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South Africa's reputation has improved among the G8 countries since January, the Research Institute said on 20130926. "We are perceived very favourable by outsiders, by the G8 countries," Country Manager Trevor Ndlazi said at the WitsBusinessSchool in Johannesburg. "Our reputation is fragile. The things that we do, the things that we say can damage our reputation quite significantly." According to the report, South Africa's reputation dropped in January compared to the previous year, from 47.56 to 46.78 points, but increased to 51.24 in September. The reputation is scored in points, with 100 points being the highest. In the same study, South Africans gave the county 33.69 points, 17.55 below the G8 countries. "We are perceived very negatively by ourselves," he said. "This, I think, is a big cause of concern for our message that we are sending outside and how it is that we are talking to other people." He said reputation drove behaviour, and often what South Africans said about the country to people could affect their decision to visit or invest.

Mr Ndlazi said an additional study of South Africa's reputation was done in August and September to see if news events had affected how the country was seen. He said events like the deaths of 44 people in Marikana, North West, in strike related violence last August, and the arrest of Oscar Pistorius for the shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in February negatively affected South Africa's reputation and could have resulted in the drop in points. The visit of important dignitaries like US president Barack Obama to South Africa and the improvement of the health of former President Nelson Mandela could have positively affected the reputation figures, said Mr Ndlazi. The Reputation Institute's Country RepTrak is a global study of the reputations of 50 countries and is conducted annually in January among 27,000 consumers in the G8 countries. The G8 countries are the eight countries with the largest economic powers. They are Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the UK and the US. Mr Ndlazi said there were still areas in South Africa that needed work like safety, efficiency, effective Government and how South Africa performs in the global economy.

Reputation drivers for G8 respondents are the characteristic of being "friendly and welcoming" followed by a "safe environment" and "contribution to the global economy". South African respondents scored the country as performing well on only two attributes, "a beautiful country" and "an enjoyable country", but rated the country more poorly than the G8 countries did in the remaining 13 categories. Mr Ndlazi said that on the perception of "valuing education", South Africans' rating was 18.51 points compared to the 49.03 points by consumers in the G8. He said the second study was done on a smaller group of people in the G8 countries. Dominik Heil, from the Reputation Institute and Wits Business school, said the study should be seen as a reality check for South Africans. The Reputation Institute is a reputation consulting firm with a presence in 30 countries. On its website, the company said it was dedicated to advancing knowledge about reputation and shared best practices and current research through client engagement, membership, seminars, conferences and publications.

Global reputation will be defined by actions (BusinessDay, p3, In Brief, 20130927) – SA’s international reputation will be defined by the actions it takes to improve socio-economically, BrandSA CEO Miller Matola said yesterday. In future, SA’s brand would be further defined by how much effort was put into implementing the National Development Plan, he said. Speaking at the release of the Reputation Institute’s findings on the state of global perceptions of SA in 2013, he said that despite the existing perceptions of a country, it was the actions of countries that ultimately defined how they were viewed in the context of a global marketplace where both investment and human capital were highly contested. Despite being affected by South Africans who were highly pessimistic about their country, those seeking to visit or invest would ultimately take action more seriously, he said.