When Deloitte’s Consumer Products Group recently surveyed consumers, 855 indicated being aware of the recent recalls and the supply chain scare, 33% indicated paying more attention to labels and packaging since then. More importantly 18% indicated they had actively started looking for additional information on the internet and elsewhere.
Deloitte categorizes the recent recalls as a new type of systemic risk that can seriously damage brand value. It further says that most companies are completely unprepared to deal with this kind of risk.
In the article, Pat Conroy, vice chairman and U.S. consumer products group leader at Deloitte & Touche USA LLP is quoted as saying: “Companies must now decide how they will compete in a much more transparent future (…)They have an opportunity to create and maintain trust by adhering to the highest standards of quality and transparency. On the other hand, in this new age of transparency, there will be immense consequences for missteps, which will directly affect consumers’ trust.”
It seems that in the age of increasingly aware and active customers, companies will have to be completely open on how they’re doing. Companies have to go out on a limb and explain themselves preemptively; describe the risks of their business and their supplier choices before something goes wrong.
When it does, and millions of consumers start browsing for details, it helps if there is a trusted, reliable, and brutally honest sustainability report available to pop up in their queries (as well as reports from key suppliers).