Microsoft's brand power
has been in sharp decline over the past four years, an indication the company
is losing credibility and mindshare with U.S. business users, according to a
recent study by market research firm CoreBrand.
According to the
CoreBrand Power 100 2007 study, which polled about 12,000 U.S. business
decision-makers, Microsoft dropped from number 12 in the ranking of the most
powerful U.S. company brands in 2004 to number 59 last year. In 1996, the company
ranked number 1 in brand power among 1,200 top companies in about 50 industries,
said James Gregory, CEO of CoreBrand.
CoreBrand measures brand power using four criteria. It first rates the familiarity
of a company's brand. Once a company has a certain level of familiarity, they
are ranked according to three "attributes of favorability": overall
reputation, perception of management and investment potential, Gregory said.
While Microsoft's brand is still eminently recognizable, the company is declining
in all three favorable attributes, he said.
Gregory said that a decline in and of itself is not indicative that a company
is losing its mindshare or reputation among customers. However, what's significant
in Microsoft's case is that the decline has been consistent over a number of
years, and has plunged dramatically in a brief time.
"When you see something decline with increasing velocity, it's a concern,"
he said.
Among its peers in the category of Computers, Peripherals and Computer Software,
Microsoft is second to IBM in brand power, with Toshiba a close third, Gregory
said. If Microsoft's downward trend continues, Toshiba could pass it in brand
power next year, he said.
Gregory could only speculate as to why Microsoft's reputation has been declining,
since his firm does not ask people that specific question. He said the "underwhelming"
response to Windows Vista might be one reason, and Apple's clever "I'm
a Mac, I'm a PC" advertising campaign -- which paints Windows in an unfavorable
light -- may be another.
IBM suffered a "much faster and more severe" decline in brand power
in the early 1990s, Gregory said, and it took them 10 years to rebuild the brand's
reputation. To stage a similar turnaround, Microsoft must have a clearer vision
of the direction in which the company is headed and put forth leaders that people
can trust to articulate that vision, he said.
Microsoft, which has been diversifying its business beyond packaged software
in the past several years, has struggled to articulate how the many facets of
its business -- software, entertainment and online among them -- show a cohesive
business plan. The company has been trying to clarify at least one of those
strategies -- its online advertising business -- with new services and a bid
to purchase Yahoo. However, Gregory suggested it may take more than that to
raise the perception of its brand.