Google overtakes Apple in top 100 most valuable global brand list
Google has regained its position at the top of the table in the 2016 BrandZ Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands ranking.
A statement released today by WPP and Millward Brown indicates that Google overtook Apple on the back of a 32% increase to hit its best-ever brand value of $229.2 billion while Apple stands at $228.5 billion, down 8% from its 2015 value.
Google thrived on continual innovation, increased revenue from advertising, and growth in its cloud business.
By contrast, Apple tends to follow a trend of bi-annual surges of innovation along with keeping this pipeline secret. This, combined with the lost momentum in sales for the Apple Watch as well as the lack of a new market-defining handset,is reflected in the 2016 valuation for last year’s no.1.
For the second consecutive year, Facebook was the technology brand that rose the fastest in the BrandZ Top 100, growing 44% to $102.6 billion, a value that pushed it into the top ten for the first time. This was thanks to adding new features such as Friends’ Day, Disaster Alert and live video broadcast to its community platform, as well as attracting new publisher content. It is also proving highly successfully in monetizing the move to mobile, attracting significant spend via its mobile ad platforms.
Overall, however, it’s been a less than triumphant year for the tech sector. After 2015’s 24% rise in total value for theTop 20 tech brands, 2016 has seen just a 6% rise. As a rule, hardware companies have performed less well with new areas such as wearables, watches and the internet of things yet to deliver either financial or brand benefits.
One company that has defied the hardware-service divide, according to the statement is Huawei, the low-cost smartphone manufacturer, which first entered the tech Top 20 last year. It has shown 22% growth to $18.7 billion following its emergence as the leading Chinese smartphone maker in China, and becoming a key rival for Apple in the rest of the world. This market leadership also allows Huawei to strengthen its premium position by raising prices.
Another success story that is indicative of future trends is streaming TV service Netflix. It has been listed in the tech Top 20 for the first time with a brand value of $9.2bn, the release said.
That consumer perception that the B2B brands are less innovative – even if that isn’t always the case – has seen the proportion of total value in the technology Top 20 that is contributed by B2B brands decline from 56% in 2006 to just 26% in this year’s listing.
“There is a clear imperative for tech brands to showcase their innovation pipeline both in order to convince consumers that they are working hard to change their consumers’ lives but also to allow investors to anticipate future growth more accurately. With complex supply chains, secrecy is no longer possible and Google has benefited from its corporate restructure which allows it to better showcase the innovations beyond its core search business,” said Elspeth Cheung, Global BrandZ Valuation Director at Millward Brown.
The BrandZ study also identified multiple areas for short-term growth including Virtual Reality, where mass market affordable devices were launched to huge acclaim earlier this year, as well as developing markets, where Facebook and Twitter are desperate to establish themselves. While the luxury end has already been grabbed by the likes of Apple and Samsung, the huge number of newly wealthy consumers remains a big opportunity.