The SportsOneSource Group has released its 2009 Brand Strength Index, indicating that Nike, adidas, New Balance, Reebok and Under Armour have the strongest connection with consumers going into the new year.  The Index, developed by SportsOneSource to more accurately measure a brand’s strength in the eyes of the consumer, is based on a formula that measures unaided brand awareness, aided brand awareness, consumer brand purchases, the consumer’s intent to re-purchase a brand, and the consumer’s unwillingness to compromise on the purchase of a particular brand.

 

The Nike brand took the top spot, driven in large part by its broad brand awareness levels, but also by the number of purchases and the consumer’s intent to re-purchase the brand in the future.  The Nike brand had been purchased by nearly 64% of the study’s 8,001 survey respondents.

 

While the position of Nike and the others at the top of the Index is perhaps unremarkable given the dollars spent each year on marketing and product development, the market must certainly take notice as the U.S. heads deeper into a recession and consumers drift toward the brands where they have the strongest connection.  The top brands in this report are positioned to maintain or take share in a troubled economy.

 

In earlier reports published by SGB, The SportsOneSource Group's largest trade publication, brand strength was based on blanket awareness and a perception of quality rating that was asked of all respondents.  That meant that a surfer could be asked to rate the quality of a shotgun brand or a golfer could be asked to rate the coolness of a skate shoe brand.  For the Brand Strength Report, SportsOneSource looked at users within specific segments of the industry and asked them to rate the brands they know and use in addition to major brands that extend across the industry’s many divisions.  For instance, team sports participants were asked more questions about team sports brands and golfers rated the golf brands.

 

The results were quite interesting – and telling. 

 

As a result of this reworked definition of brand strength, smaller niche brands move up the board, reflecting their strength in the segment where they live and play. Notable examples of larger category-specific brands benefiting from this shift include Remington at #8, FootJoy at #9 and Callaway Golf at the #10 spot.

 

Under Armour jumped from the bottom of a much smaller list in 2006 to fifth overall as the brand has grown exponentially over the last two years.  But the brand also benefited from the loyalty of its consumers, particularly those under 25 years of age.

 

SportsOneSource also specifically assessed the purchasing habits of the teen consumer and built a Brand Strength Index using the same criteria for the overall Index.

 

Nike and Adidas took the top two spots on the Brand Strength Index for both the teen respondents and for the overall, scoring even higher with teens than the overall, but things shifted quite a bit after those initial listings. Showing that Under Armour might very well be correct when it says it is the Nike for the next generation, the brand placed third on the teen Brand Strength Index.  Also of note was Speedo jumping to fourth among teens, while taking the #21 spot on the overall index. Speedo’s jump can likely be attributed to a pair of factors.  First, more teens swim competitively than do adults, by a large margin, which gives them more exposure to the brand. Second, Speedo also probably benefited from a more than few crushes on Michael Phelps following the recent Beijing Olympics.

 

Puma also experienced a large jump in the teen Brand Strength Index, placing sixth among this demographic, but #26 overall. This jump shows the brand’s emphasis on finding and appealing to the young, hip consumer. Conversely, New Balance dropped from third in the overall rankings to seventh on the teen consumer list and Columbia fell from #7 on the overall list to #21 on the teen list.

 

The Brand Strength Index is just one component of the SportsOneSource 2009 Brand Strength Report.  The Brand Strength Report will be available in late December and will be made available in various formats, including report segments based on sports or activity participation, age, race, gender and household income.  Specific Brand Strength Index reports will be developed for the top 50 brands.

 

The SportsOneSource Brand Strength survey was conducted in late September utilizing a third-party Internet panel provider.  A total of 8,001 responses were collected providing information on over 300 brands.  Respondents were age 12 and up.  SportsOneSource made every effort to control the demographics to best represent the U.S. population, but Internet surveys generally tend to skew to older, more Caucasian, better educated and higher income households.

 

The results of the survey can be projected to the U.S. population with a margin of error of +/- 1.1 percentage points.

 

To find out more about the report or to reserve your copy, contact The SportsOneSource Group at 704.987.3450 x110 or research@SportsOneSource.com.

 


















































































SportsOneSource Brand Strength Index

Top 25 Brands

OVERALL RESPONDENTS



TEEN RESPONDENTS

Rank

Brand

Score*

 

Rank

Brand

Score*

1

Nike

732.9

 

1

Nike

810.9

2

adidas

602.7

 

2

adidas

671.1

3

New Balance

565.5

 

3

Under Armour

587.4

4

Reebok/RBK

533.7

 

4

Speedo

551.5

5

Under Armour

508.3

 

5

Reebok/RBK

532.0

6

Coleman

496.6

 

6

Puma

526.3

7

Columbia

480.0

 

7

New Balance

509.4

8

Remington

475.1

 

8

Converse