Strategy

EDITIORIAL COMMENT: When Reputation Management Goes Wrong: The Sackler Saga

Tom Burroughes Group Editor September 20, 2019

EDITIORIAL COMMENT: When Reputation Management Goes Wrong: The Sackler Saga

Latest developments about Purdue Pharma and the affairs of the associated Sackler family are another reminder of when reputation, business management and philanthropy can collide. The saga has lessons for wealth managers and the advice they give.

The bankruptcy filing a few days ago of Purdue Pharma, the family-owned business that produced OxyContin, the painkiller associated with tens of thousands of deaths, is another reminder of what happens when reputation and philanthropy collide. 

The Sackler family, which has been a major donor to art galleries and museums around the world, such as New York’s Guggenheim and the Tate Modern in London, has seen its reputation trashed by the opioid scandal. (Galleries have declined to take further contributions from the family, in certain cases.) OxyContin, a drug that generated billions of revenue for Purdue Pharma, is linked to the deaths of almost 50,000 Americans who overdosed, based on data from the Centers for Disease Control (source: Daily Telegraph, Sept. 19, 2019). 

Some 26 states in the US have reached an initial $3 billion deal with Purdue but that sum could be much higher because 24 states have so far refused to enter it. The firm, which filed for bankruptcy in New York at the weekend, wants a judgment that will draw a line under the saga and provide the Sackler family with protection under bankruptcy law. Media commentary suggested that it will be fiercely resisted. Reports noted that the Sackler family has not gone bankrupt, even if their firm has done so.

As noted by this publication earlier this year, the Sackler family’s position is a reminder of how philanthropy, even when driven by sincerely motivated people, is not a reputational blanket if the wealth behind it is tainted. This has implications not just for philanthropy but for business owners engaged in the current hot trend of environmental, social and governance-themed investing, or ESG. 

A business that makes billions selling tobacco, firearms, certain chemical treatments, internal combustion engine autos or alcohol is going to have a problem in convincing others that its charity is not compromised. Of course, it is worth noting – to play the “devil’s advocate” here, that tobacco, firearms, gasoline-powered cars and alcohol are legal products (although laws on these things can change of course). But even when the product for sale is legal, and the retailer can make the point that adult purchasers should be treated as such, rather than naughty kids, in practice it becomes hard to convince people that charity funded by such business is any kind of “offset”. 

We live in a world where, for example, the rich and famous fly private jets to talk about global warming and say that’s fine because they have grown trees or offset their “carbon footprint” in certain ways. Regardless of whether they have actually done so, this sort of approach makes the broader public angry. It can come across as slick PR and actually make the reputational damage worse, as happened recently to the UK’s Duke and Duchess of Sussex (aka) Prince Harry and Meghan, when they took private jet flights several times in recent weeks. 

Big gifts in philanthropy are nothing new, of course. Wall Street tycoons, Silicon Valley leaders and real estate moguls around the world shower billions on universities, business schools and causes of all kinds. Scores of the ultra-wealthy have signed up to the Giving Pledge to give most of their assets away during their lifetimes or in their wills. Some of those business owners might have reputational issues we don’t even yet know about, or which could come to light if practices deemed okay now might be attacked later on. Big Tech, for instance, is a sector that might have been almost smugly clean a few years ago. Today, there is a chorus from the Right and Left calling for anti-trust actions, laws to protect privacy. There are worries about social media addiction and “echo chamber” effects, and so forth. Some of these attacks have merit and some don’t. But that might be scant comfort when lawsuits fly.

Wealth advisors have a role to play here in sometimes explaining the facts of life to people who, because of their great fortunes, might become divorced from such realities. Davos Man (and Woman) can end up in a bubble, so it is important to understand that reputational protection and guidance is, or should be, part of the added value that wealth advice brings. With great wealth often comes a high level of public exposure, whether the owners want that or not. The Sackler family saga is a cautionary tale to that end.

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