RETAIL

Wealth and Luxury Trends 2010 and Beyond

by

Milton Pedraza

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit: This is the featured image credit
In a wide-ranging forecast that covers everything from social media to incentivising sales staff, Milton Pedraza, CEO and founder of The Luxury Institute, bets that peer ratings and reviews will…

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

In a wide-ranging forecast that covers everything from social media to incentivising sales staff, Milton Pedraza, CEO and founder of The Luxury Institute, bets that peer ratings and reviews will influence luxury purchasing patterns more than recommendations by friends or family and that CRM will fail to deliver.

In a wide-ranging forecast that covers everything from social media to incentivising sales staff, Milton Pedraza, CEO and founder of The Luxury Institute, bets that peer ratings and reviews will influence luxury purchasing patterns more than recommendations by friends or family and that CRM will fail to deliver.

As the luxury industry ends a disappointing 2009 and prepares for 2010, there are strong signs that many top-tier luxury brands are gearing up for a renaissance. CEOs of major luxury brands are embracing the challenge to reinvent themselves, even as they fight to survive the remainder of 2009. We expect to see a dramatic redesign in key components of the luxury business model, resulting in a true, customer-centric luxury industry worthy of the name. There is hard evidence that the luxury industry is rising to the occasion, and we look forward to the innovations that will emerge in the coming year. The following are predicted forthcoming trends:

1) Social Media Becomes Plain Ol’ Luxury Media

The Luxury Institute’s latest survey on ‘Social Networking Habits and Practices of the Wealthy’ shows that seven out of 10 wealthy consumers are now members of social networks. The wide participation of the wealthy customer is rapidly persuading luxury brands to join in the online conversation. Whether it is fan pages, contests, exclusive offers, or simple banner ads, most major luxury brands will have accepted and embraced social media participation as mainstream in 2010. Print media will always have its role in luxury, and will innovate to stay relevant. However, social media may dominate the future, as well as morph into unforeseen vehicles to help promote a refined and effective luxury conversation that is unmatched by any other marketing or communication channel. States Mathew L. Evins, CEO of Evins Communications, Ltd., “The real value of social media to the luxury consumer is that it is neither ‘push’ nor ‘pull’ in nature. Traditional media has overly solicited luxury consumers and bombarded them with a surfeit of messages. Social media gives the luxury consumer the opportunity to decide what brands they engage with and on what terms. It’s this element of control that really is the ultimate luxury.”

A major economic crisis truly is a terrible thing to waste and luxury will prove it’s up to the innovation task.

2) Impatient Luxury Beginners Exit the Industry

During the boom times, many merchants, designers, investors, private equity firms, service providers, consultants and others with no experience in luxury goods or services jumped onto the luxury bandwagon looking for immediate wealth opportunities. The newcomers were mesmerized by the beauty and awe of luxury, but they underestimated the skill, investment, dedication and time required to create and deliver at the highest levels of design, quality, craftsmanship and service. A historic truism of the luxury industry is that those who serve the ultra-wealthy can achieve great success, but luxury’s slow and surgical scalability rarely allows providers to become instantly successful. Some wealthy entrepreneurs who entered the game during the boom have unfortunately learned that being rich and consuming luxury does not make you a luxury purveyor, especially if your orientation is not customer-centric. Luxury takes special talent, skill and sacrosanct devotion to serving customers that very few brands are able to deliver consistently. Many newcomers have discovered that luxury also takes a long time to bring to fruition and very few beginners have the patience. This exit will prove to be a blessing for the luxury industry as truly devoted luxury purveyors take back leadership and control of the industry for the benefit of all.

3) Customer Data is Valued as a Vital Asset Rather than as a By-product

In good times, luxury brands thought they could afford to ignore the quality and accessibility of their customer databases. Surprisingly, even the top-tier luxury brands were negligent when it came to customer intelligence and its enhancement of the customer experience. Demographic data such as email addresses, home addresses and cell phone numbers remained uncollected, disorganized and outdated. Transactional data, the heart and soul of customer intelligence, remained trapped in operational systems that were diligently used by accountants, but marginally valued by sales and marketing teams. The days of customer data mismanagement will end as luxury brands begin to embrace excellence in customer data management and analytics to generate real-time, actionable customer insights.

4) Luxury Sales Compensation Gets a Redesign

One of the most destructive conflicts in the luxury industry is the battle as to who really “owns” the customer: the sales executive or the company. Luxury salespeople refuse to provide their customer information to the company, believing that doing so will undermine the salesperson’s control of the customers, their independence, and ability to earn commissions. Many salespeople think of their customer information as job security. The company rarely provides the salesperson with real-time insights and marketing support that can be beneficial to the salesperson as well as to the company in retaining, cross-selling, up-selling and reactivating the customer profitably. Salespeople typically are not rewarded or given recognition for collecting or using customer data intelligently. In the current severe downturn the lack of cooperation on customer data has proven disastrous for salespeople and for luxury brands. In the upcoming year, expect the smart luxury companies to redesign their sales selection, training, reward and recognition systems to drive teamwork and accurate data collection in order to have a beneficial source of insights for continuously reinventing the customer experience.

5) European Luxury Launches a Redesign of its Service Culture

Unfortunately, European luxury brands are not world-renowned for delivering extraordinary customer experiences, albeit Europe is the birthplace of luxury. The quality of customer interaction and customer service of European luxury brands globally is nowhere near as great as their products and venues. European luxury executives are beginning to recognize that the time has come to not only rival the non-European luxury brands such as Ritz-Carlton, The Four Seasons, Lexus, Nordstrom and Apple in customer experience, but to dramatically surpass them in 21st century style . This task will require cultural transformations of massive proportions for the product-centric Europeans and will take several years. Look for top-tier European luxury brands to take on the challenge passionately as they begin to reinvent themselves in 2010.

6) Many Well-Intentioned CRM Projects Will Fail to Deliver Results

Several major luxury brands have decided to undertake Customer Relationship Management (CRM) projects. But Luxury CRM is vastly different from Wal-Mart CRM. The challenge is that many of these luxury brands’ leaders believe success lies within the parameters of data, analytics and technology. It is critical for luxury brands to first embrace the right culture, values, people, skills, metrics and compensation systems in order to redesign the customer experience and internal business processes in ways that are extraordinary, relevant and lasting. The data, analytics and technology are merely tools that should be used only after the customer-centric culture is embedded in the enterprise. Luxury brands also need to beware that CRM technology vendors know nothing about luxury, and surely do not practice CRM with their own clients; they only sell CRM. Luxury CRM is a virtuous endeavor, but one that can only thrive in the context of a devout customer-centric culture and a cautious approach to CRM vendors. Look for brands to finally discover this after some false starts in 2010.

7) Trusted and Authenticated Peer Ratings and Reviews Surpass Friends and Family Recommendations as Influencers on Luxury Purchase

In a recent Luxury Institute WealthSurvey, 42% of wealthy consumers chose “ratings and reviews from a trusted source” as the most influential factor in purchasing luxury goods and services. This marks a discerning shift from “friends and family” as the most trusted source. Wealthy consumers are becoming comfortable with using the expertise of trusted peer groups to help make luxury purchasing decisions. The aggregated experiences of the larger peer group become a more reliable and expert source for making luxury purchasing decisions as long as the source is trusted. Research shows that under the right circumstances, the aggregated insight from legitimate peer groups is far more reliable than an individual, albeit trusted, source of knowledge. Look for major luxury brands to begin to embrace this trend and begin to engage in this rich and profitable ratings and reviews conversation, especially with their own customer communities, in 2010.

As 2010 approaches, there is much in the luxury industry for which to be grateful. It will take a significant amount of time to recover and surpass the economic success levels of 2007, yet luxury is cyclical, and the category will benefit from the growth of the world economy over time. Asia remains a very bright spot and will drive dramatic growth in the 21st century. The top-tier brands of luxury have already embarked on a reinvention and renaissance that will make luxury wonderfully unrecognizable several years from now. Look for those famous green sprouts in 2010. They are definitely there, but hard to see with the naked eye.

Milton Pedraza
Milton Pedraza

CEO

Bio Not Found

RETAIL

Wealth and Luxury Trends 2010 and Beyond

by

Milton Pedraza

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit : This is the featured image credit
In a wide-ranging forecast that covers everything from social media to incentivising sales staff, Milton Pedraza, CEO and founder of The Luxury Institute, bets that peer ratings and reviews will…

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

In a wide-ranging forecast that covers everything from social media to incentivising sales staff, Milton Pedraza, CEO and founder of The Luxury Institute, bets that peer ratings and reviews will influence luxury purchasing patterns more than recommendations by friends or family and that CRM will fail to deliver.

In a wide-ranging forecast that covers everything from social media to incentivising sales staff, Milton Pedraza, CEO and founder of The Luxury Institute, bets that peer ratings and reviews will influence luxury purchasing patterns more than recommendations by friends or family and that CRM will fail to deliver.

As the luxury industry ends a disappointing 2009 and prepares for 2010, there are strong signs that many top-tier luxury brands are gearing up for a renaissance. CEOs of major luxury brands are embracing the challenge to reinvent themselves, even as they fight to survive the remainder of 2009. We expect to see a dramatic redesign in key components of the luxury business model, resulting in a true, customer-centric luxury industry worthy of the name. There is hard evidence that the luxury industry is rising to the occasion, and we look forward to the innovations that will emerge in the coming year. The following are predicted forthcoming trends:

1) Social Media Becomes Plain Ol’ Luxury Media

The Luxury Institute’s latest survey on ‘Social Networking Habits and Practices of the Wealthy’ shows that seven out of 10 wealthy consumers are now members of social networks. The wide participation of the wealthy customer is rapidly persuading luxury brands to join in the online conversation. Whether it is fan pages, contests, exclusive offers, or simple banner ads, most major luxury brands will have accepted and embraced social media participation as mainstream in 2010. Print media will always have its role in luxury, and will innovate to stay relevant. However, social media may dominate the future, as well as morph into unforeseen vehicles to help promote a refined and effective luxury conversation that is unmatched by any other marketing or communication channel. States Mathew L. Evins, CEO of Evins Communications, Ltd., “The real value of social media to the luxury consumer is that it is neither ‘push’ nor ‘pull’ in nature. Traditional media has overly solicited luxury consumers and bombarded them with a surfeit of messages. Social media gives the luxury consumer the opportunity to decide what brands they engage with and on what terms. It’s this element of control that really is the ultimate luxury.”

A major economic crisis truly is a terrible thing to waste and luxury will prove it’s up to the innovation task.

2) Impatient Luxury Beginners Exit the Industry

During the boom times, many merchants, designers, investors, private equity firms, service providers, consultants and others with no experience in luxury goods or services jumped onto the luxury bandwagon looking for immediate wealth opportunities. The newcomers were mesmerized by the beauty and awe of luxury, but they underestimated the skill, investment, dedication and time required to create and deliver at the highest levels of design, quality, craftsmanship and service. A historic truism of the luxury industry is that those who serve the ultra-wealthy can achieve great success, but luxury’s slow and surgical scalability rarely allows providers to become instantly successful. Some wealthy entrepreneurs who entered the game during the boom have unfortunately learned that being rich and consuming luxury does not make you a luxury purveyor, especially if your orientation is not customer-centric. Luxury takes special talent, skill and sacrosanct devotion to serving customers that very few brands are able to deliver consistently. Many newcomers have discovered that luxury also takes a long time to bring to fruition and very few beginners have the patience. This exit will prove to be a blessing for the luxury industry as truly devoted luxury purveyors take back leadership and control of the industry for the benefit of all.

3) Customer Data is Valued as a Vital Asset Rather than as a By-product

In good times, luxury brands thought they could afford to ignore the quality and accessibility of their customer databases. Surprisingly, even the top-tier luxury brands were negligent when it came to customer intelligence and its enhancement of the customer experience. Demographic data such as email addresses, home addresses and cell phone numbers remained uncollected, disorganized and outdated. Transactional data, the heart and soul of customer intelligence, remained trapped in operational systems that were diligently used by accountants, but marginally valued by sales and marketing teams. The days of customer data mismanagement will end as luxury brands begin to embrace excellence in customer data management and analytics to generate real-time, actionable customer insights.

4) Luxury Sales Compensation Gets a Redesign

One of the most destructive conflicts in the luxury industry is the battle as to who really “owns” the customer: the sales executive or the company. Luxury salespeople refuse to provide their customer information to the company, believing that doing so will undermine the salesperson’s control of the customers, their independence, and ability to earn commissions. Many salespeople think of their customer information as job security. The company rarely provides the salesperson with real-time insights and marketing support that can be beneficial to the salesperson as well as to the company in retaining, cross-selling, up-selling and reactivating the customer profitably. Salespeople typically are not rewarded or given recognition for collecting or using customer data intelligently. In the current severe downturn the lack of cooperation on customer data has proven disastrous for salespeople and for luxury brands. In the upcoming year, expect the smart luxury companies to redesign their sales selection, training, reward and recognition systems to drive teamwork and accurate data collection in order to have a beneficial source of insights for continuously reinventing the customer experience.

5) European Luxury Launches a Redesign of its Service Culture

Unfortunately, European luxury brands are not world-renowned for delivering extraordinary customer experiences, albeit Europe is the birthplace of luxury. The quality of customer interaction and customer service of European luxury brands globally is nowhere near as great as their products and venues. European luxury executives are beginning to recognize that the time has come to not only rival the non-European luxury brands such as Ritz-Carlton, The Four Seasons, Lexus, Nordstrom and Apple in customer experience, but to dramatically surpass them in 21st century style . This task will require cultural transformations of massive proportions for the product-centric Europeans and will take several years. Look for top-tier European luxury brands to take on the challenge passionately as they begin to reinvent themselves in 2010.

6) Many Well-Intentioned CRM Projects Will Fail to Deliver Results

Several major luxury brands have decided to undertake Customer Relationship Management (CRM) projects. But Luxury CRM is vastly different from Wal-Mart CRM. The challenge is that many of these luxury brands’ leaders believe success lies within the parameters of data, analytics and technology. It is critical for luxury brands to first embrace the right culture, values, people, skills, metrics and compensation systems in order to redesign the customer experience and internal business processes in ways that are extraordinary, relevant and lasting. The data, analytics and technology are merely tools that should be used only after the customer-centric culture is embedded in the enterprise. Luxury brands also need to beware that CRM technology vendors know nothing about luxury, and surely do not practice CRM with their own clients; they only sell CRM. Luxury CRM is a virtuous endeavor, but one that can only thrive in the context of a devout customer-centric culture and a cautious approach to CRM vendors. Look for brands to finally discover this after some false starts in 2010.

7) Trusted and Authenticated Peer Ratings and Reviews Surpass Friends and Family Recommendations as Influencers on Luxury Purchase

In a recent Luxury Institute WealthSurvey, 42% of wealthy consumers chose “ratings and reviews from a trusted source” as the most influential factor in purchasing luxury goods and services. This marks a discerning shift from “friends and family” as the most trusted source. Wealthy consumers are becoming comfortable with using the expertise of trusted peer groups to help make luxury purchasing decisions. The aggregated experiences of the larger peer group become a more reliable and expert source for making luxury purchasing decisions as long as the source is trusted. Research shows that under the right circumstances, the aggregated insight from legitimate peer groups is far more reliable than an individual, albeit trusted, source of knowledge. Look for major luxury brands to begin to embrace this trend and begin to engage in this rich and profitable ratings and reviews conversation, especially with their own customer communities, in 2010.

As 2010 approaches, there is much in the luxury industry for which to be grateful. It will take a significant amount of time to recover and surpass the economic success levels of 2007, yet luxury is cyclical, and the category will benefit from the growth of the world economy over time. Asia remains a very bright spot and will drive dramatic growth in the 21st century. The top-tier brands of luxury have already embarked on a reinvention and renaissance that will make luxury wonderfully unrecognizable several years from now. Look for those famous green sprouts in 2010. They are definitely there, but hard to see with the naked eye.

Milton Pedraza

Bio Not Found

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