« Washington Mutual Failure Serves as a Painful Reminder that Goodwill Is Fragile | Main | HomeTask Obtains Consent Injunction Against Former Franchisee »

Microsoft, Starbucks, and Amazon.com Remain Seattle's Top 3 Brands

Seattle’s three biggest brands all gained value this year, according to Interbrand Corp.’s “Best Global Brands 2008” survey.

Like last year, Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com, Inc., and Starbucks Corp. were the only three Seattle-based brands to make the list. (See last year’s STL post here).

Microsoft dropped one place to No. 3 from No. 2, switching places with IBM Corp. Interbrand estimated Microsoft’s brand value at an incredible $59,007,000,000, a 1% increase over last year.

Amazon.com had the best year of the three. It moved up to No. 58 from No. 62. Its brand is valued at $6,434,000,000, a whopping 19% increase.

Starbucks moved up the rankings to No. 85 from No. 88. Its brand is valued at $3,879,000,000, a 7% gain.

Google Inc. (+43%) and Apple Inc. (+24%) posted the best percentage increases on the list.

Not surprisingly, financial brands Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (-21%), Morgan Stanley (-16%), and Citigroup (-14%) were among the worst performers.

Coca-Cola Co., No. 1 last year, remained top of the heap this year. Interbrand estimates the value of its brand at $66,667,000,000.

For more information, see BusinessWeek’s article here and read about Interbrand’s methodology here.

For a north-of-the-border perspective, check out the Canadian Trademark Blog’s post, which tipped me off that the survey was out. (It’s their third time covering this story. Congratulations, guys!)

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (2)

Nice post, Mike - and on behalf of those of us at the Canadian Trademark Blog, thanks for the kudos.

On a slightly different note, sorry to hear about WaMu this morning; here's hoping other businesses and Washington state citizens will not be negatively effected.

Best wishes.
September 26, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJeffrey Vicq
Thanks, Jeffrey. Times will be tough here for a while. We not only have WaMu collapsing, but also Heller Ehrman. It's a tough market out there, and I suspect things will get worse before they get better.
September 28, 2008 | Registered CommenterMichael Atkins

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.