Huawei Ranks In BrandZ™ Most ValuableTop 50 Global Brands For The Third Consecutive Year
Huawei increased its brand value by 22% in the past year and now ranks 48th in the Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands according to the latest BrandZ™ report published earlier this week. The annual brand study, compiled by WPP and Kantar Millward Brown, notes that Huawei has now featured for the third consecutive year in the Top 50 global brands, as Chinese brands outperform their U.S. counterparts for the first time in the study.
The total brand value of BrandZ™ Top 100 reached US$4.4 trillion
seeing an increase of 204% over the past twelve years. The total net growth of
all listed brands is now close to US$750 billion with all categories achieving
full growth for the first time on record. Technology companies by far lead the
global list taking eight out of ten places in the Top 10, with a combined brand
value of more than half (56%) of the total brand value of the Top 100
companies.
Chinese brands are arguably the most eye-catching group in this
year's edition of the BrandZ™ report, now in its thirteenth year. Tencent,
Alibaba and Huawei are just some of the leading names among the fourteen
Chinese companies whose total brand value increased by 47% year-on-year. China 's brands have also seen their growth rate
surpass that of their U.S.
counterparts for the first time in the study. It is the fourth consecutive year
for Huawei on the BrandZ™ Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands. The company's
brand value and ranking have grown steadily year-on-year thanks to the strong
performance of smartphones, tablets and the brand's global expansion.
The rising influence of Huawei has not gone unnoticed in other
major brand studies. Last week Forbes revealed its Most Valuable Brands
of 2018 list in which Huawei, with a value of $8.4 billion, ranked 79th in
the Top 100 as the sole Chinese brand. Earlier in February this year, Huawei
was listed 25th on the Brand Finance Top 500 Global
Brand Value of 2018 with a brand value of US$38.046 billion.
According to IDC, there were 336.1 million units shipped globally
in the first quarter of 2018, down 2.4% year-on-year, showing an overall
downturn in the global smartphone industry. However, despite an overall decrease
in smartphone shipments, the average selling price of smartphones actually
increased year-on-year by 21% to 374 U.S. dollars, as reported by GFK.
As the third largest smartphone supplier in the world, Huawei did
not only outperform the market, but also grew the market share steadily
(11.7%). Moreover, the market share of Huawei's high-end models (above $500 US
dollars) increased to more than 10% driven in part by the breakthrough growth
in key high-end regions such as Europe and the Middle East .
Along with the global launch of the P20 series, Huawei has firmly established
itself in the global high-end market and its brand influence has further
improved.
According to Ipsos, in 2017, Huawei's global brand awareness and
consumer consideration increased to 86% making it the fastest growing brand
among global technology companies in the past six years. Brand perception and
attributes such as technology leadership, design and trustworthiness have all
gradually surged.
With its high-quality products and trend-setting technological
innovations, Huawei is bucking the international industry trends as it
gradually moves towards becoming a global and iconic tech brand.
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