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Newsroom | Fortune 500 Companies Make Top 10 in Overall Tsunami GivingPress Release: Jan 27, 2005 (6:44 am) For more information: Michele Quintaglie
Seven Out of 10 Employees Say Using Corporate Resources to Help Crisis Is Appropriate Hill & Knowlton, Inc., one of the world?s premier communications consultancies, today released the results of independent research on corporate contributions made by the Fortune 500 to the southern Asia and eastern Africa tsunami relief efforts. According to Hill & Knowlton?s research, contributions from America?s biggest companies exceeded $250 million, making the group one of the top 10 donors of the crisis. ?Corporate America is no longer just paying lip service to its global citizenship role,? said Michele Quintaglie, senior vice president at Hill & Knowlton, who is leading the research project. ?Together these companies have pledged more than most individual governments, and that makes them a powerful entity in the area of aid and development.? Fortune 500 Makes Top 10 in Government and Multilateral Giving Fortune 100 companies led the charge, providing nearly three-quarters of the Fortune 500 total. More than half of the Fortune 100 has pledged $1 million or more.
Donations of this size will likely have an impact on how aid agencies report back to their contributors. ?Companies don?t just write million dollar checks without some level of expectation,? said Quintaglie. ?In the weeks and months ahead, corporate America will want to know how their donations were spent and the impact of that spending.? Like many governments, Fortune 500 companies grappled with difficult questions in the hours and days after the crisis. Each company pondered if and when it should get involved, appropriate amounts to pledge, organizations that should receive support, whether or not to match employee contributions, and the extent that contribution details should be communicated to the public. Top-line results of Hill & Knowlton?s research includes: Fortune 100: Fortune 50: Employees Overwhelmingly Support Corporate Involvement A staggering 78% of private sector employees polled in a national online survey by H&K and Penn Schoen & Berland this month felt it was important for their companies to get involved in the tsunami relief efforts and 73% believed that using corporate time and resources is completely appropriate. ?These numbers show a grassroots movement within companies whereby employees wanted to see their companies get involved and make a difference,? said Robert Green, research lead at Penn Schoen & Berland. Other results included:
(This survey was conducted from January 14 to 18, 2005, with an overall margin of error of +/- 4.5% at the 95% confidence level. A total of 475 results were received.) Hill & Knowlton supports the communications and research efforts of many Fortune 500 companies. It undertook this tsunami research effort in order to build a greater understanding of the merging of private sector and philanthropic efforts. Full results of both the Fortune 500 research and employee surveys are available through Hill & Knowlton by contacting Michele Quintaglie at michele.quintaglie@hillandknowlton.com or calling 617/451-6102 ext. 228. About Hill & Knowlton, Inc. | Who to Contact
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