What I Learned Today asked an interesting question on Friday:
What is the fastest "0 to global" brand? Basically, what brand (company, product, person, any entity that holds a brand identity) do you think gained awareness the fastest. Reblog your answer, if you're so inclined. TBC Monday (taking a snowboard trip to Stowe this weekend).
Tumblr doesn't allow comments, so let's open them up here. What's your best guess?
But a brand like al Qaeda went global faster than that on 9/11; they were known prior to that, but not on a truly global scale.
Looking at individual people, I think the fastest way to gain global popularity would be to become a viable US presidential candidate. If that's too difficult, headbutt someone at the World Cup final.
Also, about the scope of the question. could there be a brand that completely obliterates or dominates a particular niche, but that isn't a mainstream/mass consumer-oriented brand?
Viagra probably grabbed the attention of every old man in the world the second it hit the market.
What about something like The United States of America? How long does it take the Declaration of Independence to reach England and then permeate through the colonies? Maybe not the best definition of "global" but it's an interesting thought.
But what about "Who Wants to be a Millionaire," and also, reality television?
Product-wise I'd say obviously the iPod. I bought a Rio when they first came out and thought, "cool but this basically sucks" and went back to a Sony minidisc player until iPod came along.
But it's worth asking if any of these will endure. You could argue that Netscape was pretty quick to go global and the quickest to go all the way back down.
Outside the internet, CNN and Al-Jazeera both became global brands pretty quickly.
salad in a bag
liquid soap
the "new" Coke (famous for failing)
microwave popcorn (accomplished what Jiffy Pop couldn't)
CDs
Lotto
tribal gaming
Game Boy
Wii
Casio VL Tone
bottled water
How about Pele or Beckham? Maybe not in the US but there's a big world out there.
Given that Zidane was in the French team that won the World Cup in 98 and the European Championship in 2000, and that in 2001 his transfer to Real Madrid was the most expensive in the history of football, this seems like a good moment to point out that the world is not America.
What about Monica Lewinsky? Or Osama Bin Laden? Surely they reached infamy in all parts of the world faster than Oswald...
Not so, Tim (and yes I am an old fart). Oswald was known everwhere immediately. The first Kennedy assassination was massive in its media impact and Oswald was strangely compelling as a media figure (and assassination victim himself). I would say that no one matched his galvanizing force until bin Laden.
Have to disagree on Facebook though. May be very popular in English speaking countries but in mainland Europe, it still has to gain traction because of other social network sites like Netlog that have localised versions for each country and language.
As for people, I think there is a destinction between being a famous person and being a global brand in the form of a person. That is why I have to rule out presidents, interns, assasins and terrorists and go for Paris Hilton instead. She basicly is a business enterprise in the form of a woman.
As for real world products, anything that apple releases. As far as I know, it is the only company I know that gets so much media attention, even from the mainstream press, everytime Steve Jobs launches a new product.
Also, sub-brands (e.g., like the iPhone) probably shouldn't count either--sub-brands don't really start at "0."
So, Madonna as a global brand in the 1990s, could stick an iconic picture of herself on pretty much anything--say, boxes of bellybutton lint, and attract publicity and sell those things. Madonna's kids are famous, but not really brands--and, if they were brands, (right now) they'd be sub-brands building on the Madonna brand.
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Atari was once one of the world's largest brands. If Atari isn't the fastest going "0 to global," I'd think it's maybe Nintendo.
Al Qaeda on the other hand...the whole point of terrorism is branding. They wanted everyone in the world to fear them, both for what they did in the past and for what they might do in the future. They succeeded in outstanding fashion; the bombing of the WTC and the Pentagon might have been the greatest branding statement of all time.
Although looking back it seems they were unknown, most people knew about them , they just weren't very significant , they experienced a very rapid rise in significance but not so fast of a rise in awareness
- Charles Lindbergh
- Joe Louis
- Abu Ghraib
- Lenin
- Any Supreme Court Nominee (in the US, anyway)
- Anybody on American Idol (argh)
- Unfortunate victims of awful crimes (eg, Adam Walsh, Jessica Lunsford)
- Would be interesting to expand to food that is suddenly everywhere at once (someone already bottled water): fish-of-the-year, cookie dough in ice cream, panko crumbs
It's not that prestigious of a brand anymore because there's no music on the American version of MTV, but it's really a global brand, with a great deal of brand awareness for each of the flavors in their respective area. It's not necessarily technology related, it's media related so propagated much more easily than anything you can hold in your hand.
http://www.businessweek.com/pdfs/2007/0732_globalbrands.pdf
http://www.millwardbrown.com/Sites/Optimor/Media/Pdfs/en/BrandZ/BrandZ-2007-RankingReport.pdf
I'd venture to say that today's most global brands probably have had the ability to go from zero to global faster than at any time in history -- even during JFK's assassination, news probably traveled less quickly to developing nations than similar news would today (best recent example: 9/11).
Google wins hands down, IMO, excluding people brands (i.e., "George W. Bush", "Paris Hilton" - yes, those are indeed brands whereas "Lee Harvey Oswald" and "Monica Lewinsky" were simply people of notoriety (though Monica later did try to launch a handbag brand)). But is "Paris Hilton" more well known than "Google"? And does the "Hilton" part of her brand name disqualify her from going from "zero", since as a brand she's a lifestyle extension of the "Hilton" hotels brand, one that's been around for decades?
I would have given it to Al Quada for 9/10 to 9/11 2001 except that it's true, it wasn't at "zero" pre-9/11. I don't like YouTube because it took time to go "global", and it could be argued that its true global awareness/penetration was aided by the publicity of the acquisition of it by my previous answer: Google, and certainly "Google" is still more well known globally than "YouTube"-- think of places where searching is common but broadband connections needed for web video are not.
Google.
I think it's more global than Google. Ask people in the developing world what Google is, and they'll scratch their heads. Ask them what YouTube is and they'll be like, skateboarding duck, boy on bike does face-plant, Michel Daerden off his face, beauty queen talks about maps etc.
this is just plain wrong, sorry. woods turned pro in 1996 not 2006. He first won the US open in 2000.
This thread is closed to new comments. Thanks to everyone who responded.

