Luxury Brands Surviving the Recession

Posted by Steve Pollack     3 Comments     Tags: Advertising, Brands, Economy, Fashion, Goods, Luxury, Marketing
7/26/10  Despite the rough economic times some of the classic designer brands have continued to thrive. According to a market research firm by Milward Brown Optimor, the most valuable brand is France’s Louis Vuitton worth nearly $19.8 billion. Hermès, Gucci, Channel, and Hennessy also topped the list for most valuable luxury brand. How have these designers [...]
7/26/10  

Despite the rough economic times some of the classic designer brands have continued to thrive. According to a market research firm by Milward Brown Optimor, the most valuable brand is France’s Louis Vuitton worth nearly $19.8 billion. Hermès, Gucci, Channel, and Hennessy also topped the list for most valuable luxury brand. How have these designers survive the Great Recession?

These classic luxury designers have focused their advertising campaigns on heritage. For example, Louis Vuitton’s campaigns are focused on travel, tying in their history of producing steamer trunks. Meanwhile, Hermès is going back to their roots by marketing their saddles in addition to sponsoring the Royal Windsor Horse Show in Paris, an event they have not done in years. Deemed the “Year of Heritage,” the luxury brands faring the best are taking a step back from mass luxury and high fashion and are focusing on their history, tailoring their brands to core customers searching for vintage products. By “staying pure” these classic European brands have been expanding at terrific rates given the recent economic downturn because those who are willing to spend the designer goods are those who have not been heavily impacted by the recession. The appeal of the classic designs and their exclusivity, such as the Birkin bag from Hermès, give these brands a fighting chance due to their brilliant marketing. By keeping a rare and timeless item, makes it more desirable and gives the consumer a reason invest in the good.

Not only have classic designs helped luxury brands grow, but also the economic growth from emerging markets overseas. In recent years, European designers have expanded their market by opening stores in Asia and have really seen a substantial growth in profit. Louis Vuitton has seen great success in Japan. According to a study by Asashi, “Louis Vuitton products are owned by one in four women…in Japan.” The CEO of Louis Vuitton, Yves Carcelle, stated that the Japanese are still their number one customer globally. However, they do take great measures in researching a culture and market before investing in an area and that might be the secret to their survival. In an ever-changing market, luxury brands have survived by appealing to their clientele through strategic marketing. While the U.S., European, and Japanese economies have been slowing down, the Chinese economy is growing steady rate.

The Chinese economy has become more robust within the last decade. China is considered the second largest market for luxury goods after Japan. According to a 2004 Goldman Sachs report China is the world’s third largest consumer of luxury goods, accounting for 12% of global sales. Roughly 345,000 Chinese are identified at Capgemini as millionaires who are enthusiastic consumers of luxury goods. These numbers show how the emerging Chinese market has impacted the growth of classic European brands. Hermès is set to launch a new Chinese brand, Shang Xia, in September. The decision to create a Chinese luxury brand reflects the company’s need to gain consumer recognition. Companies such as Chanel, Prada, Louis Vuitton, Gucci, and Burberry are all opening more stores in the area based on the expanding market. Luxury brands are realizing how profitable it is to sell their goods in the Chinese market. Bernard Fornas, the President and CEO of Cartier, knew the growing importance of expanding in Asia 10 years ago. Now Cartier is the number one luxury brand in China.

With the right ideas and the use of strategic marketing, some say that anyone will be able to survive. Although these are key points, it is also the presence of the luxury brands over the last 100 years that have really made a statement. Those factors combined are why these companies are still surviving this economic hardship. It is safe to say that they have been preparing for something like this for decades and therefore have come out on top.

1
Annalee Singewald
8/21/2010
-10:24 a.m.
Great post. Can't wait to read the next ones :)
2
Jen Walbert
8/21/2010
4:13 p.m.
Great post. Can't wait to read the next ones :)
3
Forest Gronstal
8/22/2010
-5:18 a.m.
Hmmmm, very interesting. I'd never considered that before!
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Social Media: The Next Revolution

Posted by Steve Pollack     2 Comments     Tags: Advertising, Communication, Facebook, Marketing, Networking, Social Media, Twitter, Youtube
6/30/10  Social media is not a fad. It is the next revolution, one affecting all generations– at least that is what some have begun to argue. People are turning to networking sites for virtually everything: finding jobs, soul mates, personal communities, products, news and other miscellaneous information. By now the list of social networking sites [...]
6/30/10  

Social media is not a fad. It is the next revolution, one affecting all generations– at least that is what some have begun to argue. People are turning to networking sites for virtually everything: finding jobs, soul mates, personal communities, products, news and other miscellaneous information. By now the list of social networking sites out there tops well over five hundred. Yet, the ones at the forefront are Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.

According to Socialnomics, Facebook gained over 200 million users in less than a year! That is just behind China and India in terms of population. Social networking is changing the way people interact and reach out to one another; friendships can be made or rediscovered with just a click of the mouse. However, these sites are not only making an impact in the personal and not always so private social world but also in the business world. 80% of companies are using social media for recruitment and there are over half a million users on LinkedIn, spanning over 200 countries and territories worldwide.

Marketing and advertising are given a whole new boost with social media sites. Individuals can promote themselves and create their own brand, updating online portfolios and forming connections with professionals, future business partners, and making referrals. As a result, traditional advertisements are not making the cut with today’s audience. People put more trust in their peers when it comes to products than in marketer controlled television and print ads. Websites like YouTube, forces advertisers to be creative, innovative, and constantly in tune with consumer opinions and needs or they will fall below the mark. But, as Rob Key of Converseon has said, “[t]his isn’t a direct marketing tool, this is human communication.”

Many thought that these social networks would have disappeared just like mullets and acid washed jeans did after the 80s. Little did they know that these social networks have made themselves into multi-million dollar companies and are here to stay!

1
radiospot
8/20/2010
-6:39 a.m.
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2
radiowerbung
8/22/2010
-8:34 a.m.
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GenNext New World of Mobility is a Reality

Posted by Steve Pollack     No Comments     Tags: Applications, Branding, Marketing, Mobile, Website Design
2/19/10  Youth of today do not use email much unless they want to attach something or contact a dinosaur like me.  They text or IM.  When sending text or instant messages is too much work, they post to all of their friends at once, on Facebook, MySpace or Twitter.  I have observed this first hand and [...]
2/19/10  Youth of today do not use email much unless they want to attach something or contact a dinosaur like me.  They text or IM.  When sending text or instant messages is too much work, they post to all of their friends at once, on Facebook, MySpace or Twitter.  I have observed this first hand and as marketers, here is all you need to do your own focus group.

Go to any mall, high school event or college dorm and watch as ”GenNext” conduct  multiple IM sessions, search for info or music, watch TV, do homework, respond to text messages, and talk on the phone all at the same time.  Today’s youth are driving the mobile revolution and they actually believe they will die faster from mobile phone deprivation than if they stop breathing.  Computers are important; mobile phones are basic necessities.

As we make the switch from mass media to internet to mobile everything about communicating with “GenNext” has changed, it has made their messages to each other just as important as our messages to them. This new audience needs speed, is bombarded with media, talks to each other constantly, and gives lots of feedback that they want to be heard.  Thanks to today’s technology, we can now address each of them individually, and even know where they are when we send them messages. Marketers had better understand the technology that makes all this possible. We need to be fast, interactive, mobile and individual. We need to know what will capture their attention in the seconds available so they’ll see our messages at all. This is pretty hard to do, and the mobility and technology of today’s phones makes it even harder. But the precision and individuality of mobile devices also makes it more valuable. Utilizing Short Messaging Service technology and integration of social media will provide the “GenNext” to take notice and integrate with your brand. Stay with us as we try to go beyond the scope of traditional by serving clients in this new world of mobility and digital entertainment.

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The Power of Ten: Social Marketings New World Order

Posted by Steve Pollack     1 Comment     Tags: Branding, Marketing, Real Estate, Website Design
11/15/09  We have all read about or participated in six degrees of separation. The concept is based on the small world phenomenon and made famous by a board game Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon which rests on the assumption that any actor can be linked through their film roles to Kevin Bacon. This human web is [...]
11/15/09  We have all read about or participated in six degrees of separation. The concept is based on the small world phenomenon and made famous by a board game Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon which rests on the assumption that any actor can be linked through their film roles to Kevin Bacon. This human web is playing especially true in our new online world order.

This gets me to my most recent experiences of developing and using online networking to reach what I call Power of Ten. Reach out to ten people. Ten people who need you or your product, who will listen to you, and hopefully trust you. Those ten people need what you have to sell, or want it. And if you win them over and they cannot live without your product or service, then you’ll win. If they love it, they will each find you ten more people (or a hundred). Repeat exercise until momentum gets going.

If they don’t love it, you need a new thing to sell. Start over or take their feedback and adjust your offering.

Your business grows. Not as fast as you want, but faster than you could ever imagine.

This Power of Ten approach changes the posture and timing of everything you do. Learn to use all the online tools at your disposal; Facebook, LinkedIn, Luxury Marketing Council website, Twitter… Get these New Influencers in your Power of Ten.

You can no longer market to the anonymous masses. They’re not anonymous and they’re not masses. You can only market to people who are willing participants. Like this Power of Ten..

The timing means that the idea of a ‘launch/opening/product release’ and press releases and the big unveiling is nuts. Instead, plan on the gradual build that turns into a tidal wave. Organize for it and spend money appropriately. The fact is, the curve of money spent (big dump, then a trickling stream, then a dry tap) is precisely backwards to what you actually need.

Three years from now, Paul Gillin and Seth Godins advice will be so common as to be boring. Today, it’s almost certainly the opposite of what most are doing.

I thought I would suggest a read of the week, this one is free online:
download Seth Godin Tribe’s here

Live socially -

Steve Pollack

1
Backlinks
8/20/2010
8:57 p.m.
Keep up the amazing work!! I love how you wrote this and I also like the colors here on this site. did you create this yourself or did you outsource it to a coder??
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