Thursday, June 9, 2016

New List: Top 100 Brands Unveiled

Apple has been ousted from the top spot.

Fortune reports for the second time in three years, Google is the world’s most valuable brand, according to the latest BrandZ ranking compiled by marketing research firm Millward Brown.

In its annual report ranking the top 100 global brands, Millward Brown, a subsidiary of advertising giant WPP, ranked the Alphabet-owned Google ahead of Apple, marking the second year in a row that the two tech giants have swapped the top two spots on the BrandZ list. Released this week, the ranking takes more than 100,000 global brands into consideration and brand value is based on a combination of financial performance, including revenue and profitability, and interviews with more than three million consumers.

According to the latest BrandZ ranking, Google’s value increased by 32% year-over-year to hit $229 billion, while Apple’s value dropped 8%, to $228 billion. Google parent company Alphabet’s share price is up more than 36% over the past 12 months on increased ad revenue, while Apple’s stock has been in flux this year due to investor concerns over disappointing iPhone sales. Millward Brown notes in its 2016 report that Alphabet and Google made inroads with investors last year by laying out a clear plan for the future while investing in sectors such as healthcare and life sciences, as well as continuing to develop autonomous driving technology.


Click Here For The Entire List.

Millard Brown offers 10 Action Points for Building and Sustaining Valuable Brands

1. Be purposeful

Every brand needs a purpose. Consumers assume brands are in business to make money, of course, but they also expect a well-defined and clearly communicated brand purpose. While that purpose might describe a way in which the brand changes the world, it must certainly describe the way the brand improves the customer’s life.

2. Be authentic

It has never been more important for a brand to be real and to operate in a broad social context. The brand is there for all to see. And consumers today, especially members of the millennial and Gen Z generations, are likely to select brands that align with their beliefs, or at least do not contradict those beliefs.

3. Be in the conversation

Consumers are making their voices heard across categories, expressing health concerns about soft drinks, fast food, and personal care products, and advocating for cleaner energy options. Brands need to be engaged, and to listen in a genuine way to both critics and supporters. Brands need to help shape the conversation in a transparent way. Change is inevitable. But the shape of change is not.

4. Grow the triple bottom line

Pay attention to the financial bottom line, of course, but do not let the social and environmental bottom lines become victims of quarterly reporting pressures. Tell an authentic and forward-looking story about where the brand is now and where it plans to be in the long term.

5. Refine the brand experience

At a time when most products are functionally good enough if not excellent, and every product is just a click away, little is left to differentiate one product from another except the experience of purchasing and using it. Making a brand experience memorable requires both adding embellishments and removing annoyances.

6. Talk to individuals, not generations

Millennials and the Gen Zs know that brands are trying to sell them, and they are less likely to be sold when brands generalize about their entire generation. Narrow the focus. Marketing briefs that talk broadly about the millennial or Gen Z generations need to go back to the planning department.

7. Use data respectfully

Consumers are providing marketers with information about themselves constantly. And while they may be fine with brands knowing that they buy shoes twice a year, they may be less pleased when shoe ads follow them online for six months. From the consumer’s point of view, the preferred transaction with a brand is: You can have my data, but only if you use it intelligently.

8. Simplify the value exchange

To simply pay cash for a product or service is now quaint. Instead, consumers are asked for their data and comments as well as their money. All these forms of currency have skewed the value equation, and consumers end up giving more without receiving additional value.

9. Change the Transaction Mindset 

Develop a sense of partnership with the customer. Help the customer think less about the transaction (What can I buy from you?) and more about the relationship (What can I achieve with you?). Motivate the customer to purchase, but also enable the customer to better understand and appreciate the value exchange.

10. Widen the competitive set

Take off the blinders if they are still on. The best opportunities – and potential competitors – may be waiting outside the product or service category.

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