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Brand Valuation: Measurement of Value Indicators

Jessica I. Marschall, CPA, MAS LLC

March 15th, 2025

Valuing a brand is a complex process that business valuators approach with both qualitative and quantitative tools. The value of a brand is typically captured as an intangible asset and can be appraised independently or as part of a broader business valuation under a fair market value, investment value, or fair value standard.

Here is a comprehensive breakdown of how brand value is measured, what indicators are examined, and how a company can track and enhance these inputs to prepare for a future valuation.

Brand valuations provide financial justification for any financial requests from either equity investors or lenders. Additionally, the measurements provide a strategic advantage for potential mergers and/or acquisitions of a company and can significantly increase the realized sales price. Investors often demand brand valuation considerations when determining lending levels as well as justifying a higher market capitalization.


PART 1: APPROACHES TO BRAND VALUATION

Brand valuation typically uses one or more of the following methods:

1. Income Approach (most common)

This method estimates the present value of future economic benefits attributable to the brand.

Methodologies under Income Approach:

  • Relief-from-Royalty Method: Estimates what the company would have to pay in royalties to license the brand if it did not own it. This is calculated by applying a royalty rate to projected revenues attributable to the brand and discounting the result to present value.
  • Excess Earnings Method: Attributes residual income to the brand after subtracting returns to other tangible and intangible assets.
  • Multi-period Excess Earnings Method (MPEEM): A version used when a brand contributes to multiple revenue streams over time.

2. Market Approach

  • Looks at market transactions of comparable brands (M&A data or brand licensing deals).
  • Adjusts multiples based on differences in risk, market share, and brand strength.
  • Limited by the availability of directly comparable data.

3. Cost Approach

  • Estimates what it would cost to recreate or replace the brand, including marketing, advertising, and development costs.
  • Used when income or market data is not available but generally provides a floor value only.

PART 2: KEY INDICATORS EXAMINED BY VALUATORS

Valuators analyze financial, market, and brand-specific indicators. These indicators feed into forecasts, risk assessments, and comparative metrics:

A. Financial Indicators

  • Revenue attributable to the brand: Sales uplift or price premium driven by brand recognition.
  • Profit margins: Strong brands can command higher margins.
  • Customer acquisition cost (CAC) and customer lifetime value (CLV): Brands that reduce CAC and increase CLV are more valuable.
  • Historical marketing spend: Serves as an input for the cost approach and brand strength analysis.

B. Brand Strength Indicators

These qualitative and quantitative metrics are often scored using a Brand Strength Index (BSI) or similar proprietary model:

  • Brand awareness and recall (aided and unaided)
  • Perceived quality and brand trust
  • Loyalty and retention rates
  • Brand differentiation (vs. competitors)
  • Net Promoter Score (NPS)

C. Legal and Ownership Rights

  • Trademark registrations
  • Exclusive licensing agreements
  • Domain names, patents (if bundled with brand identity)

D. Market Indicators

  • Market share attributable to the brand
  • Competitive position and threats
  • Industry growth rates
  • Brand elasticity (impact on pricing)

Brand value can be affected through strategic marketing and advertising, ambassadorship and sponsorship, but most importantly, in our opinion, customer experience.


PART 3: TRACKING AND MANAGING BRAND VALUE DRIVERS

To prepare for a valuation and enhance brand value, companies should:

1. Implement Brand Performance KPIs

Create a brand dashboard that tracks:

  • Website traffic and bounce rates
  • Social media engagement
  • Brand sentiment (via surveys or AI sentiment analysis)
  • Search engine rankings and trends
  • NPS, CLV, and CAC (tracked monthly or quarterly)

2. Segment Revenue by Brand (if multi-brand)

  • Set up accounting to separately track revenue streams attributable to each brand.
  • Consider SKU-level contribution if product lines are tied to distinct brands.

3. Maintain IP and Legal Documentation

  • Keep trademark registrations current
  • Track licensing agreements and usage restrictions
  • Maintain brand guidelines, usage rights, and design elements

4. Document Historical Brand Investments

  • Track advertising and promotion spend by campaign
  • Document ROI of brand-related campaigns
  • Store creative assets and campaign analytics

5. Customer and Market Data Collection

  • Periodic surveys for brand awareness and perception
  • Loyalty program performance data
  • Public relations tracking (media mentions, earned media)

6. Build a Brand Book

  • Include logo use, color palettes, tone of voice, positioning statements, and brand values
  • Helps establish brand consistency, which is directly tied to brand strength

EXAMPLE OF A RELIEF-FROM-ROYALTY VALUATION SUMMARY

ItemInput
Forecasted Brand Revenue (Year 1)$10,000,000
Royalty Rate (%)5% (based on comparables)
Pre-Tax Royalty Income$500,000
Tax Rate25%
After-Tax Royalty Income$375,000
Discount Rate (WACC)12%
Present Value (5-year NPV)~$1.45M

Final Thoughts

The most valuable brands are those that can generate a premium, sustain customer loyalty, and stand defensible in the market. Business owners who track the right metrics over time and treat their brand as a measurable, investable asset can realize significant additional value in any business exit, acquisition, or investment negotiation.

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