The Top 50 Most Valuable Global Brands

For many brands, it has been a devastating year to say the least.

Over half of the most valuable global brands have experienced a decline in brand value, a measure that takes financial projections, brand roles in purchase decisions, and strengths against competitors into consideration. But where some have faltered, others have asserted their dominance and stepped up for their customers like never before.

The visualization above showcases the top 50 most valuable global brands from a study conducted by Interbrand, which calculates brand value across hundreds of companies.

As consumers move cautiously into 2021, which brands have they chosen to keep by their side?

The Heavy Hitters

With an eye-watering brand value of $323 billion, Apple (AAPL) is the most valuable global brand in the world, followed closely by Amazon in second place, and Microsoft in third. Average growth in brand value across all three of these tech brands in 2020 was roughly 50%.

In particular, Microsoft—who overtook Google in this year’s ranking—has increased its brand value by $100 billion in just one decade. The tech giant has reinvented itself over the years by focusing not just on how its products impact consumers’ lives, but instead on how they impact the planet. The company is promising to become carbon negative by 2030.

However, other brands that sit at the top of the global brands list have not had the same recent success. Coca-Cola (K) for example sits in sixth place, but has seen a decline in brand value of over $13 billion since 2010.

Here is the full list of the most valuable global brands in 2020:

Rank Brand Brand Value YoY % Change Industry
#1 Apple $323B 38% Technology
#2 Amazon $201B 60% Technology
#3 Microsoft $166B 53% Technology
#4 Google $165B -1% Technology
#5 Samsung $62B 2% Technology
#6 Coca-Cola $57B -10% Food & Beverage
#7 Toyota $52B -8% Automotive
#8 Mercedes $49B -3% Automotive
#9 McDonald’s $43B -6% Restaurants
#10 Disney $41B -8% Entertainment
#11 BMW $40B -4% Automotive
#12 Intel $40B -8% Technology
#13 Facebook $35B -12% Technology
#14 IBM $35B -14% Technology
#15 Nike $34B 6% Apparel
#16 Cisco $34B -4% Technology
#17 Louis Vuitton $32B -2% Luxury
#18 SAP $28B 12% Technology
#19 Instagram $26B New Technology
#20 Honda $22B -11% Automotive
#21 Chanel $21B -4% Luxury
#22 J.P. Morgan $20B 6% Financial Services
#23 American Express $19B -10% Financial Services
#24 UPS $19B 6% Logistics
#25 Ikea $19B 3% Retail
#26 Pepsi $19B -9% Food & Beverage
#27 Adobe $18B 41% Technology
#28 Hermès $18B 0% Luxury
#29 General Electric $18B -30% Industrial Machinery
#30 YouTube $17B New Technology
#31 Accenture $17B 2% Business Services
#32 Gucci $16B -2% Luxury
#33 Budweiser $16B -3% Food & Beverage
#34 Pampers $15B -4% Consumer Packaged Goods
#35 Zara $15B -13% Apparel
#36 Hyundai $14B 1% Automotive
#37 H&M $14B -14% Apparel
#38 Nescafé $14B 2% Food & Beverage
#39 Allianz $13B 7% Financial Services
#40 Tesla $13B New Automotive
#41 Netflix $13B 41% Technology
#42 Ford $13B -12% Automotive
#43 L'Oreal $13B 8% Consumer Packaged Goods
#44 Audi $12B -2% Automotive
#45 Visa $12B 15% Financial Services
#46 Ebay $12B 2% Technology
#47 Volkswagen $12B -5% Automotive
#48 AXA $12B 3% Financial Services
#49 Goldman Sachs $12B 7% Financial Services
#50 Adidas $12B 1% Apparel
#51 Sony $12B 14% Technology
#52 Citi $12B -6% Financial Services
#53 Philips $12B 0% Consumer Packaged Goods
#54 Gillette $12B -16% Consumer Packaged Goods
#55 Porsche $11B -3% Automotive
#56 Starbucks $11B -5% Food & Beverage
#57 Mastercard $11B -17% Financial Services
#58 Salesforce $11B 34% Technology
#59 Nissan $11B -8% Automotive
#60 PayPal $11B 38% Financial Services
#61 Siemens $11B 2% Technology
#62 Danone $10B 4% Food & Beverage
#63 Nestlé $10B 8% Food & Beverage
#64 HSBC $10B -14% Financial Services
#65 Hewlett Packard $10B -11% Technology
#66 Kellogg's $10B -8% Food & Beverage
#67 3M $9B 4% Technology
#68 Colgate $9B 6% Consumer Packaged Goods
#69 Morgan Stanely $9B 8% Financial Services
#70 Spotify $8B 52% Technology
#71 Canon $8B -15% Technology
#72 Lego $8B 9% Consumer Packaged Goods
#73 Cartier $7B -9% Luxury
#74 Santander $7B -12% Financial Services
#75 FedEx $7B 5% Logistics
#76 Nintendo $7B 31% Technology
#77 Hewlett Packard Enterprise $7B -16% Technology
#78 Corona $7B 3% Food & Beverage
#79 Ferrari $6B -1% Automotive
#80 Huawei $6B -9% Technology
#81 DHL $6B 5% Logistics
#82 Jack Daniel's $6B -1% Food & Beverage
#83 Dior $6B -1% Luxury
#84 Caterpillar $6B -14% Industrial Machinery
#85 Panasonic $6B -6% Consumer Packaged Goods
#86 Kia $6B -9% Automotive
#87 Johnson & Johnson $6B 1% Consumer Packaged Goods
#88 Heineken $6B -2% Food & Beverage
#89 John Deere $5B -9% Industrial Machinery
#90 LinkedIn $5B 8% Technology
#91 Hennessy $5B -3% Food & Beverage
#92 KFC $5B -7% Food & Beverage
#93 Land Rover $5B -13% Automotive
#94 Tiffany & Co. $5B -7% Luxury
#95 Mini $5B -10% Automotive
#96 Uber $5B -13% Technology
#97 Burberry $5B -8% Luxury
#98 Johnnie Walker $5B New Food & Beverage
#99 Prada $4B -6% Luxury
#100 Zoom $4B New Technology

It is clear that brands that went above and beyond during the COVID-19 pandemic not only benefit from more meaningful connections with their customers; it also pays financially—with brand value for all 100 companies included in the study totaling $2 trillion.

Movers and Shakers

When it comes to 2020’s fastest risers, Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Spotify (SPOT), and Netflix (NFLX) lead the way.

Not too far behind these brands is PayPal, which saw 38% growth in the last year due to some major strategic pivots. More recently, the brand announced it would be redirecting capital from shareholders and investing in low-level employees who have been essential during the pandemic.

Other brands making their mark in 2020 are Instagram (FB), Tesla (TSLA), and YouTube (GOOGL) — all of which are new to the ranking and are experiencing significant growth in brand value. In fact, electric vehicle company Tesla experienced a 769% increase in market capitalization in just twelve months, making it the world’s most valuable automaker.

The Great Brand Shift

As pharmaceutical companies begin distributing vaccines across the globe, consumer optimism is starting to build again. However, the future of brands remains uncertain.

Only 41 out of 100 most valuable global brands remain in the ranking today from the study conducted in 2000. With almost 60 hugely influential brands falling out of favor in the last two decades, there are several ways in which today’s brands can build economic resilience and thrive in an anxious world:

  1. Leadership: The degree to which a brand has a clear purpose that is executed seamlessly across the entire organization.
  2. Engagement: Creating meaningful and collaborative relationships with consumers based on the brand’s unique story and reason for being.
  3. Relevance: Being omnipresent for customers and delivering on their expectations by going beyond selling products or services.

Although the impacts of 2020 will be felt for years to come, brands that stay ahead of consumers’ changing expectations will be in a better position to weather the storm.

Disclosure: This material has been distributed for informational purposes only. It is the opinion of the author and should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any ...

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