SEPTEMBER 7, 2005: Less than
10% of the world's 100 largest public companies
are meeting basic usability requirements for their
online annual reports to shareholders and
standards have worsened over the past three years.
These are the main findings of an in-depth comparison
of the online annual reports of the S&P Global
100 Index companies, the world's highest profile
listed companies. The study was conducted jointly
by IR Web Report, an independent investor relations
website evaluation firm, and GeBer Geschäftsberichte,
a web production firm.
"Online usability of financial disclosures
is essential for investors to easily stay informed
about their investments in public company securities,
particularly as companies begin to replace printed
reports with Web versions. Yet the vast majority
of these mega-cap companies are failing to meet
an acceptable usability standard," said IR
Web Report president Dominic Jones.
Only eight companies meet
recommended basic requirements
Out of the 100 large-cap companies in the study,
only eight met all of the basic usability requirements
for online annual reports. These requirements,
recommended by the likes of the UK Investor Relations
Society and the London Stock Exchange, meet the
needs of investors who want to either view information
online or download all or parts of the report
for offline use or printing.
The basic requirements for online annual reports
are:
- Providing the entire report in navigable HTML
for rapid online viewing and reference;
- Offering full and segmented PDF files for
printing and offline use; and,
- Giving investors downloadable spreadsheets
of financial tables in the report for easier
data importing and analysis.
Companies in the study that met these basic usability
requirements are (in alphabetical order): BASF
AG; Bayer AG, DaimlerChrysler;
Deutsche Bank, Deutsche Telekom,
IBM, Microsoft Corp., and Royal
Dutch Shell.
Deutsche Bank had the highest scoring online
annual report package among the 100 companies
in the study. The company's report was produced
by GeBer Geschäftsberichte, however, IR Web
Report provided the protocol, weighting and independently
verified the criteria used to evaluate the reports.
"The eight companies meeting all the basic
requirements deserve praise for making an effort
to provide their online annual reports in formats
that meet the varying needs of investors,"
said IR Web Report's Mr. Jones. "Clearly,
these companies are trying to communicate their
financial information effectively on the Web."
Another three companies narrowly missed meeting
all of the basic usability requirements. These
companies
Altria, General Electric and Repsol
YPF met
all of the basic requirements except that they
did not provide spreadsheet downloads of their
financial statement data, a key requirement for
analysts and other experienced users.
| Top
5 Online Annual Reports |
|
Company
|
Total Score
|
| 1. Deutsche Bank |
79.1% |
| 2. Bayer |
77.2% |
| 3. Royal Dutch Shell |
75.6% |
| 4. IBM |
74.2% |
| 5. Deutsche Telekom |
73.9% |
Only five companies meet
advanced online viewing standards
The researchers analyzed the HTML reports of all
companies against an advanced set of 28 attributes.
Only five companies' scores met a standard of
70% or higher on these more advanced requirements
for viewing annual reports online.
Companies that met the advanced standard for
their HTML reports are (in alphabetical order):
Bayer AG, Deutsche Bank, IBM,
General Electric, and Royal Dutch Shell.
The precise criteria are available online at http://benchmark.geber.at/en.
Companies are invited to use the criteria to assess
their own online reports.
Royal Dutch Shell scored the highest overall
against the HTML report criteria. Its HTML annual
report includes an advanced search engine that
enhances the report's value as an ongoing reference
document while all financial tables are provided
in HTML.
"The companies that passed the advanced
criteria are providing the very best reports for
online viewing and use. Their reports put information
in easy reach of investors and enable researchers
to quickly and easily retrieve specific information
or browse the report for general interest,"
said Mr. Jones.
| Best
Reports for Online Viewing |
|
Company
|
Total Score
|
| 1. Royal Dutch Shell |
79.0% |
| 2. IBM |
77.0% |
| 3. General Electric |
76.0% |
| 4. Bayer |
75.0% |
| 5. Deutsche Bank |
70.0% |
43% meet requirements for
downloading and printing report
In addition to providing their annual reports
in HTML for online browsing, companies should
also provide their reports in a single PDF as
well as in smaller PDF files of individual report
sections. This makes it easier for investors to
print or save a specific part of the report or
to print out the entire report. It can also reduce
the burden on investors when the report is not
provided in HTML.
The survey found that 43% of the companies provided
their reports in a single PDF as well as individual
chapters in PDF. Another seven companies provided
their reports only in sections in PDF but not
in a single file, meaning that an investor wanting
to print out or save the entire report must go
through the time-consuming task of downloading
several files.
It is important that companies not make the mistake
of using PDF as a replacement for well-designed
HTML reports. PDF is a printing format and while
some companies try to improve the usability of
PDF documents for online browsing by adding a
bookmarks index, this does not improve usability
sufficiently to replace HTML pages.
15% provide financial statement
data in spreadsheets
Expert IR website users require financial information
in annual reports to be provided in a spreadsheet
format. This allows them to import the data into
spreadsheet programs to be analyzed and compared.
Without spreadsheets, these users may be forced
to re-enter information from the report manually
or by copying and pasting it from HTML or PDF,
a time-consuming and error-prone process.
Only 15 of the 100 companies in the study provided
their financials in Excel or other spreadsheet
formats.
Many companies snubbing shareholders' usability
needs
The study found that almost 40% of companies published
their online annual reports in formats that create
significant burdens on investors to be able to
access and use them.
One of the most significant problems is when
companies provide their annual reports only in
a single PDF file, known as PDF blobs. This practice
makes it extremely difficult for many investors
- particularly less web savvy ones - to navigate
the report online and find information in it.
PDF files require users to have a PDF reader installed,
can take long to download, and may cause technical
and usability problems for the user.
A recent traffic log study by academics Frank
Hodge at the University of Washington
department of accounting and Maarten Pronk at
Tilburg University department of accounting and
accountancy has found that most investors using
online annual report information prefer to use
HTML pages.
They analyzed data from the servers hosting annual
report information of Netherlands-based Philips
Electronics and found that 76.1% of users
identifying themselves as non-professionals used
the HTML version, with 61.4% using HTML exclusively
and 14.7% using HTML in combination with PDF.
Meanwhile, 59.2% of professionals used HTML pages,
although they showed only slightly more preference
for it than PDF.
Ironically, Philips was one of 24 study companies
that published their most recent annual reports
in one PDF file only. The Philips 2004 annual
report is 219 pages.
"PDF annual reports are principally useful
only for printing, and sometimes for offline reference
for experienced users. But they are not usable
for online browsing, which is how most individual
investors want to view online annual report information.
Firms that post their reports only in PDF ignore
the needs and preferences of most of their report
users and put people off reading the report,"
said Mr. Jones.
"Jpeg Shows"
problematic
The study also found growing use of another document
format that has poor usability. Image-based reports
or "Jpeg Shows," which convert annual
report pages to large digital images that make
the text blurry, have been widely criticized by
usability experts for being hard to use and inaccessible
to users with disabilities.
In guidelines issued by the UK IR Society last
December, companies are urged to avoid these reports
due to their poor usability. The IRS guidelines
are endorsed by the Institute of Chartered Accountants
in England and Wales, the UK Department of Trade
and Industry, the Association of Private Client
Investment Managers and Stockbrokers (APCIMS)
and the National Association of Pension Funds
(NAPF), among others.
Despite this, the researchers found that two
UK companies Vodafone and HSBC
used image-based presentations for their
annual reports. In total, 21 companies used the
format. Of these, 13 also published PDF blobs.
French companies were the most likely to use
image-based formats for their annual reports.
Half of the 10 French companies used the format.
In the U.S., nine of the 38 companies (24%) used
image-based reports. Ironically, the main vendor
of image-based reports to French companies is
based in the UK, where image-based reports do
not meet the requirements of laws barring the
use of technologies that exclude access to people
with disabilities.
"Image-based reports are attractive to companies
because they are quick, cheap to produce and perceived
as a step up from PDF blobs. However, they are
extremely cumbersome to use both online and offline
as they cannot meet many basic usability requirements
of investors," said Mr. Jones. "Companies
should stop using image-based reports and vendors
should stop selling them, especially because there
are better options available that cost the same
and can be produced in the same amount of time."
Companies emphasize wrong
things
Twenty-two per cent of companies in the study
provided only highlights or a summary of their
annual reports in HTML. Typically, companies provided
the annual report narrative in HTML but offered
the financial report only in PDF or in images.
This has the effect of making the important financial
statements, notes and management's discussion
harder to use than the less detailed information
provided in the highlights or summary.
The study also found that US companies are becoming
increasingly compliance focused in their annual
report disclosures, with some providing their
SEC 10-K annual reports in lieu of an annual report.
These filings, while comprehensive, are difficult
to use because they are text-heavy, legalistic,
lack basic information design attributes and follow
a structure that most non-professional investors
and employees are unfamiliar with.
Usability declines from
prior years
Compared to surveys of a similar group of large-cap
companies conducted by IR Web Report in prior
years, there has been a sharp decline in the usability
of online annual reports in the past three years.
For example, in 2002 just 12% of companies posted
their annual reports in PDF blobs. In 2005, that
number has doubled to 24%. Similarly, the number
of companies using image-based reports has risen
five-fold from 4% in 2002 to 21% in 2005.
"Instead of improving the usability of their
reports, companies have gone backwards,"
said Mr. Jones. "This should be a concern
for the investor relations community and regulators
because a growing number of companies are beginning
to replace printed annual reports with online
versions. Investors, particularly long-term individual
shareholders, need companies to properly publish
their reports online so that there are no burdens
to access and use."
About IR Web Report
Online since 2000, IR Web Report is a subscriber
service that evaluates the investor relations
websites of more than 515 companies around the
world and advises companies on global best practices.
IR Web Report is fully independent of all IR
website design, hosting and content vendors to
ensure the impartiality of its rankings and recommendations.
Its research is paid for entirely by its public
company members.
About GeBer
GeBer Geschäftsberichte http://www.geber.at/en
is a highly specialized service provider in the
sector of online investor relations. They offer
research, consulting and support in all areas
of investor and capital market communications.
Within online reports, GeBer is the market leader
in German-speaking areas.
|