Apple has overtaken Google as the world's most valuable
brand, ending a four-year reign by the Internet search leader, according to a
new study by global brands agency Millward Brown.
The iPhone and iPad maker's brand is now worth $153
billion, almost half Apple's market capitalization, says the annual BrandZ
study of the world's top 100 brands.
Apple's portfolio of coveted consumer goods propelled it
past Microsoft to become the world's most valuable technology company last
year.
Peter Walshe, global brands director of Millward Brown,
says Apple's meticulous attention to detail, along with an increasing presence
of its gadgets in corporate environments, have allowed it to behave differently
from other consumer-electronics makers.
"Apple is breaking the rules in terms of its pricing
model," he told Reuters by telephone. "It's doing what luxury brands
do, where the higher price the brand is, the more it seems to underpin and
reinforce the desire."
"Obviously, it has to be allied to great products and
a great experience, and Apple has nurtured that."
By contrast, one of the brands most threatened by Apple's
rising popularity in offices took a big hit in the survey.
Research In Motion's BlackBerry brand lost a fifth of its
brand value. Among technology companies, only Nokia's 28 percent decline was
steeper.
Of the top 10 brands in Monday's report, six were
technology and telecoms companies: Google at number two, IBM at number three,
Microsoft at number five, AT&T at number seven and China Mobile at number
nine.
McDonald's rose two places to number four, as fast food
became the fastest-growing category, Coca-Cola slipped one place to number six,
Marlboro was also down one to number eight, and General Electric was number 10.
Walshe said demand from China was a major factor in the
rise of fast-food brands. "The Chinese have been discovering fast food and
it's such a vast market -- Starbucks, McDonald's... and pizza has hit
China," he said.
"The way McDonald's has reinvented itself, adapted
its menus, added healthy options, expanding the times of day it can be visited,
for example oatmeal for breakfast... that allied with growth in developing
markets has really helped that brand."
Nineteen of the top 100 brands came from emerging markets,
up from 13 last year.
Facebook entered the top 100 at number 35 with a brand
valued at $19.1 billion, while Chinese search engine Baidu rose to number 29
from 46.
Toyota reclaimed its position as the world's most valuable
car brand, as it recovered from a bungled 2010 product recall. The survey was
carried out before the March earthquake that caused massive disruption to
Japanese supply chains.
The total value of the top 100 brands rose by 17 percent
to $2.4 trillion, as the global economy shifted to growth.
Millward Brown takes as a starting point the value that
companies put on their own main brands as intangibles in their earnings
reports.
It combines that with the perceptions of more than 2
million consumers in relevant markets around the world whom it surveys over the
course of the year, and then applies a multiple derived from the company's
short-term future growth prospects.
Source & Read More: Yahoo Finance
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