- Tencent holds on to the number one spot for the second
year running as Kantar BrandZ’s most valuable Chinese brand
- Li-Ning leads China’s top risers as this year’s
fastest-growing brand
- Xiaohongshu and iFLYTEK enter as the
highest-ranking newcomer brands, with 15 brands joining the China
Top 100
- Overall, the Top 100 brands’ overseas operations contribute
8.8% to their business
Kantar BrandZ’s Top 100 Chinese Brands 2022 has, for the second
year in succession, surpassed the monumental $1 trillion mark,
reaching $1.24 trillion in overall brand value, in what has been a
uniquely challenging year for China, and the rest of the world.
Despite a decline of 20% year-on-year in the overall value of
the Top 100 China ranking, Chinese businesses have demonstrated the
importance of building and maintaining a resilient brand,
particularly when faced with uncertainty and global challenges,
such as retail and supply chain disruptions, inflation, rising
energy costs and the resurgence of COVID-19 restrictions.
Tencent ($204.4bn) retained the number one spot for a
second year running. The technology giant has been concentrating on
its main business, expanding steadily and organically, and adhering
to its technology innovation strategy. Tencent continues to explore
the potential of new technologies in serving consumers, enabling
industries and contributing to solving social challenges. At the
same time, Alibaba (No.2, $137.0bn) continues to expand its
portfolio of standalone retail offerings. Alcohol brand Moutai
(No.3, $108.5bn) proved resilient as its brand value dipped
only 2%, and continued its emergence as one China’s most popular
premium brands.
The Kantar BrandZ Top 10 Most Valuable
Chinese Brands 2022
Rank 2022
Brand
Category
Brand Value ($M USD)
1
Tencent
Media and Entertainment
204,378
2
Alibaba
Retail
137,031
3
Moutai
Alcohol
108,490
4
Douyin
Media and Entertainment
43,483
5
Meituan
Services Platform
41,945
6
ICBC
Banks
36,017
7
JD
Retail
34,198
8
Huawei
Consumer Technology
33,663
9
Haier
IoT Ecosystem
33,206
10
Ping An
Insurance
26,320
Newcomers and fastest risers
Lifestyle-focused social platform Xiaohongshu (No.37,
$6.6bn) meaning ‘Little Red Book’ and intelligent speech and AI
technologies company iFLYTEK (No.53, $4.2bn) were the
highest-ranking newcomers to join the China Top 100 this year,
along with 13 others from nine categories, including five brands
centred around food, drink, and casual dining, highlighting the
potential brand value in these markets. Three brands re-entered the
Chinese brand ranking this year: YTO (No.88, $2.0bn),
HAVAL (No.93, 1.8bn) and TCL (No.94, $1.8bn).
Growing 66%, athletic apparel brand Li-Ning (No.64,
$3.4bn) was the fastest-growing brand in the Top 100. It
successfully combined technical innovations with nostalgic and
patriotic styling cues while its cumulative investment in fashion
has now paid off. Six brands: Li-Ning, China Telecom
(No.28, $8.8bn), Chow Tai Fook (No.38, $6.1bn), Xing Hua Cun
(No.52, $4.2bn), BYD (No.29, $8.7bn), and Haier (No.9,
$33.2bn) - grew by more than 25%.
With a focus on collaboration, rather than competition, Haier
(No.9, $33.2bn) has risen two places to break into the Top 10.
Its global expansion strategy and constant innovation in both
consumer and industrial technology applications has contributed to
a year-on-year growth of 26% in brand value.
Car manufacturer BYD rose 29% in brand value due to rapid growth
in both China and overseas markets and became the world’s
best-selling new energy vehicle (NEV) brand during H1 2022, as
Chinese car exports doubled passing two million units for the first
time.
Building resilience
Historical Kantar BrandZ data shows that investing in strong
brands not only insulates businesses from short term challenges,
but also ensures a faster rebound relative to one’s
competitors.
Commenting on the ability of Chinese brands to deal effectively
with the many challenges faced by global businesses, Doreen
Wang, Kantar Greater China CEO and Global Chair of Kantar
BrandZ said: “In difficult economic times, having a strong
brand does not make a business fully immune to changes of fortune,
but it can help soften the blow. This year, we’ve studied the
Kantar BrandZ data closely to gain insight into what gives brands
their resilience and ability to steadily improve regardless of
market conditions.”
She added: “During VUCA* times, Chinese brands can start with
building stronger perceived value, embracing sustainability, and
improving end-to-end innovation capability. Strong brands never shy
away from uncertainties. Instead, they should take them head on
with these actions to create higher brand value and ensure a better
future.”
Smaller and stronger
This year was a year in which smaller Chinese brands gained
ground on the larger, more established brands. Over the last six
years, China’s 30 largest brands have come to represent a smaller
proportion of the Top 100’s total value. This signals China’s
emergence as a major brand landscape and as the ranking is
rebalanced, China’s extensive showing of strong brands now features
multiple category competitors, rather than a single dominant
name.
Category picture remains stable
Media and Entertainment (26% share of total brand value) is once
again the largest category in the Kantar BrandZ China Top 100,
followed by Retail (16%) and Alcohol (12%). Taken together, these
three categories account for just over half of the total value of
the China Top 100 ranking.
Out of the 20 categories that were covered by both 2021 and 2022
China BrandZ rankings, five increased their total value
year-on-year: Cars, Apparel, IoT Ecosystem, Energy and Telecom
Providers.
The value of intelligent insights
Brands that continue to advertise intelligently, particularly
during challenging times, tend to overperform compared to those
that are inclined to cut back or suspend their brand-building
activities. The rise of performance advertising led some Chinese
brand managers to feel as if they had no choice but to prioritise
short-term sales activations over long-term brand-building.
However, it is possible to do both - provided that brands have the
right data and insights at hand while navigating the dynamic world
of Chinese e-commerce, which has grown to encompass new formats
like live streaming, community group buying, and private-channel
O2O storefronts. Successful brands must also continually strive to
gain an accurate picture of their own strengths and weaknesses in
consumers’ eyes.
Other key highlights from the analysis include:
- A rise in global exposure – 47 brands in the China Top
100 are building their value outside of China, which is an all-time
high, up from just 40 brands in 2021. Consumer technology brand TCL
(No.94, $1.8bn) has been planning and investing in top-level sports
for years. TCL has signed endorsement contracts with FIBA, Copa
América, and several international sports stars. Chinese brands’
global exposure is steadily improving over a period of time and
overall, the Top 100 brands’ overseas operations contribute 8.8% to
their business.
- Better at meta – China is well poised to take advantage
of the emerging metaverse as research labs invest in 3D sound,
haptic and body sensor technologies. Within the parameters of data
protection and national regulations, there appear to be plenty of
growth opportunities. Chinese consumers have already embraced
innovations like virtual influencers and digital collectibles, as
well as immersive online showrooms and experiences.
- Responsibility towards mental health – The stresses of
the COVID-19 pandemic brought mental health to the forefront,
especially in cities experiencing lockdowns. As digital brands work
to safeguard users’ mental health as part of their larger
responsibility toward social harmony, all brands should aim to
incorporate mental well-being into their core value propositions as
consumers look for emotional security in addition to functional
performance.
- Holistic approach towards sustainability – Key measures
of sustainability are now three times more important to a brand’s
overall positive reputation than they were a decade ago. Consumer
responses to advertisements carrying sustainability messages
suggest that Chinese consumers have an innate desire to connect
with the natural world. Chinese brands can help consumers worldwide
to turn good intentions into even better actions. It all starts
with cultural intelligence.
- A closer community – Chinese consumers have become
prouder of, and more attached to, their local communities. During
city-by-city lockdowns in 2020 and 2022, many urban residents came
together to order groceries, care for the elderly, and support
school-aged children. This provides continuing opportunities for
brands operating in the areas of community group buying, and
small-format neighbourhood stores, and has major implications for
brands’ sustainability and purpose-driven initiatives.
The 2022 Kantar BrandZ Top 100 Most Valuable Chinese Brands
ranking, report and extensive analysis are available now at
www.kantar.com/campaigns/brandz/china
* VUCA stands for Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and
Ambiguity
NOTES TO EDITORS
About Kantar BrandZ: Kantar BrandZ is the global currency
when assessing brand value, quantifying the contribution of brands
to business’ financial performance. Kantar’s annual global and
local brand valuation rankings combine rigorously analysed
financial data, with extensive brand equity research. Since 1998,
BrandZ has shared brand-building insights with business leaders
based on interviews with 4.1 million consumers, for 19,250 brands
in 51 markets. Discover more about Kantar BrandZ here.
Grounded in consumer opinion, Kantar BrandZ analysis enables
businesses to identify their brand’s strength in the market and
provides clear strategic guidance on how to boost value for the
long-term.
Kantar’s BrandZ Top 100 Most Valuable Chinese Brands is the most
definitive and robust ranking of the country’s brands available,
and the brands ranked must meet these eligibility criteria:
- The brand was originally created in Mainland China.
- The brand is owned by a publicly traded enterprise, or
financials of the company owning the brand are audited by a major
global accounting practice and published in the public domain.
- Chinese unicorn brands must have their most recent valuation
publicly available
About Kantar: Kantar is the world’s leading marketing
data and analytics company. We have a complete, unique and rounded
understanding of how people think, feel and act; globally and
locally in over 90 markets. By combining the deep expertise of our
people, our data resources and benchmarks and our innovative
analytics and technology, we help our clients understand people and
inspire growth.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220824005516/en/
For further information please contact: Monica Zhang
Marketing Communications Director Email:Monica.Zhang@kantar.com
Tel: +8621 2287 0253
Martin Guo Chief Editor Email:Martin.Guo@kantar.com Tel: +8621
2287 0046
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