Technology & Innovation

Future proofing brands for an era of digital transformation

August 01, 2016

Global

August 01, 2016

Global
Peter Zemsky

Deputy Dean

Peter Zemsky has been part of the INSEAD leadership team since 2010. He has had global responsibility for Faculty and Research, Degree Programmes including MBA and EMBA, IT and Digital Communications, and the development of the school’s Middle East campus. As Dean of Strategic Initiatives and Innovation he is responsible for the school’s digital strategy including the development of its online education capabilities and offerings.

What does it take to keep a company and its brand at the top today?

While every industry has its own unique challenges and opportunities, the last few years have seen digital strategy becoming a top priority for more and more corporate leaders. Just as growth in India, China and other emerging markets was a key driver of corporate performance over the last 15 years, digital promises to be the defining trend of the coming decade, or more. We have moved from the era of BRICs to the era of clicks.

Digital competence drives perceptions

Research published recently by FutureBrand, (), ranks the world’s most valuable 100 companies by how positively the global public perceive them. It clearly highlights the growing importance of digital to a company’s ability to forge and sustain a top brand.  Not only are leading tech companies like Apple, Microsoft, Facebook and Amazon in the top 10 most positively perceived of these listed companies overall, but consumer services companies like Inditex, LVMH and Nike, which have taken the lead in embracing the new digital business playbook, are seeing strong advances.

The companies with high perception scores are winning plaudits for being in the vanguard of the digital industrial revolution unfolding all around us.  Central to this revolution are underlying technologies that are now mature: cheap and powerful computing power, massive interconnectivity and seemingly limitless data storage.  

From mastering mass, to digital production

Production and branding are closely linked. It was mass production that made brands critical for business success and fuelled generations of advertising campaigns around packaged food, home appliances and the automobile. Brands with a unique proposition, quite rightly, remain at the epicentre of business strategy today but digital production brings its own rules for delighting consumers and delivering success.

Steve Jobs, with his obsessive focus on design and outstanding customer experience, redefined branding for the digital era.  It is no accident that Apple is at the top of the Index. Whether at work or at home, we expect our favourite brands to deliver convenient and compelling digital experiences that show that they understand our needs better than we do ourselves.

Delivering on modern expectations increasingly calls for a digital transformation of the entire company. A well designed mobile app and web interface is just the beginning. The challenge is to re-engineer the rest of the company’s internal activities to match the convenience and personalisation of the digital experience. For some, like Facebook (up 15 places in the Index this year), the back-end is fully digital as well.  However,   most companies still need to transform and integrate their physical operations. What is especially impressive about Amazon (up 26 places) is that they have done the hard work of developing the physical logistics to unlock the potential of online retail.

How sectors are faring

The waves of the digital revolution are fanning out across business and society. The movement from the tech sector to consumer services is well underway and other companies are beginning to rise, or fall. Mastering digital capabilities will determine whether the healthcare sector can sustain its strong position in perception terms (with three companies currently in the Index top 10). Fundamentally an information business, the financial services sector faces even greater pressure from rising digital expectations, just as this year’s Index shows them finally rebuilding their brand equity from the impairment of the financial crisis.

Indeed, the financial services sector offers a powerful illustration of the forces impacting today’s leading companies and their brands.  Across the world, mobile banking is increasingly the channel of choice for customers. Not only do legacy IT systems and organisations need to be transformed, but also the bank’s core processes in order to allow them to compete in a digital age. Both retail and corporate clients increasingly expect speed, convenience and personalisation in everything from account creation and payments to loans and investment advice. Those banks that lag in transforming their services and organisation can expect to see their market capitalisation transferred to those who are able to play by the new digital playbook. This includes traditional competitors and hundreds of recent fintech start-ups. Perhaps even more threatening, the leading tech companies, with their powerful brands, are targeting growth in financial services.

Future proofing 

Digital technology is extremely powerful but at the same time, modern society is incredibly complex. It will take years to discover how to fully exploit the new capabilities in products and services and to then develop organisations that can deliver them. This is far more challenging strategically and organisationally than what we have lived through with the dramatic emerging market growth. Earlier industrial revolutions played out over decades. There is no reason to think that this one will be different. Despite radical changes, brands are proving to be as central and decisive in the digital age as they ever were. However, what it takes to establish a leading brand is clearly being transformed. Years of success could hinge on your company’s ability to embrace the new paradigm. Is your brand future proof?

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

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