Quantcast
Marklives.com

Marklives.com

Covering Africa's changing media, marketing and advertising landscape.

  • Home
  • Sections
    • Adland
    • Media
    • Marketing
    • S’HOT
    • Tech
    • Archive
  • Columns
    • #Agency/BrandFocus – Sabrina Forbes
    • Agency Leaders – Most Admired Poll
    • An Accountant in Adland – Siwe Thusi
    • Back2Basics – Mark Eardley
    • Big Q – MarkLives Panel
    • Brands & Branding – Affinity Publishing
    • #Campaigns – MarkLives
    • Circulation Data – ABC Analysis
    • Clicks ‘n Tricks – Charlie Stewart
    • Dear Radio – Paulo Dias
    • Fair Exchange – Erna George
    • FieldNotes – Marguerite Coetzee
    • Frank – Mimi Nicklin
    • Gestalt – Leeya Hendricks
    • Hermaneutics – Herman Manson
    • #Marketers – MarkLives
    • Masterclass Notes – Johanna McDowell
    • Media Redefined – Martin MacGregor
    • Motive – By Invitation Only
    • Press Pass – Carey Finn
    • Q5 – Carey Finn
    • South African TV Ratings
    • #SPOTLIGHT – MarkLives
    • The Suit – Jason Harrison
    • The Martini Shot – Bobby Amm
    • The Power Report – Megan Power
    • Thinking B2B – Warren Moss
    • Young, Gifted & Killing It – Veli Ngubane
    • Zeitgeist of Now – Jason Stewart
  • Find an Agency
    • Shortlist & Compare Agencies
    • List your Agency
    • List as Agency Supplier/Service
    • Register as a Marketer
    • Company News Feed
    • Upgrade to Ramify Premium
    • RamifyPRO
    • Add Premium to Cart
  • Data
    • Agency Revenue Rankings 2019
    • Agency Salary Survey
    • Biggest SA consumer magazines
    • Biggest newspapers in SA
    • The 50 most-valuable brands in SA
    • Top 50 SA advertisers 2016
    • South African TV Ratings
  • Careers
    • Advertising
    • Digital
    • Marketing
    • Media
    • Public Relations
    • View All
  • About
    • About & Contact
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • Partners
Market Research Wrap

Market Research Wrap: First SA BrandZ ranking released

  •   Nov 1, 2018
  •   1

Cheryl Hunter (research at marklives.com)’s weekly wrap of the latest market and consumer research:

  • Standard Bank is SA’s biggest brand
  • Banking sector set for change

SA BrandZ worth over US$40bn

BrandZ Top 30 most valuable SA brands 2018 logoStandard Bank, with a brand value of US$4.79bn, is South Africa’s no.1 brand in the first BrandZ Top 30 Most Valuable South African Brands announced yesterday, Wednesday, 31 October 2018, by WPP and Kantar Millward Brown. The ranking reveals that the Top 30 South African brands show more potential for global growth than their counterparts in the Chinese and European rankings, but have less exposure to overseas markets.

The BrandZ Top 15 Most Valuable South African Brands 2018

Rank 2018

Brand

Category

Brand value (US$m)

1 Standard Bank Banks 4.788
2 First National Bank Banks 3.675
3 Vodacom Telecom providers 3.258
4 Castle Beer 3.172
5 MTN Telecom providers 2.913
6 Nando’s Fast food 2.160
7 Absa Banks 2.019
8 Nedbank Banks 1.882
9 Discovery Insurance 1.708
10 Old Mutual Insurance 1.692
11 Woolworths Retail 1.434
12 Sasol Oil & gas 1.213
13 Investec Banks 1.161
14 Shoprite Retail 1.122
15 Hansa Pilsener Beer 1.121

With a combined value of US$42.6bn, the BrandZ Top 30 Most Valuable South African Brands ranking covers several industry categories, including banks, telecom providers, retail, insurance, fast food, beer, hospitals, oil and gas, entertainment and airlines. The report flags the potential for brands to grow locally and globally but warns that brands will need to work hard to stand out from competitors in a digital landscape in which offerings are increasingly homogenised; future winners will be those which are able to differentiate themselves in a meaningful way that will enable them to deliver superior shareholder value.

The most meaningfully different South African brands are Woolworths, Dis-Chem, Nando’s and Clicks. These brands are differentiating themselves by driving strong brand purpose and a unique brand experience, and then amplifying this through great market communication. Brands that are perceived as creative by consumers capture interest and grow more than competitors which are perceived as unimaginative and dull. Nando’s clever and controversial advertising campaigns are good examples of how a brand can communicate effectively with its target audience, in a very real and relevant way.

Technological disruption

While technology brands have not yet entered South Africa’s Top 30, many of the country’s brands have adopted technological disruption to distinguish themselves from competitors. Examples include First National Bank’s “open a bank account with a selfie” and Capitec’s biometric security. Up-and-coming brands are also using technology to disrupt, with Takealot having purchased Mr Delivery a few years ago and Showmax partnering with DStv.

Says Charles Foster, Kantar insights division Africa and Middle East CEO, “South African brands show great potential for growth in a region undergoing change. BrandZ demonstrates how brands with strong equity are protected and recover more quickly during tough economic periods, while growing faster during the good times. Those that focus on innovation and building emotional connections with consumers will grow faster.”

• For more, go to Millward Brown.

 

Banking on success

BrandMapp logoWritten by Brandon de Kock, WhyFive Insights director, this third in a selection of interesting insights from the 2018/19 BrandMapp survey looks at the banking sector and why its clients are so unhappy.

by Brandon de Kock. With six new banks set to launch in South Africa in 2019, BrandMapp 2018 asked a simple question — “How likely are you to change banks in the next two years?” — and discovered that 15% of the total sample (representing adults living in households earning R10 000 or more) ticked a box to say they were either likely or very likely.

Now, 15% may not seem like much but, when you’re talking about banks with millions of customers paying service fees every single month, small shifts could mean a lot of cash. Perhaps more concerning for the traditional banks should be that another 21% of respondents ticked the “unsure” box — which sounds like a lot of people who would be swayed by a good-enough offer. And if you’re thinking there must be huge differences between demographic segments, you’d be wrong. Even among the 50+ segment and the wealthiest segment (people living in R80 000-a-month houses), there’s a significant enough group of doubters to make the private bankers worried.

Seventy percent of affluent respondents said they were unlikely or very unlikely to switch — which means that 30% might well be tempted by something like a fistful of Vitality points!

The point is that the banks haven’t really done a great job of pleasing us as customers, verified by 44% of all respondents saying they’d be ‘happy never to go back into a bank again’!

Whichever way you look at it, 2019 is going to be a very interesting year in the banking industry.

• For more, go to WhyFive Insights.


Cheryl Hunter

Cheryl Hunter (@cherylhunter) has written for the South African media, marketing and advertising industries for more than 15 years. A former editor of M&M in Independent Newspapers and contributor to Bizcommunity, AdFocus, AdReview and the Ad Annual, she has also produced for various television networks and currently consults on communication strategy and media liaison. She now does the new weekly “Market Research Wrap” column for MarkLives.com.

— One subscription form, three newsletters: sign up now for the MarkLives newsletter, including Ramify headlines; The Interlocker, our new monthly comms-focused mailer; and Brands & Branding, launching

Share this:

  • Print
  • Email
  • WhatsApp
  • Tweet

Related

Columns

  • #Agency/BrandFocus – Sabrina Forbes
    #Agency/BrandFocus – Sabrina Forbes
  • #Campaigns – MarkLives
    #Campaigns – MarkLives
  • #SPOTLIGHT – MarkLives
    #SPOTLIGHT – MarkLives
  • Agency Leaders – Most Admired Poll
    Agency Leaders – Most Admired Poll
  • Always Learning – Kirsten Dewar
    Always Learning – Kirsten Dewar
  • An Accountant in Adland – Siwe Thusi
    An Accountant in Adland – Siwe Thusi
  • Back2Basics – Mark Eardley
    Back2Basics – Mark Eardley
  • Big Q – MarkLives Panel
    Big Q – MarkLives Panel
  • Big Reads on MarkLives
    Big Reads on MarkLives
  • Brands & Branding – Affinity Publishing
    Brands & Branding – Affinity Publishing
  • By Invitation Only – Motive
    By Invitation Only – Motive
  • Circulation Data – ABC Analysis
    Circulation Data – ABC Analysis
  • Clicks ’n Tricks – Charlie Stewart
    Clicks ’n Tricks – Charlie Stewart
  • Dear Radio – Paulo Dias
    Dear Radio – Paulo Dias
  • Extracts — Excerpts from books & research
    Extracts — Excerpts from books & research
  • Fair Exchange – Erna George
    Fair Exchange – Erna George
  • FieldNotes – Marguerite Coetzee
    FieldNotes – Marguerite Coetzee
  • Frank – Mimi Nicklin
    Frank – Mimi Nicklin
  • Gestalt – Leeya Hendricks
    Gestalt – Leeya Hendricks
  • Hermaneutics – Herman Manson
    Hermaneutics – Herman Manson
  • Masterclass Notes – Johanna McDowell
    Masterclass Notes – Johanna McDowell
  • Media Design/MagLove – Archive
    Media Design/MagLove – Archive
  • Media Redefined – Martin MacGregor
    Media Redefined – Martin MacGregor
  • Only Connect Podcast – Bradley Elliott
    Only Connect Podcast – Bradley Elliott
  • Press Pass – Carey Finn
    Press Pass – Carey Finn
  • Q5 – Carey Finn
    Q5 – Carey Finn
  • South African TV Ratings
    South African TV Ratings
  • The Martini Shot – Bobby Amm
    The Martini Shot – Bobby Amm
  • The Power Report – Megan Power
    The Power Report – Megan Power
  • The Suit – Jason Harrison
    The Suit – Jason Harrison
  • Thinking B2B – Warren Moss
    Thinking B2B – Warren Moss
  • Young, Gifted & Killing It – Veli Ngubane
    Young, Gifted & Killing It – Veli Ngubane
  • Zeitgeist of Now – Jason Stewart
    Zeitgeist of Now – Jason Stewart
  • View All
  • Digital Media Planner
    Dec 5, 2019
  • Programmatic Media Trader
    Dec 5, 2019
  • Account Director/ Senior Account Manager
    Dec 5, 2019
  • Graphic Designer
    Dec 5, 2019
  • Managing Director – Youth Marketing
    Dec 3, 2019
  • Strategist
    Dec 3, 2019
  • Copywriter (Bryanston)
    Dec 3, 2019
  • SNR TTL Art Director
    Dec 2, 2019
  • Managing Director: Youth Agency
    Dec 2, 2019
  • PR Account Lead/Director: Fashion Retail Portfolio
    Dec 2, 2019
  • Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Leave a Reply to NIck Herbert Click here to cancel reply.

    One Response to “Market Research Wrap: First SA BrandZ ranking released”