The Web brand is useful, clear, simple, interactive, and most importantly, customer-centric.


"Google has knocked Microsoft off the top spot and been named the most powerful global brand of 2007," Gemma Simpson wrote for Silicon.com in April 2007. "It's the second year in a row a tech brand has beaten household names such as Coca-Cola, Marlboro and Toyota."
The brand ranking was carried out by market researcher, Millward Brown Optimor, and factored in financial performance and consumer sentiment. Google had a brand value of more than $66 billion, nearly double its value in the 2006 ranking.
A consumer poll published in January 2007 by online branding magazine, brandchannel.com, found that Google had retained its title as the world's most influential brand. Video-sharing site, YouTube, and online encyclopaedia, Wikipedia, were at No. 3 and 4.
Commenting on the poll, Reuters stated that "Internet companies are becoming more important to people than firms that operate in the real world."
Here are the five most important characteristics of web brands:
Web brands are useful
They have a clarity of purpose
The embrace simplicity
They interact and engage
They are customer-centric

Web brands are useful
Google has a market capitalization of $153 billion because it is useful. I will easily change my car brand, my mobile phone brand, my shoe brand, but I will not change Google. I will not change from Google because it helps me find stuff faster than other search engines.
Search is purposeful. We don't search for the fun of it. We search because we need to find something that will help us complete a task. The Web is a functional, no-frills pace. It may be our goal to spend more time with our family, but we go to the Web to get a good deal on a family vacation.
Clarity of purpose
When you arrive at the homepage of a quality web brand you know immediately what it is about-what it can do for you. A web brand is not a murder mystery. It tells you who did it right from the very first line.
"Google is an absolutely phenomenal brand in the sense that it is very clear what it stands for and it has perceived leadership and innovation," Peter Walshe, global brands director at Millward Brown, told Silicon.com.
Making life more simple Quality web brands save us time. They don't force us to think too much. The BUY button is nice and big. It's easy to figure out what to do next. It's hard to get lost. We only need to read the sentence once to understand it. We are not overawed and confused by too many choices.
Web brands interact and engage
Craigslist has 10 million customers and gets over four billion page views per month. It has 22 employees. Wikipedia is a hugely popular website. It has 10 employees. Skype has 171 million customers. It has 510 employees.
Web brands have a different concept of the organization. They see the Web as the organization. They see their customers as part of the organization.

Web brands are customer-centric

Great web brands are built around the customer. They don't start out with this question: How can we make money out of customers? Rather, they start with this question: How can we help customers do things they need to do?


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Five Key Characteristics of Web Brands

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Gerry McGovern
Gerry McGovern (gerry@gerrymcgovern.com) is a content management consultant and author. His latest book is The Stranger's Long Neck: How to Deliver What Your Customers Really Want Online, which teaches unique techniques for identifying and measuring the performance of customers' top tasks.