Black Friday’s Hottest Consumer Electronics Brands

When it comes to

consumer electronics, Apple rules the roost this Black Friday season.
The personal computer maker, along with three of its most popular products—the iPod, iPad and iPhone—ranked 1, 3, 7 and 8, respectively, in a new ranking of this holiday shopping weekend’s most buzzed about brands. YouGov’s BrandIndex, which tracks consumers’ daily perceptions of brands, compiled the report.
Apple aside, which came in with a buzz score of 32.5, other highly sought after consumer electronics brands include Nintendo’s Wii (second place, with a buzz score of 31.3), Bose (#4, 29.1), Sony (#5, 27.3) and LG (#6, 27.0). Hewlett-Packard rounded out the list (#10, 21.5). YouGov compiled the data for Forbes on November 19, and the buzz scores are a ratio of participants’ positive versus negative feedback about a brand. (The firm reached out to 5,000 respondents ages 18 or older—out of its sample set of 1.5 million U.S. adults—for the study.)

Okay, buzz is one thing, but what do these numbers mean for marketers and consumers who have stumbled across this post? Looking at this year’s “winners,” a few take home points jump out:
*It’s good to be Apple. Times are tough, indeed, but Apple still enjoys top-of-mind awareness among shoppers heading into this Black Friday season. Dad might not be willing to shell out $500 for a new dining table, but he’ll plunk down $1,000+ for a new MacBook Pro if it makes his youngest daughter look good, right? (This really happened with Media Geek’s sibling, who just started at Temple University as a business major. Media Geek got squat for her freshman year college present.) Plus, though Apple may be a brand that connotes style and class, it’s not too stuck up to offer consumers a good Black Friday deal. As this Mashable post notes, the company is holding a one-day, Black Friday sale where consumers can find deals on beloved Apple products.
*Value matters. Microsoft might’ve put big marketing dollars behind its Xbox Kinect, game controller-free entertainment system, but Nintendo’s Wii, which the former was meant to challenge, still managed to hold its place. (Xbox Kinect didn’t make the top 10.) Why? Penny pinched consumers might see Nintendo’s Wii as a better value buy. Most of its consoles sell for under $200 on Amazon.com, whereas Xbox Kinect’s list price runs anywhere from $149 to $399, depending on what equipment you already have, per Microsoft’s site.
*Quality matters. No. 5 Sony has traditionally been a favorite among quality seekers, with the company ranking right behind Intel and Canon, as far as quality scores ago. In fact, its ranking among the top 22 electronics brands, in terms of quality, remained exactly the same as the year-ago period, YouGov said. Compare that with what happened to Toyota when reports about sticky accelerator pedals and floor mats hit. Yikes.
*It pays to be a consumer electronics staple. Bose makes speakers, radios, headphones and clocks. Okay, not exactly the same, gliterrati-like sort of tech stuff that Apple makes, but sometimes—particularly now—all you need are the basics, right?
*It pays to be consumer-centric. Dell recently kicked off a global push to become “the most loved brand in the PC industry,”  global CMO for consumer and small and medium businesses, Paul-Henri Ferrand, told marketing trade Brandweek last month. Ads, via Wunderman, carry the tagline, “You can tell it’s Dell,” and mark a stark contrast from the former’s (up until now) price-driven approach.
With Black Friday less than three days away, “these are the brands that people are talking about in the most positive way,” says Ted Marzilli, svp and global managing director for BrandIndex. In the end, “sales tell the tale,” though being one of the most buzzed about brands certainly helps. (There is some evidence that high buzz scores correlate with strong sales, though it’s not always the case, he adds.)
At the very least, these numbers tell marketers whether or not “they are even in the game. If you’re not in the consideration set, you don’t have a seat at the table,” he says.

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