Two-year analysis of 39 global brands and 2M+ mentions challenges foundational assumptions of PR, marketing, and investor relations practice
Reputation House, an international technology company specializing in digital risk protection, released the Brand Reputation Research 2026 — a comprehensive analysis examining how media events, consumer search behaviour, purchase activity, and stock price movements interact across 39 global brands and 12 financial sector companies. The research was conducted in partnership with the Institute of Communication and Data Science (ICDS), which served as the exclusive data partner for this study.
Based on data spanning 2023–2025, the research covers more than two million brand mentions, 85 identified mention peaks, and 2,400+ monthly stock records across eight product categories. The findings contradict several widely held assumptions about how brand coverage translates into commercial outcomes.
The key findings of the research are the following:
- 96.5% of all brand mentions carry zero emotional content and generate zero measurable consumer response
- 10–39% the effective emotional intensity window — the only range in which media peaks consistently convert to purchase intent
- 8–13 pts average rebound in negative sentiment among brands that attempted to suppress it with positive content — making the negative signal more visible, not less
- 1.73x higher speculative volatility following social media peaks compared to the market’s reaction to quarterly earnings releases
The analytical framework underlying the research is Cultural-Semantic and Value (CSV) Analysis — a methodology that shifts focus from individual brand tracking to the cultural context of the market, the linguistic codes of the audience, and the value structure through which consumers describe experience. Causal inference was established using cross-lagged correlation analysis, with all search volume data Z-normalised within the sector to control for category size and seasonal variation.
The Brand Reputation Research 2026 addresses four beliefs that have shaped communications and PR strategy for decades:
- Belief 1 — Volume drives results. Debunked. 96.5% of mentions are emotionally neutral and produce no consumer response.
- Belief 2 — More emotion means stronger effect. Debunked. Content above 40% emotional intensity converts audiences into spectators, not buyers.
- Belief 3 — Positive PR suppresses negative press. Partly true — and documented to backfire. Three financial sector brands each saw 8–13 point rebounds in negative sentiment following positive suppression campaigns.
- Belief 4 — Negative press is the biggest risk for public companies. Wrong. Mixed sentiment — not negative sentiment — is the primary driver of speculative stock volatility.
‘The industry has spent years optimising for metrics that do not predict whether consumers act. Volume of coverage, disconnected from emotional composition and intensity, is a vanity metric. This research establishes a measurable framework for what actually drives search activity, purchase intent, and stock movement — and the findings require a fundamental reappraisal of how brands allocate resources to risk management. For public companies, reputation is now a measurable risk function — this is not a communications problem, it is a governance problem,’ says Kristina Shinkareva, CEO of Reputation House.
The complete Brand Reputation Research 2026 — including all case studies, the full Emotional Classification System, Sentiment Disbalance Classification tables, and the Curiosity-to-Action Funnel analysis — is available for download on official website.
About Reputation House:
Reputation House is an international technology company specializing in Digital Risk Protection. Its proprietary platform provides companies and individuals a single control center to monitor and manage digital reputation risks across search engines, AI systems, media environments, and review platforms before they become business damages.
