Six years after the financial crisis, financial services firms are still burdened by reputational and customer service issues, according to a survey released Tuesday by the communications firm Makovsky.
Eighty-one percent of communications, investor relations and marketing executives surveyed said the financial crisis continued to strongly affect stakeholder perceptions of their firms.
The study showed that this negative perception was taking an even bigger toll on sales, as the firms interviewed reported an average business loss of 27% — equaling billions of dollars — in the last two years as reputational and customer service issues persisted.
This average loss was significantly higher in the past 12 months than reported in the 2013 study, according to Makovsky.
"The financial crisis has left scars and those scars may be permanent," Makovsky executive vice president Scott Tangney said in a statement.
Firms in the survey complained of constant reputation and customer satisfaction issues related to trust, regulation, products, liquidity and capital, financial performance and compensation, Tangney said.
"The standing of many has been diminished, with nearly half of executives telling us that the crisis fallout made their firm competitively vulnerable, allowing their closest or direct competitors to gain an advantage."