Brand strength measurement has been approached from multiple theoretical and commercial perspectives over the past four decades. From Aaker's five-dimension model to Young and Rubicam's Brand Asset Valuator, from Keller's Customer-Based Brand Equity pyramid to the more recent simplifications of brand strength into two-variable multiplicative formulas, the field has produced a rich but fragmented landscape of tools. This paper reviews the existing body of knowledge on brand strength measurement, identifies persistent gaps in current frameworks, and proposes The BrandCore Strength Model (BCSM) as an integrated evolution that addresses those gaps. The BCSM extends the established multiplicative logic of Visibility multiplied by Reputation into a four-variable model: Visibility, Net Reputation, Differentiation, and Loyalty. It introduces a net reputation formulation that accounts for the asymmetric impact of negative perception, a diagnostic pathology layer that maps score patterns to specific brand conditions, and an integration architecture that connects the quantitative model to established proprietary brand theory, including the Awareness-Experience-Memory brand journey, the Three Cardinals of Every Solid Brand, and the Suspect-to-Trusted trust sequence. The model is designed for practical application in emerging markets, with particular attention to the African and Nigerian business context, where formal market research infrastructure is often limited but the need for brand measurement is acute.
Adeola Taiwo (Mon,) studied this question.