In this guide, we’ll explore:
✔ What brand equity is and why it matters
✔ How to measure it effectively, including Marketing Mix Modelling (MMM)
✔ Actionable strategies—from the STEPPS framework to storytelling—to strengthen brand equity
Let’s dive in and turn brand insight into real business growth.
What is brand equity?
Brand equity is the added value a brand gives to a product beyond its functional benefits. It reflects consumers’ perception of a brand’s worth, influencing recognition, trust, and preference. Strong brand equity leads to higher willingness to pay, as seen in consumers choosing branded pain relievers over identical store-brand versions due to trust and familiarity.
Key components include brand awareness (recognition) and associations (emotions and perceptions). Built over time through consistent experiences, marketing, and storytelling, brand equity grows when positive interactions accumulate. As Harvard professor Jill Avery highlights, a strong brand resonates with consumers, reflecting their identity and values. Ultimately, brand equity shapes how a brand is perceived and its market strength.

Why brand equity matters:
Brand equity isn’t just a marketing concept—it drives real financial impact. Strong brand equity leads to greater customer loyalty, pricing power, and market resilience.
Key benefits of brand equity:
- Influences purchase decisions: Consumers prioritise brand trust over price or advertising. An August 2023 survey found trust to be the top factor in buying decisions
- Enables premium pricing: Strong brands command higher prices, boosting profit margins. Companies with high equity can launch premium-priced products without heavy discounts.
- Expands market share: Coca-Cola’s $271 billion brand value allows it to dominate globally and expand into new markets with ease, a challenge for weaker brands.
- Builds long-term resilience: Nielsen data shows a 1-point gain in brand metrics can drive a 1% sales increase—compounding over time into significant revenue growth.
- Boosts customer advocacy: Loyal customers become brand advocates, driving word-of-mouth marketing—more trusted than traditional advertising.
Brand equity strengthens financial performance, helping brands weather downturns, launch products successfully, and reduce reliance on discounts. Companies like Gap Inc., Adidas, and Tripadvisor highlight the need for long-term brand investment over short-term tactics. For marketing managers, brand equity is a critical driver of sustainable growth.
Measuring brand equity: Insights and analytics
To manage and improve something, you need to measure it. Measuring brand equity can be challenging – it’s an intangible, psychological metric – but there are established ways to gauge how your brand is performing in consumers’ hearts and minds. Modern marketers combine survey-based insights with advanced analytics like Marketing Mix Modelling to get a full picture of brand equity and its impact on business results.
Brand tracking metrics
One direct way to measure brand equity is through brand tracking studies and surveys. These typically track metrics such as:
Brand awareness: What percentage of your target audience knows your brand? This includes aided awareness (“Have you heard of Brand X?”) and unaided awareness (“Name brands in [category]”). Awareness is often the first step in building equity.
Brand consideration: Among those aware, how many would consider purchasing your brand? This reflects the relevance and attractiveness of your brand’s promise.
Brand associations: What characteristics or qualities do people associate with your brand? (e.g., “innovative,” “trustworthy,” “family-friendly”). Strong, positive associations indicate higher equity.
Brand preference: When given a choice, what fraction prefers your brand over competitors? This shows loyalty and the result of cumulative equity drivers.
Net Promoter Score (NPS) or advocacy: How likely are customers to recommend your brand to others? A high NPS signals that your brand has created enthusiasts willing to promote it (a sign of strong equity).
Tracking brand equity through surveys and sentiment analysis helps assess brand health over time. Integrating these metrics into marketing analysis links brand strength to sales outcomes. Research shows that metrics like awareness and consideration often predict long-term sales growth, even before immediate sales effects appear.

Marketing mix modelling (MMM) and brand equity
Marketing mix modelling (MMM): Measuring short-term sales & long-term brand equity
Marketing mix modelling (MMM) quantifies the impact of marketing activities on both immediate sales and long-term brand strength. Traditionally focused on short-term sales lifts, modern MMM now integrates brand equity metrics to measure sustained effects.
How MMM works
By analysing historical data, MMM identifies which marketing investments drive the best ROI and how tactics influence brand health over time. Advanced MMM separates:
✔ Baseline sales driven by brand equity (brand preference, distribution, awareness).
✔ Incremental effects from marketing campaigns layered on top.
Key benefits for marketing managers
✅ Short-term ROI: Identifies high-performing campaigns and channels (e.g., search ads, TV, social media) that drove immediate conversions.
✅ Long-term ROI: Measures brand-building efforts (e.g., awareness campaigns) that may not show an immediate return but also drive sustained future sales.
✅ Optimal budget allocation: Balances performance marketing and brand investment. While paid search might yield quick sales, upper-funnel channels (e.g., online video, sponsorships) strengthen brand equity, making all marketing more effective over time.

MMM as a strategic growth tool
Firms like Nepa champion an always-on MMM approach, and ensure both short-term revenue and long-term brand impact are measured. By assessing each channel’s contribution, businesses can allocate resources efficiently for sustainable growth. MMM acts as a marketing microscope—revealing what drives performance—and, when combined with brand tracking, quantifies brand equity in financial terms.
Strategies to build brand equity (actionable insights)
Knowing the importance of brand equity is one thing; building it is another. The good news is that marketing managers can actively cultivate brand equity through smart, customer-centric strategies. In alignment with Nepa’s mission to turn brand insight into an engine of opportunity, here are actionable strategies – backed by psychology and data – to grow your brand equity and, by extension, your business.
#1. Craft and communicate a compelling brand story
Humans are wired for stories. Brand storytelling connects your brand with customers on an emotional level, reinforcing shared values and building loyalty. Instead of just selling features, tell stories about real impact, your brand’s origins, and its beliefs.
Why storytelling matters for brand equity
According to marketing experts, storytelling fosters emotional connections, the foundation of strong brand equity. Think of:
- Apple’s “Think Different” narrative of innovation and empowerment
- Nike’s “Just Do It” stories of athlete triumph and perseverance
These brands don’t just sell products—they sell values and experiences that customers identify with.
How to craft a powerful brand narrative
✅ Define your purpose: What does your brand stand for beyond profit? Are you an eco-friendly disruptor or a small business enabler?
✅ Weave stories into marketing touchpoints: Blog content, videos, ads, and social media should all reflect your brand’s mission and values.
✅ Share customer success stories: Highlight real people who have benefited from your brand—authenticity builds trust and advocacy.
A compelling brand narrative sticks in consumers’ minds and hearts, fostering loyalty and elevating brand equity. Keep it authentic, consistent, and emotionally resonant for maximum impact.
#2. Leverage the STEPPS framework for shareable content
Wharton professor Jonah Berger’s STEPPS framework reveals six principles that make content contagious and shareable, driving brand awareness and favourability. A widely talked-about brand grows faster, strengthening its equity organically.
Applying STEPPS to brand marketing
✔ Social currency – People share content that makes them look good. Offer exclusive insights, sneak peeks, or insider reports to encourage digital word-of-mouth.
✔ Triggers – Stay top-of-mind by associating your brand with daily habits (e.g., KitKat’s “Have a break”). Reinforce branding with consistent messaging and cues.
✔ Emotion – Content that inspires, entertains, or moves people drives engagement. Emotional connections cement brand memory—as seen in Thai Life Insurance’s viral storytelling ads.
✔ Public – Make your brand visible and imitable. Encourage user-generated content (UGC) to amplify organic reach—like an Instagrammable product that promotes itself.
✔ Practical value – Offer useful, shareable content. A brand that regularly provides tips, hacks, or industry insights earns trust and positions itself as an expert.
✔ Stories – People remember narratives, not facts. Wrap your brand message in compelling stories—customer success cases, challenges overcome—to enhance recall and emotional impact.
By designing marketing with STEPPS in mind, brands encourage organic sharing, reinforcing positive associations without additional ad spend. It’s a cost-effective way to build brand equity and market presence virally.
#3. Deliver consistent and exceptional customer experiences
Brand equity isn’t built by marketing alone—it’s shaped by every customer interaction. From first exposure to post-purchase service, each touchpoint must consistently reflect your brand promise. Even the best advertising can’t compensate for poor customer experiences.
The power of consistency
A brand known for reliability must ensure product quality, service, and messaging all reinforce that perception. Marketing managers should collaborate with product and customer success teams to maintain alignment. As the saying goes, “Your brand is what people say about you when you’re not in the room.”
Listening & adapting
Proactively tracking customer feedback through sentiment analysis and social listening helps catch issues before they escalate. Transparent responses—even owning up to mistakes—can turn potential PR crises into trust-building opportunities. Research confirms that authenticity and accountability strengthen consumer trust, fostering long-term brand equity.
#4. Use data and insights to drive brand strategy
Continuously analyse brand data to uncover strengths, weaknesses, and growth opportunities. Regularly reviewing brand tracking and market research helps identify high-affinity segments and untapped audiences, refining both campaigns and product strategies.
Optimise messaging & perception
If your brand is strong among urban millennials but lacks awareness among suburban families, adjust media and messaging accordingly.
If quality perception is high but innovation scores are low, update brand communication to shift perceptions.
Leverage marketing mix modelling (MMM)
Use MMM to optimise marketing investment:
- If social media drives awareness but direct mail converts, balance resources—invest in social for long-term equity and use direct mail for immediate sales
Tie strategy to measurable outcomes
Set clear, data-driven goals like:
✔ Increase unaided brand awareness by 10 points in a year.
✔ Boost consideration in a key segment from 20% to 30%.
Celebrating these milestones fosters a culture that values brand health alongside revenue growth.
#5. Balance short-term sales activation with long-term brand building
Marketing managers must balance immediate sales with long-term growth. A mix of short-term activation (promos, sales events, performance marketing) and long-term brand-building (advertising, content, sponsorships) is essential for sustainable success.
Cutting brand investment can hurt business over time, leading to higher acquisition costs, lower loyalty, and increased vulnerability. Nielsen research shows brand-building efforts drive 10–35% of sales, making them critical for future revenue. Conversely, focusing solely on brand marketing without activation can make ROI difficult to measure in the short term.
Marketing mix modelling (MMM) helps justify brand budgets by showing how brand equity translates into sales. A balanced strategy often allocates 60–70% to brand-building and 30–40% to direct response, though industry variations exist. When done right, brand campaigns enhance activation effectiveness, and activation funds further brand investment—creating a cycle where strong equity lowers acquisition costs, lifts conversion rates, and fuels long-term growth.

Brand equity as an engine of opportunity
Brand equity: Your most valuable asset
In today’s rapidly changing market, brand equity is more critical than ever. With consumer trust in advertising at an all-time low, buyers gravitate towards brands they recognise and resonate with. Marketing managers must focus on earning trust and building brands that stand out—not just for what they sell, but for what they stand for.
A strong brand is a powerful growth engine, driving customer loyalty, market expansion, and long-term business success. By measuring brand equity with data-driven frameworks like STEPPS and marketing mix modelling (MMM), marketing teams can turn brand sentiment into actionable strategies and measurable results.
Brand equity isn’t built overnight—it’s strengthened with every campaign, story, and customer interaction. Stay consistent, authentic, and committed to the long game to ensure your brand remains a trusted market leader.
Ready to turn your brand insight into action? Leverage data-driven solutions and creative strategy to elevate your brand equity and outshine the competition. For a hands-on demonstration of how to grow your brand’s equity and drive growth, request a demo today.