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Amazon, Apple, Google Most Valuable Brands But China’s Rising – Kantar

Amazon, Apple and Google are the world’s most valuable brands, however, Chinese brands are rising up the leaders’ list and are more valuable than Europe’s top brands, according to a global ranking by Kantar’s BrandZ.

Amazon maintained its position as the world’s most valuable brand, growing 64% to $684bn (or the equivalent GDP of Poland). Having first entered the BrandZ ranking in 2006, Amazon’s value grew by almost $268bn this year and became the first half-a-trillion-dollar brand, joined by Apple, valued at $612bn.

Amazon, founded in 1994 by Jeff Bezos, remained the world’s most valuable brand with an estimated value of $684 billion, followed by Apple, founded in 1976, at $612 billion and Google at $458 billion.

Photo by Piotr Cichosz

China has consolidated its lead over Europe. Chinese brands have grown from 11% of the top 100 value in 2011 to 14% today. European brands, in contrast, now represent 8% of the ranking’s value versus 20% in 2011.

China’s biggest social media and video games company, Tencent, was the People’s Republic’s top brand, in fifth place, while Alibaba was in seventh place.

Rank 2021​ ​Brand​ Brand Value 2021 ($mil.) ​ “% Change 2021 vs 2020​”​
1​ Amazon​ $683,852 ​ 64%​
2​ Apple​ $611,997 ​ 74%​
3​ Google​ $457,998 ​ 42%​
4​ Microsoft​ $410,271 ​ 26%​
5​ Tencent​ $240,931 ​ 60%​
6​ Facebook​ $226,744 ​ 54%​
7​ Alibaba​ $196,912 ​ 29%​
8​ Visa​ $191,285 ​ 2%​
9​ McDonald’s​ $154,921 ​ 20%​
10​ MasterCard​ $112,876 ​ 4%​

Kantar BrandZ Top 10 Most Valuable Global Brands 2021

Tesla is the fastest growing brand and became the most valuable car brand, growing its value by 275% year on year to $42,6bn.

Five brands more than doubled their brand values: Pinduoduo, Meituan, Moutai and TikTok from China, and Tesla from the USA.

Overall growth has been fuelled by 69 brands increasing their value by at least 5% since 2020, together with 13 new entrants, including Zoom, Nvidia and AMD, and Spotify.

Technology dominates the top end of the Kantar BrandZ ranking, with seven of the top ten brands coming from the tech sector. Tech has also enabled non-tech brands to achieve significant growth, for example, Gucci – harnessing the power of TikTok during the pandemic – and Domino’s – leveraging online and delivery services. The top 10 brands are today valued at $3,3trn, compared to $800bn in 2011.

US brands grew fastest in 2021 with their brand values growing an average 46% year-on-year, meaning the US now accounts for 74% of the top 100’s total value, despite having just 24% of global GDP.

“2020-1 has been a record year for brand growth, and despite many facing a difficult year, our research has again proven that strong brands deliver superior shareholder returns, are more resilient and recover more quickly,” comments Nathalie Burdet, CMO of Kantar.

“With global e-commerce growing from 12% to 15% of all sales in 2020, it has been a positive year for brands involved in that value chain – from the retailers through to the couriers like FedEx and UPS.

However, we have also seen growth in industries where many were predicting challenges early in the pandemic. Apparel brands for example have collectively grown even more than media and entertainment brands in the ranking, and luxury brands, despite reduced travel and lockdowns globally, have refocused their energies and seen growth as a result.”

Across industries brands have been rewarded for meeting consumers’ changing needs and behaviours:

Reputation, especially for sustainable and ethical purposes, is increasingly a driver for brand growth. The luxury category saw 34% brand growth with, predominantly, French and Italian luxury companies such as LVMH investing in their corporate reputation through pandemic-related initiatives, sustainable transformation and support for social movements such as Black Lives Matter (BLM).

Similarly, L’Oréal Paris successfully bucked the trend across beauty brands in the pandemic, securing brand growth by flexing its assets and driving female empowerment.

“This year’s results show that brand building remains critical to securing growth,” explains Burdet. “We track the stock market performance of our strongest brands and have seen these recover twice as fast as other key indices.

Our analytics have uncovered that 70% of what makes a brand successful is executing four fundamentals well: providing superior experience across consistently branded touchpoints, a range of well-designed and functional products and services, convenience and exposure through great advertising.

However, Covid-19 has emphasised consumer values such as trust and reliability. Those brands that are evolving their values, projecting leadership on these issues are demonstrating differentiation and standing out.”

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