Samsung introduced the Galaxy 8.0 – its latest answer to Apple’s iPad
– at this year’s World Mobile Congress. Both companies currently
dominate the tablet market: in the final quarter of 2012, Apple held
43.6 percent of the UK market share, with Samsung’s Android tablets
trailing at 15.1 percent. Amazon’s 11.5 percent came in at third place,
while Asus enjoyed 5.8 percent of the market share.
Apple is often cited as an example of a successful lifestyle brand,
with many devoted followers. Apple consumers often own more than one
Apple product, and follow the brand as well as the products – hence the
public reaction to Steve Jobs’s
death in 2012. New product releases are greeted by scores of eager fans
lining the streets. When the NYC Fifth Avenue store opened, the queue
was nearly half a mile long. There’s little doubt that loyalty to the
Apple brand is very strong, and this equity has been recognised. The
Apple brand has won a host of awards, topping the list of Forbes
magazine’s ‘Most Admired Companies’ each year from 2008-2012, as well as
winning the UK CoolBrands ‘Coolest Brand’ category. Its brand crown has
been long-standing and consistent.
Despite similarly impressive sales performances, Samsung’s brand
equity seems less defined. Despite winning a plethora of awards for its
TV products, its tablets and smartphones don’t command the same
loyal-to-the-family attitude of Apple consumers. Global brand agency
Interbrand ranked Samsung 19th in the Best Global Brands category in
2009, and in 2010 the company came 2nd in Fortune’s Most Admired Company
list in the electronics category. Last year Interbrand upgraded Samsung
to 9th place. The rankings are worked out using not only financial
performance, but also the ability of the brand to generate loyalty.
Currently outranked by Apple, the Samsung brand is, however, one to
watch – CEO Kwon Oh-Hyun was nominated Brand Finance’s most successful
brand building chief executive for 2012 (beating Apple’s Tim Cook).
Rival Asian brands are also worth noting. Asus was ranked 3rd by
Interbrand for the Best Taiwanese Brands 2012, behind HTC and Acer. The
company’s holistic philosophy, as outlined in the ‘ASUS DNA’ on their
website, is an innovative brand identity; Asus has also been praised for
its sustainability efforts by Oekom Research in the past.
Chinese manufacturer Lenovo is another brand with a difference and strong contender for best tablet
title with a range of Android tablets and laptop/tablet hybrids like
the IdeaPad Yoga. The IdeaTab and ThinkPad ranges, acting as sub-brands
under the Lenovo umbrella, have created a bit of an edge for Lenovo;
with sales of over 75 million in 20 years, the ThinkPad has even been
used in space. The Asus and Lenovo brands are popular across the world,
evidenced by their considerable sales growth in 2012.
Would you choose Asus or Lenovo tablets over other big names?
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