Technology companies have led BrandZ™’s Top 100 ever since its first global brand value ranking in 2006 when Microsoft took the top spot.

Rising in brand value by 52% year-on-year to $315.5-billion, Amazon moves ahead of Apple ($309.5-billion) and Google ($309-billion), which both rose by +3% and +2% respectively, to end the technology giants’ 12-year dominance.

In the top 10, Facebook remained at number six while and, for the first time, Alibaba overtook Tencent and became the most valuable Chinese brand, moving up two places to number seven and growing +16% to $131.2-billion.

Tencent dropped three places to number eight, declining by 27% to $130.9 billion year-on-year.

According to BrandZ™, as other social media platforms face challenges in terms of trust and desirability, Instagram (number 44, $28.2 billion), now with over a billion users worldwide, emerged as this year’s fastest riser climbing 47 places with a massive +95% growth in brand value. Lululemon, an athletic apparel company, was the second fastest riser, stretching to +77% growth year-on-year to $6.92-billion.

Other top risers, such as Netflix (+65%, number 34, $34.3-billion), Amazon (+52%, $315.5-billion) and Uber (+51%, number 53, $24.2-billion) reflect the changing, technology-driven world in which consumers are placing more value on richer brand experiences.

David Roth, CEO of The Store WPP: EMEA and Asia and chair of BrandZ™, says, "The growth in value of this year’s top 100 brands to an all-time high proves the power of investing in brands to deliver superior shareholder value. Behind this headline growth figure lies the success coming from a new phenomenon of ecosystem brand building."

"We’re seeing a move from individual product and service brands to a new era of highly-disruptive ecosystems. Brands need to understand the value this type of model can create and should embrace its approach to be successful in the future," Roth adds.


BrandZ™ says that, despite the economic uncertainty surrounding the United States and China trade tariffs, almost a third of a trillion Dollars ($328-billion) of value was added to the BrandZ™ Top 100 Global ranking over the last year, giving it a combined brand value of $4.7 trillion — roughly the combined GDP of Spain, Korea and Russia.

Much of this value is derived from consumer technology brands appearing in the ranking which combined are now worth in excess of a trillion Dollars. Examples include newcomers Xiaomi (number 74, $19.8-billion), a Chinese mobile handset brand that uses the Internet of Things (IoT) to connect smart devices and is experiencing rapidly growing demand in countries such as Russia, India and Malaysia.

Another Chinese brand, Meituan (number 78, $18.8-billion), is seen as a category disrupting consumer technology platform offering everything from food delivery, room bookings and ride-hailing to bike rentals.

Meanwhile, Uber is leveraging the ecosystem model and expanding into food and other delivery services, while Haier (number 89, $16.3 billion), the world’s largest home appliances and IoT platform, is committed to co-creating an open ecosystem brand in the IoT era with its customers and partners.

Doreen Wang, Kantar’s global head of BrandZ™, adds, "Amazon’s phenomenal brand value growth of almost $108-billion in the last year demonstrates how brands are now less anchored to individual categories and regions. The boundaries are blurring as technology fluency allow brands, such as Amazon, Google and Alibaba, to offer a range of services across multiple consumer touchpoints."

"Using their consumer experience and expertise, these brands are crossing over into the business services sector, creating new opportunities for brand growth. Disruptive ecosystem models are flourishing in regions such as Asia, where consumers are more technology-enabled and where brands are integrating themselves into every aspect of people’s daily lives," Wang says.

Trends that were highlighted in the 2019 BrandZ™ Global Top 100 study include:
  • Luxury is the fastest growing category (+29%) followed by retail (+25%), fuelled by the shifting preferences to digital channels from GenY and GenZ consumers.
  • Technology, finance and retail categories dominate, accounting for more than two-thirds of the total value of brands.
  • Nine newcomers appear in the top 100, predominantly driven by Chinese and US technology brands with disruptive business models including Dell Technologies, Xbox, Haier, Meituan and Xiaomi.
  • Asian brands increase their presence with 15 Chinese, three Indian and one Indonesian brand making the ranking among a total of 23 from the region, including LIC and Tata Consultancy Services.
  • GenZ brands (created after 1996) are ahead in growth rate as they add more value to the ranking per year of existence — almost four times more than brands created in the millennial era of 1977 to 1995. A total of 23 GenZ brands appear in the top 100 with an average age of 16 years compared to 18 millennial brands averaging 33 years.
  • Sustainable brands — Brand owners are demonstrating the importance of improving and reinforcing consumer perceptions that they are ‘responsible’ through social, environmental and corporate initiatives.
  • China and US trade wars affected the growth of the top 100 ranking, which slowed to +7% over the last 12 months. Consumer confidence was hit as the trade tariffs impacted several brand categories with cars, logistics and banks suffering most.
The BrandZ™ Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands report and rankings are available online here.

The global report, rankings, charts, articles and more can also be found via the BrandZ™ app. The app also contains the same features and functionality for all BrandZ™ regional reports and is free to download for Apple IOS and all Android devices from www.brandz.com/mobile. Alternatively, individuals can search for BrandZ™ in the respective iTunes or Google Play app stores.

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