A report known as the BrandZ Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands, released on
Wednesday by advertising firm WPP and market researcher Millward Brown,
attempts to rank the value, or dollar amount, of a company through a
combination of market data and customer surveys. Overall, technology firms
fared well among the 100 brands that showed up.
According to cnet.com, it was Apple that shined higher than
the rest of the tech pack. This year, the company reclaimed the top spot after
being overtaken by Google in 2014. Specifically, Apple picked up a brand value
of $247 billion, a jump of 67 percent from last year. In bumping Apple back to
the top of the charts, Millward Brown cited the success of the iPhone 6 and the surrounding excitement about
the Apple brand in
general. The company also was the leader in the growth of
its brand value over the past ten years, rising by 1,446 percent.
At one point, Apple investors, consumers
and watchers had wondered whether the company had lost its mojo following the
death of co-founder Steve Jobs and the dearth of new, innovative products. The
company was also losing market share and customers to rival Samsung. But the
heavy demand for the big-screened iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus and the debut of the Apple Watch appear to have rejuvenated Apple,
pushing the shares higher and prompting many analysts to raise their stock
price projections.
Second-place Google was no slouch
either, rising by 9 percent to achieve a brand value of $173 billion. Known
primarily as a search engine, Google always seems to have its hooks in a
variety of businesses, including the Android operating system, self-driving
cars, its high-speed fiber network and its new Project
Fi wireless service. The only major area where the company stumbled this
past year was Google
Glass, which was put on hold in January as Google tries to develop a more
consumer-friendly model.
Microsoft took third place with a brand
value of $115 billion, rising 28 percent from last year. The report credited
new CEO Satya Nadella for refreshing the company's culture and establishing a
greater sense of cooperation with partners and customers. In fourth place was
IBM with a value of $93 billion, though that number was down 13 percent from
last year.
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