, it also tried to further validate that when the RepTrak Model of corporate reputation was used to rate corporate reputation, overall corporate reputation was associated with a willingness to accept lower salaries. Age was also introduced as a moderator to this relationship. Hypotheses were predicted and investigated using a post-test only control group design experiment, with 1 control group and 7 treatment groups. In order to prove that the survey design was completely randomised and the descriptions within each dimension truly reflected each dimension, a pilot test was carried out as well. It was found that there are indeed differences in mean salary acceptable to potential employees when there were perceptions that organizations possessed individual drivers of corporate reputation. These mean differences represent potential wage cost savings for the organization. The relationship between corporate reputation and willingness to accept a salary markdown was also found to be moderated by age. This study also offers insights on managerial implications. In particular, organizations can highlight drivers that they possess when making recruitment advertisements to increase applicants’ willingness to accept salary markdowns. Since age is a moderator in the relationship between corporate reputation and willingness to accept salary markdown, organizations should also customise these advertisements based on the target age group they want to attract. BUSINESS 2012-04-03T04:02:24Z 2012-04-03T04:02:24Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48268 en Nanyang Technological University 73 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::Public relations::Corporate communication
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Public relations::Corporate communication
Ooi, Wei Kang
Lim, Seok Hui
Lai, Desmond Yibing
Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
description This study sets out to investigate the value that perceived corporate reputation brings to organizations. Positive corporate reputation enables organizations to command price premiums for products, yet is this translatable to the labour market? In this study, we examine the value of possessing each of the 7 drivers of corporate reputation: Innovation, Workplace Well-being, Corporate Governance, Corporate Leadership, Organizational Performance, Corporate Citizenship, and Product and Service Quality. The study aimed to determine whether when an organization was perceived to possess these elements, a potential employee would exhibit willingness to accept a lower mean salary as compared to organizations that are perceived to be without these elements. Additionally, it also tried to further validate that when the RepTrak Model of corporate reputation was used to rate corporate reputation, overall corporate reputation was associated with a willingness to accept lower salaries. Age was also introduced as a moderator to this relationship. Hypotheses were predicted and investigated using a post-test only control group design experiment, with 1 control group and 7 treatment groups. In order to prove that the survey design was completely randomised and the descriptions within each dimension truly reflected each dimension, a pilot test was carried out as well. It was found that there are indeed differences in mean salary acceptable to potential employees when there were perceptions that organizations possessed individual drivers of corporate reputation. These mean differences represent potential wage cost savings for the organization. The relationship between corporate reputation and willingness to accept a salary markdown was also found to be moderated by age. This study also offers insights on managerial implications. In particular, organizations can highlight drivers that they possess when making recruitment advertisements to increase applicants’ willingness to accept salary markdowns. Since age is a moderator in the relationship between corporate reputation and willingness to accept salary markdown, organizations should also customise these advertisements based on the target age group they want to attract.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Ooi, Wei Kang
Lim, Seok Hui
Lai, Desmond Yibing
format Final Year Project
author Ooi, Wei Kang
Lim, Seok Hui
Lai, Desmond Yibing
author_sort Ooi, Wei Kang
title Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
title_short Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
title_full Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
title_fullStr Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
title_full_unstemmed Investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
title_sort investing in corporate reputation : can it help earn returns in wage cost savings?
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48268
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