A new study by J. Walter. Thompson (JWT) in the US has found America might be on the nose under Donald Trump, but we’re all still in love with American brands.
The study, titled ‘Brand America’, researched global attitudes towards the US under the current administration are nuanced.
More than 40 per cent of respondents from Mexico, Russia and the UK have a negative view of America, directly linked to the events of the past year and mostly riven by the actions of the US government.
However, 90 per cent of Indian respondents view the US very or somewhat positively – higher, even, than the 83 per cent of Americans who hold a positive view of their own country
Despite concerns about ‘Brand America’, approval ratings of US brands range from 78 per cent in the UK to 93 per cent in India and China – again, higher than US respondent, whose approval rate of American brands is 90 per cent. These figures are little changed since 2012, suggesting that consumers at home and abroad distinguish between ‘Brand America’ and American brands.
Only 15 per cent of respondents say it matters whether a brand comes from a country of which they think highly.
Terms most readily associated with American brands are ‘quality’, ‘innovative’ and ‘expensive’, mentioned by 55 per cent, 51 per cent and 46 per cent of respondents, respectively. Biggest drivers of brand affinity across all respondents are ‘quality’, ‘trustworthiness’ and ‘familiarity’.
Apple, Coca-Cola, Ford, McDonald’s, Microsoft and Nike were the first American brands that sprang to respondents’ minds.
How brands behave – and their social conscience, especially – is a key concern amongst respondents. Some 40 per cent of respondents want a brand that values its customers; 22 per cent want a brand that does good in the world; and 19 per cent want a brand that cares about more than just making money.
Respondents’ understanding of where American brands are from is nuanced, however – in part due to national partnerships and / or national product variation, demonstrating a weakening of the notion of brands having a national identity.
When asked, 31 per cent of Indian respondents think Ford is American; 40 per cent of Chinese respondents think Facebook is American; 59 per cent of Britons think amazon is American; 63 per cent of Mexicans think Coca-Cola is Russian. And 62 per cent of Americans think Apple is American.
Moving forward, American brands should be ambitious – by being good to become great, rather than simply focusing on being big, JWT advises. They should provide leadership. They should think local. They should be honest and transparent. And they should focus on emotion and experience.
Those American brands that acknowledge the interconnectivity of brands and consumers across national borders and behave in a way that recognises we are all tied together are more likely to be more people-orientated and so successful, the report also suggests.
Tamara Ingram, JWT’s CEO, said, “Thought leadership, and insight, are at the core of J. Walter Thompson’s DNA. We constantly strive to understand change, in culture, and in consumers, and what impact this will have on brands. America the brand is undergoing a critical shift on a global stage right now and we were wanted to understand how these changes were impacting it’s stable of global powerhouse brands. Our insight? America’s brands continue to endure, though they may need to evolve. I’m thrilled to unveil this groundbreaking piece of JWT research.”
Worldwide director of The Innovation Group (JWT’s research and innovation unit), Lucie Greene, added, “Since our study The Political Consumer that we released prior to the US election, we’ve been examining the changing relationship between consumers, brands and the political situation. We headlines appearing about the US, and it’s reputation as a global thought leader evolving in this controversial administration, we wanted to explore how much this was affecting American brands. And further, examine the role of US brands internationally, their origins and values, and how that should change in future. We’re excited to unveil this study with an original global survey of several international markets.”
Publication of the Brand America report follows indications of a marked change in attitudes towards America in recent months.
The number of international visitors to the US in the first quarter of 2017 fell by 4.2 per cent- or 700,000 people – year on year, according to latest figures released by the United States Department of Commerce.
The fall equates to a loss of $US2.7 billion in spending, according to Oxford Economics.
While 64 per cent of respondents expressed confidence in Barack Obama doing the right thing in world affairs during the final year of his presidency, 22 per cent of respondents expressed confidence in Donald Trump, according to Pew Research Center’s annual Global Attitudes survey conducted in 37 countries in spring 2017.
Multiple studies have demonstrated that confidence is closely related to consumer spending.