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Understanding Brand Equity and Valuation
By: Stuart Whitwell
Intangible Business
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PDF: Understanding Brand Equity and Valuation
Introduction
It is interesting to appreciate brands have
always been considered as intangible assets, presumably
justified on the basis that brands cannot be seen or touched
like a building or plant and machinery. But anyone who has
worked in a brand environment will testify there is nothing more
tangible than the cash flows generated from the company’s
brands.
For leading brands these cash flows are resilient, reliable and
sustainable and often the sole basis of a businesses existence.
Without them there is no real business just people in buildings
with not a great deal to do.
Brand valuation in our opinion should not be seen as just a
number, the valuation process itself enriches the user with a
far more comprehensive understanding of how business generate
cash flows through an understanding of their customers, the
markets and channels they operate in, the competitive
environment, and operational capability to deliver value and
growth.
Brand valuation has been in existence for at least 20 years, and
has been for a large part of this time misunderstood and too
often poorly practiced with the consequence that many in
business have been rightly skeptical about the benefits Brand
Valuation brings.
After all from an ongoing management perspective
what is the use of knowing the value of a brand at a point in
time if you are not provided with a brand performance tracking
process that helps develop growth strategies, performance
monitoring and resource allocation decisions to optimize
shareholder value.
Critics of brand valuation (and I suppose consequently valuation
in general) point out that any discounted future cash flow model
is based upon certain key assumptions that make such an exercise
very subjective and of little benefit, such as future growth
rates, discount rates, profitability etc. But this criticism is
pretty pointless as most investment decisions are based upon
future cash flow expectations and returns and we have a
requirement to continually improve our forecasting capability
and understanding.
Besides it should be appreciated that strong brands provide very
reliable steady cash flows and I would argue very strongly that
you can far more accurately value a brand as opposed to a
commercial building (based on future rental expectations).

The Development of Brand Valuation
The problem with brand valuation in the past is
that generally brand valuation grew out of business valuation
and has been practiced by accounting firms who have first class
technical knowledge in terms of justifying a discount rate,
appropriate tax rates etc but do not possess the commercial
experience or background knowledge to fully appreciate and
understand how brands operate from the perspective of consumers
and markets and retail distribution in a competitive context.
Without this understanding of the real world built into a
valuation process any forecasts going forward will be based on
guess work without real substance built into the guts of the
analysis. And as a direct consequence provide no genuine benefit
to business or investors alike.
Having said that brand valuation methodologies
have been developed and improved considerably in recent times,
and is now starting to be recognized and used as a leading edge
business tool.
But only now is Brand Valuation and Intangible Asset Valuation
being taken seriously mostly due to United States financial
reporting standards requiring acquired intangibles which can be
separately identified and have separate economic lives to be
valued and put on the balance sheet. International accounting
standards will require UK (and other countries adopting IAS’s)
public companies to do the same and this will be effective from
January 2005. Additionally these intangibles require annual
impairment testing to make sure their values have not
diminished. If they diminish in value then a write off to the
profit and loss account is required. Not a pleasant circumstance
for company directors to explain to their stakeholders. For
example in the United States under the new accounting standards
AOL Time Warner has written off $ 54 billion and Worldcom $ 50
billion dollars.
Even so from the perspective of users of
accounts these developments will not provide the full picture
yet as only acquired intangibles need to be valued and put on
the balance sheet, and only acquired intangibles after the new
accounting standards come into force.
All those internally generated brands and brands purchased
before the new standards apply, which will be the vast majority
will not have to be put on the balance sheet.
But this is a positive development and in due course we should
expect to see an interest in putting all internally developed
and acquired brands on the balance sheet. Only then can the
balance sheet be expected to reflect the real value of the
business. This would reveal the real value of the assets under
the management of company directors and make interesting reading
from the perspective of understanding real returns on assets
employed.

Brands Drive Value
Globalization, technological developments,
outsourcing and e-business have forced companies to compete more
intensely and brands have become the main way of differentiating
products and services, creating and sustaining competitive
advantage and maintaining customer loyalty. As such, brands have
become the main drivers of value within a company. It is no
surprise that branded companies have recently outperformed the
major stock market indices. It is imperative therefore to
understand what value brands hold and to track where and how
they create it. This is recognized by a recent operating and
financial review exposure draft issued by the Accounting
Standards Board in the UK which requires amongst other things:
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a commentary on
items such as… corporate reputation and brand equity ….
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a report on how
business has sought to maintain and improve future
performance, including – ….investment in brand equity,
through advertising and other marketing activities ….
Brand Valuation is starting to be recognized as
a primary tool in the business model bringing together brand
metrics, market analysis and finance to improve and inform
Management decisions and maximize shareholder value. In so much
it aids in the following:
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Marketing
investment, budget and resource allocation decisions.
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Highlighting
brands as drivers of value, income, profitability and long
term growth. Amongst other things this enables a company to
develop / rationalize an existing portfolio to maximize
returns.
-
Continuous brand
equity and value tracking enables brand performance by line
of business, geography or channel to be monitored and
reported in an understandable financial value. This also
enables different brand strategies and marketing investment
as well as the performance of different marketing teams
across an organization to be monitored and altered as
necessary.
-
By application of
a dynamic brand equity performance model specific consumer
metrics can be applied to determine the viability of a brand
to attract new users through brand extension activities,
highlighting relative risks and rewards across a portfolio
of brands and markets.
-
By using a
financial model using predictive research the brand’s
impact on volume and price can be used to identify if new
product development through brand extensions or stretch is
viable.
Intangible Business a leading specialist brand
valuation consultancy in the UK, has evolved the Relief from
Royalty methodology thereby eliminating many of its shortcomings
to provide a far more complete and reliable valuation
methodology for both one off brand valuations and for use by
management as a performance measure that quantifies and
appreciates the connection between brand equity and brand
performance delivery.

Brand premium approach: This makes the Relief from
Royalty methodology more rigorous by analyzing existing
comparable commercial arrangements within the company and sector
they are valuing and corroborating such analysis with available
external comparables and the understanding of commercial
affordability to reach an appropriate royalty rate. The
financial analysis can assess the earnings between different
points in the value chain i.e. the brand owning entity, the
distributor and retailer separating the earnings applicable to
the brand. Cross checks are also made with external sources. In
the diagram below this process is referred to as Brand Premium
Analysis.
The wealth of information that many companies hold internally on
consumer insight along side a detailed market analysis is the
first stage of this valuation methodology.
Intangible Business through a combination of real hands on
knowledge and expertise in brand management, markets, finance
and corporate development have combined their extensive
knowledge in this area and adapted their individual offerings to
develop a consumer driven brand equity performance model that
reflects not only the current value of the brand but also its
potential to grow. This is denoted on the illustration below.

Intangible Business have developed and
implemented a brand valuation methodology and process that
competitively benchmarks brand profitability (the premium a
brand derives) and brand equity to understand the relationship
between the drivers of brand equity and financial performance.

The process is logical and practical and has been systemized
into existing business processes.
Leading edge brand companies who want the latest business tools
to stay ahead of the game in terms of managing and optimizing
resources for growth now have an opportunity to significantly
improve their business model and to use this process to
galvanize all the different disciplines in the business through
the brands that they operate and own.
All disciplines and operatives in the business should add value
and understand how they add value to the brands they operate,
whether they are in sales and distribution, marketing,
manufacturing or finance and there is no better way to
demonstrate their contribution than through a brand value
tracking model.
For example in our experience we have seen how a gradually
declining mature brand has actually increased its brand value
over time through driving costs down through the supply chain
thereby increasing margins that have more than offset volume
losses.
Marketing and sales did their bit too by maintaining premium
pricing positions and continuing to invest in the brands major
markets. The supply chain operatives should have the opportunity
to understand and be aware of their contribution to the business
in this way. It is motivational and ensures cohesive effort
directed to one purpose.
Summary: Brand Valuation in this form brings together
market analysis, brand metrics and financial performance in a
meaningful and pragmatic structure allowing leading edge brand
companies the opportunity to significantly improve their
business model.
Marketers understand brand equity metrics and market performance
measures of the brands under their stewardship in a competitive
context, and will have access to volume, net turnover, gross
margin and brand contribution financials. But what they do not
have are the tools to measure and understand the impact of
marketing investment on the long term equity and future earning
potential of their brands.
Understanding the linkage between brand equity and brand
performance delivery focusing on a brands ability to attract
new users and retain the loyalty of existing customers is
critical for improved strategic investment decisions.
Management decisions will be significantly better informed and
the until now separate disciplines of Marketing and Finance will
be truly brought together in a combined commercial understanding
that puts Brands legitimately at the top of the Board agenda.
DOWNLOAD
PDF: Understanding Brand Equity and Valuation
About Stuart Whitwell:
Brand strategy valuation projects
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Logistics, Electronics, Pharmaceuticals –
US Internal Revenue Service
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Retail and furniture brands – MFI
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Utilities – Norweb and npower
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Postal Services – Royal Mail, Post Office
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Media – Guardian
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Telecoms – BT, Bell Canada and Infostrada
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Banking – Network Banking and SEB
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Building and construction – Blue Circle
AbsoluteBRAND's
European Partner
About Intangible
Business
Intangible Business is a
London-based consultancy, with extensive experience in valuing and managing brands, businesses, patents and other intellectual property.
visit us online:
http://www.intangiblebusiness.com
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