Introduction To Branding: by Robert Jones (Author)
Introduction To Branding: by Robert Jones (Author)
Introduction To Branding: by Robert Jones (Author)
Coca-Cola
What is a brand?
One definition of a brand is as follows:
“A name, term, sign, symbol or design, or a
combination of these, that is intended to identify
the goods and services of one business or group of
businesses and to differentiate them from those
of competitors”.
Interbrand - a leading branding consultancy - define
a brand in this way:
“A mixture of tangible and intangible attributes
symbolized in a trademark, which, if properly
managed, creates influence and generates value”.
Brand Equity
Manufacturer’
Private Brand
s Brand
$67,000 million
Based in U.S.
Flagging appetite for soda has cut demand for Coke, but the beverage
giant has a raft of new products in the pipeline that could reverse its
recent slide.
2 Microsoft
$56,926 million
Based in U.S.
Threats from Google and Apple haven't yet offset the power of its
Windows and Office monopolies.
3 IBM
$56,201 million
Based in U.S. Having off-loaded its low-profit PC business
to Lenovo, IBM is marketing on the strategic level to
corporate leaders.
4.GE
$48,907 million
Based in U.S. The brand Edison built has extended its reach from ovens
to credit cards, and the "Ecomagination" push is making GE look like a
protector of the planet.
5.Intel
$32,319 million
Based in U.S. Profits and market share weren't the only things
slammed by rival AMD. Intel's brand value tumbled 9%, as it
loss business from high-profile customers.
6.Nokia
$30,131 million
Based in Finland .Fashionable designs and low-cost models
for the developing world enabled the mobile phone
maker to regain ground against competitors.
7.Toyota
$27,941 million
Based in Japan. Toyota is closing in on GM to become the world's
biggest automaker. A slated 10% increase in U.S. sales this year will
help even more.
8. Disney
$27,848 million
Based in U.S. New CEO Robert Iger expanded the brand by buying
animation hit-maker Pixar and beefing up digital distribution of TV shows
through the Internet and iPods.
9.McDonald's
$27,501 million
Based in U.S. A new healthy-living marketing campaign—and the
premium-priced sandwiches and salads that came with it—have led
to a fourth year of sales gains.
10.Mercedes-Benz
$21,795 million
Based in Germany The new S-Class sedan and M-Class SUV are
helping repair a tarnished quality reputation. High costs and weak
margins will take longer to fix.
Here's how we calculate the power in
a name
INTERBRAND TAKES lots of ingredients into account when ranking the
world's most valuable brands. To even qualify for the list, each brand must
derive about a third of its earnings outside its home country, be
recognizable outside of its base of customers, and have publicly available
marketing and financial data. One or more of those criteria eliminate such
heavyweights as Visa, Wal-Mart, Mars, and CNN. Interbrand doesn't rank
parent companies, which explains why Procter & Gamble doesn't show up.
And airlines are not ranked because it's too hard to separate their brands'
impact on sales from factors such as routes and schedules.
Evaluation
BUSINESSWEEK CHOSE Interbrand's methodology because it
evaluates brands much the way analysts value other assets:
on the basis of how much they're likely to earn in the future.
The projected profits are then discounted to a present
value, taking into account the likelihood that those earnings
will actually materialize.
THE FIRST STEP IS figuring out what percentage of a company's revenues can be
credited to a brand. (The brand may be almost the entire company, as with
McDonald's Corp., or just a portion, as it is for Marlboro.) Based on reports from
analysts at J.P. Morgan Chase, Citigroup, and Morgan Stanley, Interbrand projects
five years of earnings and sales for the brand. It then deducts operating costs, taxes,
and a charge for the capital employed to arrive at the intangible earnings. The
company strips out intangibles such as patents and management strength to assess
what portion of those earnings can be attributed to the brand.
Summary
FINALLY, THE BRAND'S strength is assessed to
determine the risk profile of those earnings
forecasts. Considerations include market
leadership, stability, and global reach—or the
ability to cross both geographic and cultural
borders. That generates a discount rate, which is
applied to brand earnings to get a net present
value. BusinessWeek and Interbrand believe this
figure comes closest to representing a brand's true
economic worth.