Wattie’s Crowned Country’s Most Trusted Brand
Wattie’s Crowned the Country’s New ‘Most Trusted Brand’
Kiwi icon Wattie’s has been voted New Zealand’s number one trusted brand in the annual Reader’s Digest Most Trusted Survey; released today in the July issue of Reader’s Digest New Zealand.
The sixth annual Trust Survey confirms some solid favourite category brands, but heralds a change at the top for 2010. After six years at number one, confectionary giant Cadbury has been knocked from its perch as Overall Most Trusted Brand and winner of the food category to 36= place out of 133 brands surveyed.
Overall: Automobile giant Toyota came in at second overall (and won the automobile category), while Sony came in at third and won both the electronics categories and the computer categories.
Biggest
movers: The brands that made the biggest moves up the
charts in 2010 were Sony Ericsson, up 26 places to 34=;
Lexus, up 33 places to 36 and ASB up 20 places to 60.
Whittaker’s made an impressive debut at number
5.
OVERALL MOST TRUSTED
BRANDS
RANKING BRAND
(Place in last year’s overall
ranking)
1. Wattie’s
(9)
2. Toyota (4)
3. Sony
(3)
4. Tip Top
(2)
5. Whittaker’s
(na)
6. Panadol (5)
7. Fisher
& Paykel (7)
8. Panasonic
(9)
9. Colgate (8)
10. New
Zealand Post (13)
NEW
ZEALAND’S MOST TRUSTED BRANDS
2010
CATEGORY
WINNER
Bank
Kiwibank
Beauty and Cosmetics
Gillette
Cars
Toyota
Computers
Sony
Credit Cards
Visa
Electronics
Sony
Fast food
Subway
Food
Wattie’s
Health and wellbeing
Panadol
Home improvement Mitre
10
Mobile phones Nokia
Retail
New Zealand Post
Telecommunications
Vodafone
Travel Air
New Zealand
Whitegoods
Fisher & Paykel
The 2010 Reader’s Digest Trust Survey was commissioned to independent research firm The Digital Edge, who surveyed a representative sample of 500 New Zealand adults aged over 18 years old on their trust of 133 brands across 15 categories.
The July issue of New
Zealand’s Reader’s Digest also includes the result of
the 2010 Most Trusted People Survey, which asked Kiwis to
rank 85 well known people on a scale of one to ten, rank a
list of professions and everyday relationships according to
the level of trust attributed to those
people.
ENDS