We have designed a specific project aiming to identify the reputation implications of Wikileaks revelation of US Department of State communications. Our intention is to show who are the countries, political leaders and firms more affected by this crisis. We analyze the quantitative impact in terms of the amount of news related to Wikileaks issues in every corner of the globe. We also proceed to a qualitative analysis, by showing the news content profile, as well as the impact on media reputation.
This is a pure reputation analysis, and we renounce to any political, legal or ethical analysis of the crisis and its implications.
As many of our empirical results are highly dependent of immediacy, we will post our new findings in an specific blog (Wikileaks Reputation Crisis, at wikileaksreputationcrisis/worldpress.com). Later we will show in this site some systematic results and analysis.
Those are some of the posts already published:
Jan 3, 2011: Companies Reputation: Bank of America Case
Dec 30, 2010: Wikileaks Issues Viewed from: Pakistan
Dec 27, 2010: Index of Wikileaks Media Impact, by December 27th
Dec 27, 2010: Companies Reputation: Chevron Case
Dec 22, 2010: American Firms Affected by Wikileaks News
Dec 20, 2010: A ranking of top 20 Political Leaders most affected by Wikileaks news.
