Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Most powerful brands: Sure Google is No. 1, but Apple shines as does tech overall

By | April 21, 2008, 7:08am PDT

Millward Brown is out with its annual ranking of most powerful brands and Google is the top dog, but let’s not forget the broader technology story here: Six out of the top 10 brands are technology companies. Apple and Blackberry brands are surging and folks even like their wireless carriers these days.

Here are a few snippets of the top 25 from Millward Brown’s BrandZ 2008 report released Monday.
brandz1.png

As I look at that chart, I almost wonder what the hubbub about Google is about (Techmeme). Is it more notable that Google is ranked No. 1 or that Apple’s brand equity has jumped 123 percent? How about Microsoft’s brand value growth for 2008 matching Google’s? China Mobile at No. 5?

But the broader story is that technology brands have moved to the forefront at the expense of the financial sector. And there’s a good reason for that. Consumers are becoming more intimate with their wireless services and devices even as they struggle to pay the bills (to the banks incidentally). According to the BrandZ report:

The technology sector (including mobile operators), which accounted for 28 of the Top 100 brands, outperformed all other categories in this year’s BrandZ Ranking, with a brand value growth of $187.5bn. This is more than half of the Top 100’s total increase.

Here’s the technology specific split:

brandz3.png

And the mobile operators category:

brandz4.png

A peak at the 10 companies that didn’t break the top 25 also indicate that technology companies are on the move with Oracle (No. 26), Intel (No. 27), SAP (No. 29) and Verizon Wireless (No. 33) showing good brand equity growth over 2007. Oracle’s brand growth was up 29 percent from a year ago compared to SAP’s 20 percent.

Other odds and ends that are notable:

  • Dell (No. 41) showed brand equity growth of 10 percent. Is this a sign of a nascent turnaround.
  • Blackberry as a brand (No. 51) showed brand equity gains of 390 percent. That continues the wireless device theme.
  • AT&T (No. 55) showed brand equity growth of 30 percent. That has to be iPhone related.
  • Amazon (No. 61) had brand equity growth of 93 percent. I wonder how much of that is related to Amazon Web Services vs. gaining share at eBay’s expense. EBay was No. 65 with brand equity down 13 percent.
  • Yahoo (No. 62) showed a 13 percent decline in brand equity.

The report is an interesting read, but the methodology could be debated–especially since the whole brand value thing is based on intangible assets. Here’s how the figures are calculated for the BrandZ report.

brandz2.png

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Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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RE: Most powerful brands: Sure Google is No. 1, but Apple shines as does tech overall
tomlin21-24319035676893835085146735905770 11th Oct
You own an extremely intriguing weblog covering a great deal of matters I'm intrigued on very best of that.I just additional your websites to my favorites so I can browse a terrific offer mulberry outlets additional with the adhering to days
0 Votes
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Interesting
Qbt 21st Apr 2008
Microsoft is ranked way ahead of Apple in this report, yet you manage to mention Apple 3 times (and a few times indirectly), yet MS only once. You even managed to put Apple right in the title.

Are you such a big Apple fanboy that you can't even manage to write a blog based on a table that doesn't show how much you suck up to Apple?
0 Votes
+ -
Chatting up MS is like talking about the 350LB lineman
who as it happens is a superstar and is expected to thrive
and therefor not what one would call news. Now the 160
lb running back who for as of yet reasons unclear keeps
managing to squeeze through defensive lines of giants and
thrive in pro football now there is a story.

Nobody cares about the story of a rich kid who went to all
the "right" schools. Was born to the right family. New the
right people and went onto a nice life for himself.

Everyone is interested in the "scrapper" who stumbles and
falls sometimes but keeps on getting up and tried again
despite the odds and one day manages to make good.

If you are DESTINE to be a success your story is well Ho
Hum. If you are DESTINE to fail and don't NOW THAT IS A
STORY!!!!

Pagan jim
0 Votes
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Apple "destined to fail"?
Anton Philidor 21st Apr 2008
I know how much you hate Apple, but that's excessively blatant.


You could also turn the story a bit. Apple sells based on its brand reputation for style and quality. It's selling well.

Microsoft sells because it's how the computer works, and usually not excitement. Vista's blazing success may be an exception, but brand is usually not a selling point without work.

So the better model is the dazzling flash of someone born to money against someone working hard and simply to gain attention for achievements.

You can star Paris Hilton as Apple and - say - Marie Curie as Microsoft.
0 Votes
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Funny but no....:P
James Quinn 21st Apr 2008
Woz and Jobs started out in a garage and nobody gave
them a second look as they started out. Gates and Co did
some software development in the start but their real PUSH
was mom who worked at IBM and got her son into the
door. Now the "born to fail" or destine to fail were the
many comments by press and pundits over the years
regarding Apple's fate. Nobody was or has written MS obit
however Apple has been placed in the grave sooooo many
times over these many years that Undead could be their
next OSX name (getting tired of kitties anyway) Maybe
Vlad would be cool too?

Pagan jim
0 Votes
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Vlad?
Anton Philidor 21st Apr 2008
I can understand how someone stuck with the high initial costs and impaled with expensive operating system updates would think of the ol' bloodsucker.

But the difference is that at least some of the victims like Lucy Westenra were ... thrilled as a side effect. Those contributing their life's blood for a Mac - apples often do lasting damage - are more likely to feel gouged.
0 Votes
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Do you seriously believe...
RocketEater 22nd Apr 2008
that Microsoft landed the IBM contract because Bill Gates' mother worked at IBM? First of all she didn't. She did know high ranking IBMers through charity work at the United Way but do you really think any company as large and powerful as IBM was back in the early 80s would arrange a contract based on knowing somebody's Mom? Totally, totally, totally un-IBM-like!
0 Votes
+ -
You own an extremely intriguing weblog covering a great deal of matters I'm intrigued on very best of that.I just additional your websites to my favorites so I can browse a terrific offer mulberry outlets additional with the adhering to days

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