SOURCE: TRUSTe
December 15, 2008 08:30 ET
Ponemon Institute and TRUSTe Announce Results of Annual Most Trusted Companies for Privacy Survey
American Express, eBay, IBM Are Top Three; Facebook Breaks Into Top 20
TRAVERSE CITY, MI and SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - December 15, 2008) - Privacy and
information security research company Ponemon Institute along with TRUSTe,
the most widely recognized Internet privacy trustmark, today announced the
results of the Ponemon Institute's fifth annual survey of Most Trusted
Companies for Privacy. The study asked 6,486 adult-aged U.S. consumers
which companies they thought were most trustworthy and which did the best
job safeguarding personal information. A total of 706 companies were named
by consumers; 211 made the final list of most trusted companies.
American Express ranked as the Most Trusted Company for 2008 for Privacy,
retaining its place from last year despite the current financial climate.
eBay earned a ranking as the second most trusted company, while IBM,
Amazon, and Johnson & Johnson rounded out the top five.
While the financial services sector slipped amid industry-wide woes, the
technology sector showed marked improvement as eBay, Apple, Yahoo!,
Microsoft, and HP all bettered previous rankings. Also of note, Facebook
moved into the top 20 for the first time, signifying an increased trust in
social networking as a mainstream communications tool.
2008 Ranking 2008 Ranking
----------------------------------------- --------------------------------
1 American Express (remained number one) 12 Intuit (+7)
2 eBay (+6) 13 WebMD (-1)
3 IBM (no change) 14 Yahoo! (new to the top 20)
4 Amazon (+1) 15 Facebook (new to the top 20)
5 Johnson & Johnson (+1) 16 Disney (-1)
6 Hewlett Packard (+10) 16 AOL (-12)
6 U.S. Postal Service (+1) 17 Verizon (new to the top 20)
7 Procter & Gamble (+2) 18 FedEx (new to the top 20)
8 Apple (new to the top 20) 19 US Bank (-2)
9 Nationwide (remained the same) 20 Dell (-7)
10 Charles Schwab (-8) 20 eLoan (-9)
11 USAA (+4)
"That we see many of the same names ranked among the top 20 companies year
after year, strongly suggests that consumer perceptions are not
superficial, but are in fact the result of diligent and successful
execution of thoughtful privacy strategies," said Dr. Larry Ponemon,
chairman and founder, Ponemon Institute. "Consumers want to do business
with brands they believe they can trust, and we believe our study is a
strong indication of which brands have best earned that trust."
The survey notes a significant gap developing between the importance
privacy holds with consumers and the sense of control they feel they have
over their personal information, specifically:
-- Importance of privacy continues to rise. Seventy-three percent of
consumers said the protection of their personal privacy is "important" or
"very important," up from 69 percent in 2006.
-- Consumers feel they are losing control of personal information. Only
45 percent of consumers feel they have control over their personal
information, down from 56 percent in 2006.
-- Identity theft is top of mind. Sixty-two percent of consumers believe
that identity theft most saliently affects their perceptions about a
company's privacy, while 53 percent named data breach notification and 42
percent cited annoying background chatter in a public venue. Only 18
percent of consumers cited social networking abuse as a factor.
"As shoppers continue to turn to eBay for great deals in a tough economy,
they expect that their personal information will be safe online," said
Scott Shipman, Global Privacy Leader for eBay Inc. "We take our customers'
privacy very seriously and strive to be as transparent as possible to gain
and maintain their trust. eBay's Privacy and Information Security teams do
an outstanding job of identifying privacy and security issues and heading
them off at the pass. The privacy ranking is a good touch point of our
progress and it is an honor to share the spotlight with so many
accomplished brands."
"We are honored to have IBM recognized again as the top
business-to-business company in the Ponemon/TRUSTe Most Trusted Company
survey," said Harriet Pearson, vice president & chief privacy officer at
IBM. "As the physical and digital worlds converge, and sensitive
information moves from desktop to cloud -- from standalone data centers to
intelligent, shared infrastructures -- IBMers around the globe are
dedicated to delivering on our long-standing commitment to providing
clients with trusted and secure technologies, services and solutions."
"Our audience comes back to Yahoo! because they value the services we
provide, but just as importantly, because they trust our brand. That's why
we're so proud of our longtime commitment to privacy leadership including
transparent policies, choices for users and consumer education across the
network," stated Ann Toth, Yahoo! vice president of policy and head of
privacy.
TRUSTe and Ponemon Institute will host a Webinar to discuss the Most
Trusted Companies for Privacy award on January 21, 2009 at 11:00 a.m. PST.
Larry Ponemon will present. To RSVP for the Webinar, please email
webinar@truste.com with the subject "Most Trusted Company for Privacy
Award."
About Ponemon Institute
The Ponemon Institute© (http://www.ponemon.org) is dedicated to advancing
responsible information and privacy management practices in business and
government. To achieve this objective, the Institute conducts independent
research, educates leaders from the private and public sectors and verifies
the privacy and data protection practices of organizations in a variety of
industries.
About TRUSTe
TRUSTe helps millions of consumers identify trustworthy online
organizations through its Web Privacy Seal, Email Privacy Seal and Trusted
Download Programs. TRUSTe ensures online privacy and protects confidential
user information on more than 2,400 Web sites and many of the most highly
trafficked, including Yahoo!, AOL, Microsoft, Disney, eBay, Intuit, and
Facebook. Independent research shows that when a TRUSTe web seal is
present, visitors and customers are more likely to share personal
information, register at higher rates and spend more money. To learn more
about internet privacy visit www.truste.com.