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Executive Summary
         Landmark Ogilvy & Mather study identifies
                ‘New Muslim Consumer’
             Ogilvy Noor launched to debunk myths and help brands chart a successful path
                     through the confusion that still surrounds marketing to Muslims.


A pioneering research study by Ogilvy & Mather, in partnership with TNS, has revealed the emergence
of the ‘New Muslim Consumer’: young, proud of their religion and emblematic of the remarkable spending
power embodied by the world’s fastest-growing religion.

The ‘Brands, Islam and the New Muslim Consumers’ Report serves as the launch pad for Ogilvy Noor,
a multidisciplinary global Islamic Branding practice that aims to help brands better engage with Muslim
consumers worldwide. The Muslim market is viewed as a critically important playground for marketers,
with the halal segment alone worth $2.1 trillion, and growing by $500 billion annually.

Polling consumers in four key Muslim markets – Malaysia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan – the research
study has identified the New Muslim Consumer as a critically important development for brands hoping
to build successful relationships with the Islamic world.

In doing so, the report debunks many of the stereotypes that surround Muslim consumer attitudes
towards brands and their marketing communications. For example, halal stickers, while important to
showcase certification, are no longer sufficient to persuade the New Muslim Consumer of a brand’s
belief in Islamic values.

Similarly, despite the massive sums spent by financial services brands on Shariah-compliant banking
services – Ogilvy Noor can reveal that the vast majority of consumers view this category as the least
effective in terms of Shariah-compliance.

The findings become particularly important given the risks that exist once Muslim consumers are alienated.
Despite the evident economic potential, for example, Muslims are often neglected or misunderstood
by global brands. The report highlights examples of brands that have inadvertently got it badly wrong,
and provides guidelines on how to avoid the same fate. It also explains how brands should react when
affected by forces outside of their hands.

‘We didn’t really have much thought of Denmark, until they started the photos that depict Prophet Mohammed
 when we started to boycott them’. (Respondent, Egypt)

According to estimates, Danish exports of about $ 2.6 billion a year disappeared with that particular boycott.

It’s unsurprising that many brands believe the area is fraught with risk. Brands that get it wrong are
commonly boycotted. Brands that engage effectively, though, are able to develop long-lasting relationships
with a global Muslim community that is almost 1.8 billion-strong and are some of the most loyal
consumers in the world today.
Executive Summary
For these reasons, the research incorporates the groundbreaking Noor Brand Index which, for the
first time, benchmarks the appeal of specific brands to Muslim consumers. The Noor Category Index
repeats this exercise at a category level.

The study analyses the factors that drive beneficial relationships with Muslim consumers, distilling the
findings into an eight-step toolkit for branding success. It is required reading for all brands that want
to deliver more effectively against the needs of the New Muslim Consumer.

The New Muslim Consumer

The global Muslim community stands at almost 1.8 billion people. By 2050, more than half of the
world’s population will be Muslim. Significantly, 52 per cent of the Muslim community are under
24 years old, pointing to the enormous cultural influence that will be wielded by Muslims in the years
to come. Young Muslims are already starting to stamp their influence on the consumption habits of
the wider global Muslim community, known as the Ummah.

The assembled portrait of the New Muslim Consumer explodes the lazy stereotypes that commonly
surround this area. Modern Muslims are undergoing a major reassessment of their relationships with
religious structures, cultural assumptions, authority, consumption and technology. This can be quite
confusing for observers who are not familiar with these trends.

It is tempting to view younger Muslims through the Generation-Y prism so favoured by global marketers.
However, the Ogilvy Noor report reveals that the New Muslim Consumer is fundamentally different
because of a strong reliance on faith.

62 per cent of these respondents, for example, agreed with the statement: ‘I am proud to be a Muslim’.
This high proportion reflects that that the new generation of Muslim consumers is proud to be a Muslim
first and foremost. This sense of pride, the research finds, is driven by a desire for inclusion. Rather
than distance themselves from religion in order to progress and succeed, 38% of these consumers
say that Islam is what ‘gives life purpose and direction’.

45% of this new generation believe that ‘religion should be adapted to suit individual lifestyles’ –
but crucially, they’re finding their own ways of doing so, with 27% agreeing that ‘protecting Islamic
values from Western lifestyle and media influence’ is important to them.

They feel that Muslims have been misrepresented by the global media, by politicans and by educators,
and they are keen to redress that balance.

The move towards conservatism should not be mistaken for a rejection of high-tech lifestyle products.
Instead, New Muslim Consumers are often highly technically literate. At the same time, though, they do
not believe in an automatic acceptance of Western technology, particularly if they reject the underlying
ideas and values.

They believe in crafting ways forward out of their own faith, believing that religion and progress,
far from being mutually exclusive, are practically inseparable. 22% of them appreciate ‘flexibility within
boundaries’ and 25% see Islam as ‘adaptable to suit individual needs’.

They want to stand up, be heard and make an impact – ‘I want to be a useful person for my society
and prove my presence’, said a Saudi Arabian female respondent.
Executive Summary
The New Muslim Consumer is particularly wary of the kind of tokenism that continues to masquerade
as an effective engagement strategy. Stamping products as halal or Shariah-compliant is not enough.
They ask more questions, and aren’t satisfied with glib answers.

In fact, the research shows that despite the millions invested in Shariah banking, the financial
services category is least trusted by Muslim consumers.

Instead the New Muslim Consumer is highly interested in the authority and provenance of brands and
the companies behind them. They are more educated, more questioning, more challenging and more
discerning.’ ‘We need to look at the halal logo, yes, but also at the ingredients’ said a young respondent
in Malaysia. ‘And we need to know where the profits go’, agreed her friend.

While their trust is difficult to win, once achieved it is deeper and longer-lasting.

Noor Brand Index

The groundbreaking Noor Brand Index benchmarks the appeal of specific brands to Muslim consumers,
by ranking consumer perceptions of their Shariah-compliance. Chief among its findings are that global
brands can forge highly successful relationships with Muslim consumers if they approach the task in
a sensitive, honest fashion that is consistent with the core values of Islamic Branding.

The first Noor Global Brand Index throws up some fascinating questions. Why do Nestle, Lipton and
Kraft all appear among the top five ranked brands? And why is Emirates, the flagship airline and pride
and joy of the United Arab Emirates, in the bottom ten?

Answers are to be found in sensitive analysis that starts from an understanding that Islamic Branding
is not like any other kind of branding. A different kettle of fish, it requires a specialised set of practices.

In personal care, Lux is the clear global winner, with a top five performance in each of the surveyed markets.

The report reveals that branding success is less about provenance, and is instead based on whether brands
can fundamentally empathise with the needs of the new Muslim consumer through tailored offerings
and communications.

‘I think of Nokia as an Egyptian company… they did research and produced products that suit the
 Egyptian consumer… they have Islamic values and know how to deal with Egyptians’ said a respondent
 in Egypt.

The Noor Category Index provides a similar analysis of category appeal to Muslim consumers, including
such important areas as food and finance. For example, what effect does the healthiness of the category
have on the consumers’ demand for it to be halal?

The Noor Category Index also investigates a number of other critical questions, such as the difference
between products used daily, and products used a couple of times a year. Or whether a product is for
individual or collective consumption. The Noor Category Index is designed to answer these questions
by breaking down the insistence of consumers on halal compliance into tiers, and explains what
brands must be specifically mindful of in any of these tiers.
Executive Summary
Good business practice

 The Ogilvy Noor Report has enabled Ogilvy Noor to formulate an effective definition for Islamic branding:
‘Branding that is empathetic to Shariah values in order to appeal to the Muslim consumer, ranging from
 basic Shariah-friendliness to full Shariah-compliance in all aspects of the brand’s identity, behaviour
 and communications.’

Brand, Islam and the New Muslim Consumer’ report provides invaluable insight into Shariah values,
from the perspective of consumers and marketers, clearly explaining how businesses should navigate
this area. Significantly, it finds that Shariah practices are closely aligned with the existing universal
ideals of good business practice.

This has become particularly important for global business given the massive erosion of trust in bodies
of authority, including corporation, in recent years. Shariah values can offer brands a roadmap back to
the kind practices that build credibility with all consumers. 32% of Muslim consumers agree that ‘respect’
and ‘responsibility’ are still the fundamentals of a good brand.

Islamic values, in fact, can champion the cause of corporate social responsibility in both the Muslim and
Western worlds. Values such as transparency, discipline, humility and purity are universal in their appeal.

Shariah-friendly practices – which commonly relate to food - include such factors as ethical sourcing,
humane treatment of animals, cleanliness, nutrition and fair trade practices. Values such as these are
obvious assets for a food industry that has experienced numerous crises related to contamination and
negligence.

The Ogilvy Noor Report has further distilled its research into Shariah values and how consumers want
to see them lived by brands into a toolkit for branding success, focusing on the following eight factors,
and providing an invaluable list of do’s and don’ts.

(1) A brand’s role in the community: including all aspects of a company’s corporate citizenship

(2) Product: including both the range of offering, ingredients and manufacturing processes

(3) The brand story and its PR strategy: focusing on the tactics brands can employ when talking
    about themselves, to better appeal to the New Muslin Consumer

(4) Corporate business practice: every aspect of how the business is run internally

(5) Visual Identity: the specific needs of the Muslim consumer when it comes to visual information
    and appeal

(6) Brand communication: a success guide built on decades of Ogilvy experience in Muslim markets

(7) External endorsement: who to partner with and who to avoid

(8) Customer service and delivery: why getting this right is so important and how to do so.
Executive Summary
Ogilvy Noor

Ogilvy Noor is a multidisciplinary practice focused on Islamic branding, drawn from across the breadth
and depth of Ogilvy & Mather Group’s global network. It is the world’s first bespoke Islamic Branding
practice, offering expert practical advice on how to build brands that appeal to Muslim consumers,
globally. Ogilvy Noor is led by a team of experts based across our key Muslim market offices worldwide:
Dubai, Pakistan, Malaysia and the UK and our core team: John Goodman, President of Ogilvy Action
Asia Pacific and President Ogilvy & Mather South and Southeast Asia, and strategically by Nazia Hussain,
Director of Cultural Strategy for Ogilvy & Mather globally. They are supported by Tanya Dernaika,
Planning Director for Memac Ogilvy across the Middle East, Zayn Khan, Regional Business Strategy
Director for South and South East Asia, and Shazia Khan, Associate Planning Director at Ogilvy in
Karachi. A wide network of communications professionals supports the core team across all the Muslim
markets in which Ogilvy operates across 450 offices in 171 markets.

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Brands Islam and the New Muslim Consumer (Executive Summary)

  • 1. Executive Summary Landmark Ogilvy & Mather study identifies ‘New Muslim Consumer’ Ogilvy Noor launched to debunk myths and help brands chart a successful path through the confusion that still surrounds marketing to Muslims. A pioneering research study by Ogilvy & Mather, in partnership with TNS, has revealed the emergence of the ‘New Muslim Consumer’: young, proud of their religion and emblematic of the remarkable spending power embodied by the world’s fastest-growing religion. The ‘Brands, Islam and the New Muslim Consumers’ Report serves as the launch pad for Ogilvy Noor, a multidisciplinary global Islamic Branding practice that aims to help brands better engage with Muslim consumers worldwide. The Muslim market is viewed as a critically important playground for marketers, with the halal segment alone worth $2.1 trillion, and growing by $500 billion annually. Polling consumers in four key Muslim markets – Malaysia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan – the research study has identified the New Muslim Consumer as a critically important development for brands hoping to build successful relationships with the Islamic world. In doing so, the report debunks many of the stereotypes that surround Muslim consumer attitudes towards brands and their marketing communications. For example, halal stickers, while important to showcase certification, are no longer sufficient to persuade the New Muslim Consumer of a brand’s belief in Islamic values. Similarly, despite the massive sums spent by financial services brands on Shariah-compliant banking services – Ogilvy Noor can reveal that the vast majority of consumers view this category as the least effective in terms of Shariah-compliance. The findings become particularly important given the risks that exist once Muslim consumers are alienated. Despite the evident economic potential, for example, Muslims are often neglected or misunderstood by global brands. The report highlights examples of brands that have inadvertently got it badly wrong, and provides guidelines on how to avoid the same fate. It also explains how brands should react when affected by forces outside of their hands. ‘We didn’t really have much thought of Denmark, until they started the photos that depict Prophet Mohammed when we started to boycott them’. (Respondent, Egypt) According to estimates, Danish exports of about $ 2.6 billion a year disappeared with that particular boycott. It’s unsurprising that many brands believe the area is fraught with risk. Brands that get it wrong are commonly boycotted. Brands that engage effectively, though, are able to develop long-lasting relationships with a global Muslim community that is almost 1.8 billion-strong and are some of the most loyal consumers in the world today.
  • 2. Executive Summary For these reasons, the research incorporates the groundbreaking Noor Brand Index which, for the first time, benchmarks the appeal of specific brands to Muslim consumers. The Noor Category Index repeats this exercise at a category level. The study analyses the factors that drive beneficial relationships with Muslim consumers, distilling the findings into an eight-step toolkit for branding success. It is required reading for all brands that want to deliver more effectively against the needs of the New Muslim Consumer. The New Muslim Consumer The global Muslim community stands at almost 1.8 billion people. By 2050, more than half of the world’s population will be Muslim. Significantly, 52 per cent of the Muslim community are under 24 years old, pointing to the enormous cultural influence that will be wielded by Muslims in the years to come. Young Muslims are already starting to stamp their influence on the consumption habits of the wider global Muslim community, known as the Ummah. The assembled portrait of the New Muslim Consumer explodes the lazy stereotypes that commonly surround this area. Modern Muslims are undergoing a major reassessment of their relationships with religious structures, cultural assumptions, authority, consumption and technology. This can be quite confusing for observers who are not familiar with these trends. It is tempting to view younger Muslims through the Generation-Y prism so favoured by global marketers. However, the Ogilvy Noor report reveals that the New Muslim Consumer is fundamentally different because of a strong reliance on faith. 62 per cent of these respondents, for example, agreed with the statement: ‘I am proud to be a Muslim’. This high proportion reflects that that the new generation of Muslim consumers is proud to be a Muslim first and foremost. This sense of pride, the research finds, is driven by a desire for inclusion. Rather than distance themselves from religion in order to progress and succeed, 38% of these consumers say that Islam is what ‘gives life purpose and direction’. 45% of this new generation believe that ‘religion should be adapted to suit individual lifestyles’ – but crucially, they’re finding their own ways of doing so, with 27% agreeing that ‘protecting Islamic values from Western lifestyle and media influence’ is important to them. They feel that Muslims have been misrepresented by the global media, by politicans and by educators, and they are keen to redress that balance. The move towards conservatism should not be mistaken for a rejection of high-tech lifestyle products. Instead, New Muslim Consumers are often highly technically literate. At the same time, though, they do not believe in an automatic acceptance of Western technology, particularly if they reject the underlying ideas and values. They believe in crafting ways forward out of their own faith, believing that religion and progress, far from being mutually exclusive, are practically inseparable. 22% of them appreciate ‘flexibility within boundaries’ and 25% see Islam as ‘adaptable to suit individual needs’. They want to stand up, be heard and make an impact – ‘I want to be a useful person for my society and prove my presence’, said a Saudi Arabian female respondent.
  • 3. Executive Summary The New Muslim Consumer is particularly wary of the kind of tokenism that continues to masquerade as an effective engagement strategy. Stamping products as halal or Shariah-compliant is not enough. They ask more questions, and aren’t satisfied with glib answers. In fact, the research shows that despite the millions invested in Shariah banking, the financial services category is least trusted by Muslim consumers. Instead the New Muslim Consumer is highly interested in the authority and provenance of brands and the companies behind them. They are more educated, more questioning, more challenging and more discerning.’ ‘We need to look at the halal logo, yes, but also at the ingredients’ said a young respondent in Malaysia. ‘And we need to know where the profits go’, agreed her friend. While their trust is difficult to win, once achieved it is deeper and longer-lasting. Noor Brand Index The groundbreaking Noor Brand Index benchmarks the appeal of specific brands to Muslim consumers, by ranking consumer perceptions of their Shariah-compliance. Chief among its findings are that global brands can forge highly successful relationships with Muslim consumers if they approach the task in a sensitive, honest fashion that is consistent with the core values of Islamic Branding. The first Noor Global Brand Index throws up some fascinating questions. Why do Nestle, Lipton and Kraft all appear among the top five ranked brands? And why is Emirates, the flagship airline and pride and joy of the United Arab Emirates, in the bottom ten? Answers are to be found in sensitive analysis that starts from an understanding that Islamic Branding is not like any other kind of branding. A different kettle of fish, it requires a specialised set of practices. In personal care, Lux is the clear global winner, with a top five performance in each of the surveyed markets. The report reveals that branding success is less about provenance, and is instead based on whether brands can fundamentally empathise with the needs of the new Muslim consumer through tailored offerings and communications. ‘I think of Nokia as an Egyptian company… they did research and produced products that suit the Egyptian consumer… they have Islamic values and know how to deal with Egyptians’ said a respondent in Egypt. The Noor Category Index provides a similar analysis of category appeal to Muslim consumers, including such important areas as food and finance. For example, what effect does the healthiness of the category have on the consumers’ demand for it to be halal? The Noor Category Index also investigates a number of other critical questions, such as the difference between products used daily, and products used a couple of times a year. Or whether a product is for individual or collective consumption. The Noor Category Index is designed to answer these questions by breaking down the insistence of consumers on halal compliance into tiers, and explains what brands must be specifically mindful of in any of these tiers.
  • 4. Executive Summary Good business practice The Ogilvy Noor Report has enabled Ogilvy Noor to formulate an effective definition for Islamic branding: ‘Branding that is empathetic to Shariah values in order to appeal to the Muslim consumer, ranging from basic Shariah-friendliness to full Shariah-compliance in all aspects of the brand’s identity, behaviour and communications.’ Brand, Islam and the New Muslim Consumer’ report provides invaluable insight into Shariah values, from the perspective of consumers and marketers, clearly explaining how businesses should navigate this area. Significantly, it finds that Shariah practices are closely aligned with the existing universal ideals of good business practice. This has become particularly important for global business given the massive erosion of trust in bodies of authority, including corporation, in recent years. Shariah values can offer brands a roadmap back to the kind practices that build credibility with all consumers. 32% of Muslim consumers agree that ‘respect’ and ‘responsibility’ are still the fundamentals of a good brand. Islamic values, in fact, can champion the cause of corporate social responsibility in both the Muslim and Western worlds. Values such as transparency, discipline, humility and purity are universal in their appeal. Shariah-friendly practices – which commonly relate to food - include such factors as ethical sourcing, humane treatment of animals, cleanliness, nutrition and fair trade practices. Values such as these are obvious assets for a food industry that has experienced numerous crises related to contamination and negligence. The Ogilvy Noor Report has further distilled its research into Shariah values and how consumers want to see them lived by brands into a toolkit for branding success, focusing on the following eight factors, and providing an invaluable list of do’s and don’ts. (1) A brand’s role in the community: including all aspects of a company’s corporate citizenship (2) Product: including both the range of offering, ingredients and manufacturing processes (3) The brand story and its PR strategy: focusing on the tactics brands can employ when talking about themselves, to better appeal to the New Muslin Consumer (4) Corporate business practice: every aspect of how the business is run internally (5) Visual Identity: the specific needs of the Muslim consumer when it comes to visual information and appeal (6) Brand communication: a success guide built on decades of Ogilvy experience in Muslim markets (7) External endorsement: who to partner with and who to avoid (8) Customer service and delivery: why getting this right is so important and how to do so.
  • 5. Executive Summary Ogilvy Noor Ogilvy Noor is a multidisciplinary practice focused on Islamic branding, drawn from across the breadth and depth of Ogilvy & Mather Group’s global network. It is the world’s first bespoke Islamic Branding practice, offering expert practical advice on how to build brands that appeal to Muslim consumers, globally. Ogilvy Noor is led by a team of experts based across our key Muslim market offices worldwide: Dubai, Pakistan, Malaysia and the UK and our core team: John Goodman, President of Ogilvy Action Asia Pacific and President Ogilvy & Mather South and Southeast Asia, and strategically by Nazia Hussain, Director of Cultural Strategy for Ogilvy & Mather globally. They are supported by Tanya Dernaika, Planning Director for Memac Ogilvy across the Middle East, Zayn Khan, Regional Business Strategy Director for South and South East Asia, and Shazia Khan, Associate Planning Director at Ogilvy in Karachi. A wide network of communications professionals supports the core team across all the Muslim markets in which Ogilvy operates across 450 offices in 171 markets.