0 related to someone's or something's reputation (= the opinion that other people have about them or it):
The reputational damage of having a director or other employee prosecuted for bribery will be significant.
Such attacks could represent a substantial reputational risk to the company.
But sponsors are unlikely to allow defaults - the reputational harm could be massive.
The potential reputational fallout from court action remains something that financial institutions would prefer to avoid.
He added that the reputational enhancement of implementing his recommendations would help BAE's performance in the long run.
Yet, if reputational costs, or for that matter, legal penalties and political sanctions, cannot account for the respect due the rule of law, what can?
Together, these organizations formed a coalition of esteem, or reputational constituency.
In other words, economists fear reputational spillover effects of deceptive practices even if only a few of their tribe practice it.
And, as also noted, there can be reputational and commercial factors also to include, and these will influence how an organization wishes to manage risk.
In fact, this large number of possible equilibria expands still further when more general approaches are taken to characterize the set of reputational equilibria.