Here are five other landmark corporate brand transformations, and how experts say they stack up to Facebook’s renaming.
Andersen Consulting becomes Accenture – 2001
Andersen Consulting was legally required to take a new name after splitting from its sibling professional services firms Andersen Worldwide and Arthur Andersen. But its move to Accenture is hailed by branding experts as the gold standard for renaming, Adamson said.
The name is catchy – which always helps – but executives of the rebranded firm immediately outspent competitors on advertising to make Accenture a household name, Adamson said. The Andersen companies were thought of as legacy accounting firms. Accenture leaned into its 21st century provenance and billed itself as a forward-thinking competitor to power players McKinsey and Booz Allen Hamilton.
“Arthur Andersen, its brand was accounting, it was about telling you what already happened,” Adamson said. “Consulting is telling you what the future holds.”
Google becomes Alphabet – 2015
The world’s dominant search engine spent the early 2010s aggressively branching into other technology services and product lines: Android smartphones, Waymo autonomous electric vehicles, Calico life sciences, and more.
The Google name, Ricca said, was not elastic enough to cover all of the corporation’s businesses. It needed a holding vessel that told investors Google was about more than typing something into a search bar. And the Alphabet name has meaning, too: alphabet is the core of language and represents Google’s search origins, company co-founder Larry Page said; it also alludes to the company’s “bets” on ambitious products that could create “alphas,” or returns above investment.
Ricca said the Alphabet name has done its job. It’s a strong brand for investors and gives its subsidiaries uniting themes. Under the best circumstances for Facebook, its Meta brand will follow a similar trajectory.
“To investors, you’re essentially seeking a higher multiplier by saying, as an organisation, we’re headed to another future that has lower risk and higher opportunities than the current business as you know it,” Ricca said. “A new name to reflect that is important. You’re trying to use the name to tell a better story to investors.”
Kraft creates Mondelez – 2012
Kraft Foods in 2012 had two branches of food products. The first was its low-growth, but revenue-steady grocery division, which sold brands including Velveeta, Kraft Macaroni & Cheese and Oscar Mayer. Its snack division included rapid growth brands such as Oreo cookies, Cadbury chocolates and Ritz crackers.
Shareholders chose the name Mondelez – a name concocted by employees and meant to evoke the words for “world” and “delicious” in Romance languages – to spin off its snack business.
The spinoff went over well, Adamson said. It was transparently aimed at Wall Street; consumers could still buy Oreos and Ritz crackers in the same packaging and employees still made the same products in mostly the same factories. To investors, Adamson said, the name Mondelez conveyed the company’s ambitions: spread delicious snacks all over the globe.
British Petroleum becomes Beyond Petroleum – 2001
The company is still known almost universally as BP, but its rebrand to de-emphasise its fossil fuel holdings was a well-conceived, but poorly-executed effort, Adamson said.
BP, he said, did not move swiftly enough to expand its renewable energy practice, and even as it did make renewable investments, they were not well publicised. It left both investors and consumers muddled on what the company truly stood for.
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And then, of course, its Deepwater Horizon oil rig in 2010 was responsible for what many consider to be the largest marine oil spill in American history.
The catastrophe, Adamson said, flew in the face of the company’s overtures about investing in renewables. By 2013, it announced that it had divested of its wind-power assets and doubled down on oil and gas extraction.
“If you’re going to change your name, make sure you have a business plan, and you can deliver on that product,” Adamson said.
Philip Morris becomes Altria – 2003
The Philip Morris-Altria transition is the worst-case scenario for Facebook, Ricca and Adamson said. Philip Morris, one of the world’s largest tobacco and cigarette producers, took on the name Altria to shield its other brands – including Kraft Foods and Miller Brewing – from negative associations with the tobacco industry. (The company spun off Kraft in 2007 and sold most of its stake in Miller to Anheuser-Busch in 2016).
Researchers at the University of California-San Francisco found in a 2003 study that internal Philip Morris documents released as part of litigation discussed for more than a decade changing the name of the company for reputational purposes. Deliberations about a rebranding dated to 1989.
The strategy backfired, Ricca and Adamson said. Consumers and investors alike recognise the Altria name as one linked to tobacco and tobacco-caused death and illness, though antismoking advocates played a large role in consumer education.
Facebook’s rebrand to Meta could have similar consequences, if the company’s potentially damaged reputation from the whistleblower’s disclosures endures.
“Right now,” Adamson said, “Facebook is going through a Philip Morris moment.”
The Washington Post
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