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American Red Cross
America's Second Harvest
Bombardier Global
Bombardier LearJet
Bosch
Campbells
Carrier
Chevron
Coca-Cola
Crest
DHL
Doritos
Dunkin Donuts
Elmers
Gold's Gym
Guardsmark
GUND
Hanes
Hole in the Wall Camps
Holiday Inn Express
Home Depot
Hot Wheels
Jakks Pacific
John Hancock
Johnny Rockets
Korn/Ferry International
Liberty Mutual
Major League Baseball
Massachusetts Mutual
MasterCard
Midas
Nascar
Office Depot
Oppenheimer Funds
Oracle
Oreos
Royal Doulton
Staples
State Farm
Texaco
The New York Times
Thermador
Thomas'
Timken
Toys R Us
Unum
Waterford Crystal
Western Union
Yellow Book
[The American Brands Council]

Clay Timon
Retired Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, Landor Associates

At Landor, we know through our BrandAssetTM Valuator (BAV) research that great brands build on four fundamentals.
  • Differentiation. If a brand is not differentiated from its competition, it has no reason for being.
  • Relevance. Without relevance, one might build a niche brand, but if the brand is not relevant to a sufficiently large audience, it will not become one of the world’s great brands.
  • Esteem. The regard customers have for a brand.
  • Knowledge. Customers who are able to actually describe what they believe the brand stands for. In the end, customers will look at themselves as BMW drivers, not merely automobile drivers; as a Coke or Pepsi drinker, not a soda drinker.
The brands that achieve the highest levels across all four fundamental building blocks become the world’s greatest brands.

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