The 2009 Sunday Times Generation Next cool brands have been decided by a jury of 5 000 urbanites aged 8 to 22 years. Loved, for its Brrrr effect, Coke is the overall coolest brand; while Nokia claimed the second coolest brand spot and Nike is the third coolest brand.
Marketers gathered at the Venue, in Melrose Arch, Johannesburg on the evening of 28 May 2009 to get insight on what goes on in the minds of tweens, teens and youth.
The research, which is conducted by HDI Youth Marketeers in partnership with the Sunday Times, aims to uncover insights into how the youth perceive and respond to brands, as it is said that the youth are the driving force behind purchases in most households.
The number of categories for this year's study was increased as is the research study from which the awards are derived, conducted by HDI Youth Markteers. “We met very ambitious sample targets this year and extended the number of categories to 56. Young South Africans, unshaken by economic downturn, are as brand conscious as ever. Although there were some interesting shifts in the top rankers in some categories, we see growing similarity in votes by region, gender, race and sometimes even age around the coolest brands,” says managing director HDI Youth Marketeers, Jason Levin.
“It's hard to topple über-brand Coke from its number one spot, but there were big and exciting shuffles in the order this year with strong showings from Nokia and Nike, particularly. So we may see a shake-up soon,” says Levin.
The rest of the winners
Nokia took first place in the Coolest Cellphone Category, ranking highest amongst teens and young adults. Samsung was placed second, dropping from first place in 2008.
The Coolest Fashion Label 2007 and 2008 winner, Billabong, ranked number 6 this year, with high ratings amongst tweens (aged 8-12). Adidas moved into first place with both tween and teen support. Nike came in second and Puma third. New in the category, Dolce & Gabbana took fifth place after the perennial Levi's.
A new category in this year's Sunday Times Generation Next Survey was Coolest Alternative Brand. The overall winner is lifestyle and clothing brand Ama Kip Kip, enjoying much favour amongst tweens (51.1%) and teens (35.6%). Converse took second place.
Sun City was voted Coolest Fun Destination for the third year in a row and Gateway the Coolest Shopping Centre. Coolest Domestic Airline, another new category, saw SAA taking the coolness trophy for overall winner, with its' sister brand, Mango's orange, lighting up second place.
Trace TV moved up from 4th position in 2008 to 1st position in 2009 as the Coolest Music channel, the music channel of choice for tweens and teens. MTV dropped to number 4 and MTV Base to third place from first and second positions in 2007and 2008.
Edgars won the Coolest Fashion Retailer category and achieved 4th places in both Coolest Brand and Coolest Company categories. “It's like the whole shopping centre in one store, without the food,” comments Iman, one of the participants in the survey. Pick n Pay won the Coolest Grocery Retailer for the fifth year running, as did ABSA in the Coolest Bank category.
Coke was ranked 6th place in 2007 and moving to top position in 2008. Nike moved up the ranks to 3rd place, from 9th in 2008, and Nokia took second place.
Eligible category winners can make use of the Sunday Times Generation Next Coolest Brand endorsement as of June this year. The market can use the mark for marketing and packaging purposes for a period of 12 months. For further information contact Charlene Naidoo at HDI Youth Marketeers on +27 (11) 706 6016.
How is Nokia a cool brand? Clearly I have not been paying attention or the criteria for assessing "coolness" are a little off target. How can a brand be "cool" if the after-sale service is so shocking? Surely pathetic service would not make a brand "cool"? For me, Nokia is "uncool". Posted on 2 Jun 2009 14:19
How this can win an award at all is beyond me. This is truly the worst ...and unimaginative campaign I have ever had the displeasure of witnessing. It only proves that the target group (and creators) who have voted in favour of this campaign must be lacking in both originality and ideas, let alone a blatant underestimation of the greater masses' intelligence.
It is so far beyond Brrrri...lliance that the agency should be fired, flogged and shamed publicly.
What an utter abortion. It smacks of a typical campaign that has been elevated to a status of innovation, because the agency contracted to produce this rubbish probably had a favourable EE percentage and the brand managers were BEE candidates.
Shamefull...(this is not a racist review or intended to be either) Posted on 2 Jun 2009 15:08
If you are reading Bizcom, you are certainly not in the age groups targeted by the Next Generation survey. So your idea of 'cool' is VERY different from theirs. So before jumping in and giving your ONE opinion on an advertising campaign, please remember that your opinion is not the one that counts. What counts is the MAJORITY opinion of the YOUTH. Posted on 17 Jun 2009 08:54
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