
What's in a name? That which we used to call Twitter no longer
smells as sweet, according to just-released brand equity valuation platform Brand Finance, which this morning downgraded the value of X's brand to just $673 million, an 88% decline from the $5.7
billion Twitter had when Elon Musk acquired it for $44 billion.
As a result, Brand Finance has dropped X from its vaunted "Media 50" brand equity ranking for the first time since Twitter
ranked on it.
The company said X's brand strength index score has also declined considerably by 12.7 points to 56.9/100, "signaling a major reputational crisis that the brand is
struggling to overcome."
The downturn isn't just due to the brand name change from Twitter to X, but underscores advertisers’ concerns regarding X’s content moderation under
Musk’s leadership.
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The downgrade also comes on the heels of Musk's antitrust suit against the World Federation of Advertisers' self-regulatory Global Alliance for Responsible Media initiative, which the WFA has shuttered due to the
burden of the suit.
“Musk’s controversial rebranding of Twitter has resulted in a dramatic and abrupt decline in brand value and strength," comments Brand Finance Managing Director
Richard Haigh, adding, "The hasty abandonment of a globally recognized name, without a clear migration plan, has had disastrous consequences, alienating key stakeholders and eroding the
brand’s core strengths. This is reflected in the brand’s weaker scores in the familiarity, reputation, and recommendation metrics of Brand Finance’s research."
Google once
again ranked No. 1 in Brand Finance's 2024 "Media 50" ranking, making it the most valuable media brand for the fourth consecutive year.
TikTok follows in
second place, marking a year of remarkable brand value growth.
Meta’s portfolio has also shown substantial growth, with Instagram leading as the fastest-growing media brand,
soaring 48% to $70.4 billion.
WhatsApp has experienced a 29% increase to $10.4 billion, and Facebook has grown by 28% to $75.7 billion.
WeChat tops the brand
strength index with a score of 94.3/100, reflecting its essential and familiar role in China, despite a 17% decrease in brand value to $41.8 billion amid ongoing economic challenges.
