Havas has issued a piece of research called “Meaningful Brands,” which it has done every two years since 2008. Shockingly, every study has shown that consumers around the world
couldn’t care less if the majority of brands disappeared overnight.
The methodology behind the survey is solid. It looks at three brand pillars: Personal Benefits, Collective
Benefits and Functional Benefits, and then adds in 13 dimensions like environment, emotional, social, ethics, etc. and 52 attributes such as “save time,” “makes me happier,”
“deliver its promises,” etc. It is also a truly global and quantitative survey, covering over 350,000 respondents across 31 countries and 1,800 brands.
The results for
2019 show that consumers would not shed a tear over losing 77% of the world’s brands, which is an increase of 3% over 2017. To make matters worse, 58% of the advertising and promotional output
of the world’s leading 1,800 brands is deemed poor and irrelevant.
There are of course brands that do well. The top five for 2019 looks like this: (1) Google, (2)
PayPal, (3) Mercedes Benz, (4) WhatsApp, (5) YouTube. Absent from the Top 30 are stalwarts such as Apple, Coca-Cola and other “Most Valuable Brands” as measured by
Interbrands.
The top five seems to indicate a specific love for utility. Four of the top five allow me to accomplish something (i.e. search, watch, share). Yeah, I
can’t explain Mercedes Benz either.
And there are other surprises, such as the inclusion of Johnson & Johnson as the 6th most meaningful brand (I would think that their
individual products might be better known than J&J as “parent”) and Michelin cracking the Top 30.
The Meaningful Brands survey shows that brands that are
“meaningful” score almost twice on overall impression of a brand, on purchase intent, advocacy and justification of a premium price. Repurchase scores are even three times higher versus
the least meaningful brands. So having a meaningful brand comes with benefits.
The other important question to ask is if advertising can even help to create a brand, meaningful or
otherwise. To me, this study shows that “utility” and “delivering on what you say you are/have” is more important than anything else.
I think we all
agree that having a strong brand probably helps, and perhaps today even more so than 20 or 30 years ago. But we are mostly still operating on the premise that building a powerful brand will help along
the AIDA funnel (attention, interest, desire, action), whereas most purchase journeys follow a wildly different path.
The AIDA model is attributed to American advertising and
sales pioneer, E. St. Elmo Lewis, who died in 1948. So it has been around for a bit! Author Joseph Jaffe added ADIA to this funnel in his book “Flip the Funnel” (Wiley, 2010). ADIA stands
for Acknowledgement, Dialogue, Incentivation and Activation of the consumer, post AIDA. I think adding ADIA to your funnel already gets you closer to being meaningful.
Obviously, Havas’ agenda is to convince brand marketers that, in todays cluttered and fragmented world, brands are more important than ever, and that they can help get you such a brand.
But what the research really shows is that, as an industry, we kinda suck at creating meaningful brands. And we have been sucking at it measurably since 2008.