Just do it! Brand Name Lessons from Nike's Troubles
?I have spent the last week reading "Shoe Dog", Phil Knight's memoir of how ?a runner on the Oregon University track team built one of the great shoe companies in the world, in Nike. In addition to its entertainment value, and it is a fun book to read, I read it for two storylines. The first is the time, effort and grit that it took to build a business, in a world where risk capital was more difficult to access than it has been in this century, and in a business where scaling up posed significant challenges
Brand Name - What is it?
? ??The broadest definition of a brand name is that it is recognized (by employees, consumers and the market) and remembered, either because of familiarity (because of brand name longevity) or association (with advertising or a celebrity). That definition, though, is not particularly useful since remembering or recognizing a brand, by itself, tells you nothing about its value. After all, almost everyone has heard or recognizes AT&T as a brand/corporate name, but as someone who is a cell service and internet customer of AT&T, I can assure you that neither of those choices were driven by brand name.??The essence of brand name value is that the recognition or remembrance of a brand name changes how people behave in its presence. With customers, brand name recognition can manifest itself in buying choices (affecting revenues and revenue growth) or willingness to pay a higher price (higher profit margins). With capital providers, it may allow for lower funding costs, with equity investors pricing equity higher and lenders accepting lower interest rates and/or fewer lending covenants. For the moment, this may seem abstract and subjective, but in the next section, we will flesh out brand name effects on operating metrics and value more explicitly.
Corporate, Product and Personal Brand Names
? ? Brand names can attach to entire?companies, to particular products or brands, or even to personnel and people. With a company like Coca Cola, it is the corporate brand name that has the most power, but the soft drink beverages marketed by the company (Coca Cola, Fanta, Sprite, Dasani etc.) each have their own brand names. With companies like Unilever, the corporate brand name takes a back seat to the brands names of the dozens of products controlled by the company, which include Dove (soap), Axe (deodorant), Hellman's (mayonnaise) and Close-up (toothpaste), just to name a few. There are clearly cases of people with significant brand name value, in sports (Ohtani in baseball, Messi in soccer, Kohli in cricket) and entertainment (Taylor Swift, Beyonce), with a spill over to the entities that attach themselves to these people. In fact, a critical component of Nike's brand name was put in place in 1984, when the company signed on Michael Jordan, in his rookie season as a basketball player, and reaped benefits as he became the sport's biggest star over the next decade.
Brand names and other Competitive Advantages
? ? One reason that brand name discussions often lose their focus is that companies are quick to bundle a ?host of competitive advantages, each of which may be valuable, in the brand name grouping. The table below, where I have loosely borrowed from Morningstar and Michael Porter is one way to think about both the types and sustainability of competitive advantages:
Companies like Walmart and Aramco have significant competitive advantages, but I don't think brand name is on the top five list. Walmart's strengths come from immense economies of scale and bargaining power with suppliers, and Aramco's value derives from massive oil reserves, with far lower costs of extraction, than any of its competitors. Google and Facebook control the advertising business, because they have huge networking benefits, i.e., they become more attractive destinations for advertisers as they get bigger, explaining why they were so quick to change their corporate names, and why it has had so little effect on value. The pharmaceutical companies have some brand name value, but a bigger portion of their value added comes from the protection against competition they get from owning patents. While this may seem like splitting hairs, since all competitive advantages find their way into the bottom line (higher earnings or lower risk), a company that mistakes where its competitive advantages come from risks losing those advantages.
Brand Name Value
? ??At the risk of drawing backlash from marketing experts and brand name consultants, I will start with my "narrow" definition of brand name. In arriving at this definition, I will fall back on a structure where I connect the value of a business to key drivers, and look at how brand name will affect these drivers:
Put simply, brand name value can show up in almost every input, with a more recognizable (and respected) brand name leading to more sales (higher revenues and revenue growth), more pricing power
The ingredients, in case you are wondering, are exactly the same, leading to the interesting question, more psychological than financial, of why anyone would pay an extra $2.50 for a product with no differentiating features. If you are wondering how this plays out at the business level, the operating margins of pharmaceutical companies that own the "brand names" are significantly higher than the brand names of companies that make just the generic substitutes.
? ? The Tylenol example also serves to illustrate when it is easiest to value brand name,?i.e., when it is the only competitive advantage, and when it will become difficult to do, i.e., when it has many competitive advantages. It is for that reason that valuing brand name
Note that while the company comes in as slightly overvalued, it is still given a value of $281.15 billion, with much of that value coming from?its pre-tax operating margin of 29.73%. We estimate the value of Coca Cola's brand name in two steps, first comparing to a?weighted average margin off 16.75%?for soft-drink beverage companies, where many of the largest companies are themselves branded (Pepsi, Dr.?Pepper etc.), albeit with less pricing power than Coca Coal and then comparing to the?median operating margin of 6.92%, skewed towards smaller and generic beverage companies listed globally:
This is undoubtedly simplistic, since it assumes that the brand name value shows up entirely in the margin, and it likely understates the value of Coca Cola's brand name. That said, valuing Coca Cola at the median beverage company margin yields a value of $51 billion, suggesting that 82% of the company's intrinsic value comes from its brand name. Comparing to other beverage company and valuing at the weighted average operating margin still yields a differential brand value of $131.4 billion for Coca Cola, indicating that having a premium brand name has significant value.
? ? Brand names become more difficult to isolate and value, when a company has multiple competitive advantages, since the higher margins or growth or returns on capital will reflect the composite effect of all of the advantages.?With companies like Apple, where brand name is a factor, as is a proprietary operating system, a superior styling and a unique app ecosystem, the higher margin can be attributed to a multitude of factors, making it more difficult, perhaps even impossible, to isolate the brand name value. When valuing Birkenstock, at the time of its IPO, I wrestled with this problem, and with the help of a series of assumptions along the way, did find a way to break the value of the four intangibles that I saw in the company:?a world-recognized brand name, a quality management team, free celebrity advertising and the buzz created by Margot Robbie wearing pink Birkenstock in the Barbie movie.
The pricing premium effect of brand name also becomes an effective device to strip companies that hold on to the delusion that their brand name values have value, long after?they have lost their shine. If a company has margins that trail that of other companies in its industry grouping, it has lost brand name bragging rights (and value), and it is time to either accept that reality or rebrand to acquire pricing power again. Applying this test, you will find that nine out of ten companies that claim to have brand values have really nothing to show for that claim.
? ? Nike, in my view, falls somewhere between the two extremes. It is not as pure a brand play as Coca Cola, since athletic footwear, in particular, has physical differentiation that may lead some to prefer one brand over another. At the same time, it is not as complex as Apple, insofar as even a Nike aficionado can find a relatively close substitute in another brand. To measure how Nike's brand name has played out in its operating metrics, we compared the company's operating margins to the weighted operating margin of the two businesses (two thirds footwear and one third apparel) that Nike has operated in for much of the last two decades:
Other than 2023, Nike has consistently earned a higher operating margin (1.5% to 3% higher) than the rest of the industry, and since much of this industry is composed of brand name companies, it would suggest that Nike has a premium brand name, not surprisingly. If you are a Nike-pessimist, though, the drop off in the margin differential in the last five years is troubling, but almost all of that drop can be attributed to the company's troubles in 2023. Clearly, the company is taking the decline seriously, bringing back a Nike employee of long standing in Elliott Hill to replace John Donahoe, who cut his teeth in tech companies (ServiceNow, eBay and PayPal).?
?? ?I valued Nike, using its compounded annual growth rate and average operating margin over three period - 2014-2108, 2019-2023 and just the last twelve months:
You can see why Nike acted swiftly to change its CEO, since its value will dip substantially, if its growth stays down and margins do not bounce back. At the $71 stock price that the stock was trading at, just six weeks ago, the investing odds would have been in your favor, but the bounce back in the stock price to $88, after the new CEO hire, suggests that the market is pricing in the expectation that the company will bounce back to higher growth and better margins.
? ??Brand name does add value, if it gives the company that owns it pricing power, but how does a company end up with a valuable brand name? There are facile answers and they include longevity, with long-lived companies having more recognizable brand names, and advertising, where more spending is assumed to result in a more valuable brand name. To see why I attach the "facile" prefix to these answers, consider again the example of AT&T, a company that has been around for more than a century and remains one of the ten largest spenders on advertising in the United States. None of that spending has translated into a significant brand name value, thought there may other benefits that the company accrues.?
? ?I am sure that someone who immerses themselves in in this topic, perhaps in marketing and advertising, may be able to provide a deeper answer, but here is what I see as ingredients that go into developing a valuable brand name:
If asked to advice a company that was intent on creating a brand name, my suggestion would be to start with a product or service that is differentiated from the competition, and to give the brand name time to build around that differentiation. That may require sacrifices on scaling up (accepting less growth to preserve the product differential), a higher cost structure (if it is a quality difference) and perhaps even more reinvestment, but trade offs are inherent to almost everything of value in business. If the expected costs of building a brand name exceed its benefits, though, it may be worth asking whether brand name is the competitive advantage that the company should be aspiring for, since there are other competitive advantages that can add as much or much more value in the business the company operates in.
Brand Name Destruction
? ??The benefit of building a strong brand name is that it remains one of the most sustainable competitive advantages in business, with the advantages often lasting decades. However, even brand names eventually lose their luster, but the reasons they do so vary:
While all of these forces can cause a once valuable brand name to lose its value, it is worth noting that there are companies that have redeemed brand name value, sometimes by remaking the product or service, sometimes by repackaging it and sometimes by repositioning it. Crocs, whose brand name soared in the 2000s, but crashed by the end of the decade, repackaged itself around celebrity endorsements to become a successful brand again. Lego, a venerable brand name in the toy business, sold off its theme parks, and refocused attention on its core product, while redirecting its offerings to adults. In general, though, reincarnating a brand becomes easier for niche brands than for mass market ones, for product brands than for company brands, and for younger brands than for older ones.
? ? I believe that 2023 was a wake up call for Nike, as it awoke multiple disruptions. First, in the post-COVID years, Nike moved from store sales to digital sales, with Nike Digital, accounting for almost 43% of revenues in 2022. While that shift does reflect a change in consumer preferences towards shopping online, there is a question of whether bypassing shoe stores, which over the decades have contributed to the Nike brand, by highlighting their most iconic shoes, has undercut the brand. Second, while the footwear business has been more resistant to fads than the apparel business, Nike;'s mass market strategy of being all things to all people is exposing it to disruption. The company is losing market share, especially among younger customers, to newcomers in the space like?On?and?Hoka, and among runners (Nike's original core market) to older companies like New Balance that have rediscovered their mojo. Third, in an age where celebrities come with problems, and politics divides us on even the most trivial of issues, Nike's celebrity-driven advertising campaigns may hurt more than help the company. In short, Nike's new CEO has his work cut out for him!
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1 个月Terrific!
MS Finance at Babson College | Equity Analyst | Financial Modeling and Financial Analysis | Fundamental Analysis |
4 个月Great analysis. I think Nike as a brand has a lot of competitors coming in like On and hoka which are also offering very comfortable shoes with good designs which has lead to erosion if the differentiation.
Owner at Hyde Park Painters - Kiney Tile Refinishing
5 个月I m a Stern MBA marketing ‘89 alum . I ve noticed Stern NYU seems to be overwhelmingly East Asian especially India with faculty and students . It doesn t seem to be an American Business school certain not a place for Midwesterners like me . The NYU alumni magazine seems to be all about DEI woke politics
Owner at Hyde Park Painters - Kiney Tile Refinishing
5 个月This sounds too complicated . IMO Nike has ruined it s brand the same way a Disney studios , Bud Lite Coke and Cola ruined theirs ; By embracing anti American , woke Hate White people politics and causes - BLM BlackLiesMatter, Trump derangement , LGBT Trannie , the Great Replacement Colin Kilpatrick “ Just Do It” Nope.