How the luxury industry will balance the traditional world of exclusivity with the digital world that is available to everyone.
Has the Digital Era Changed the Luxury Game for Good?
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
How the luxury industry will balance the traditional world of exclusivity with the digital world that is available to everyone.
The digital age poses challenges for all brands in every sector, and yet for the luxury market the conundrum is a particularly tricky one.
For a long time conventional wisdom was that the luxury goods sector was largely impervious to the ups and down of the economy. Recent results suggest this is no longer true, with 29% of luxury retailers reporting a decline in sales earlier this year. Digital would appear to be a huge opportunity, making luxury goods accessible to everyone.
And yet one of the traditional appeals of the luxury market has been its perceived ‘exclusivity’, with the very fact it is ‘hard to reach’ making it so much more satisfying when you do attain it. So how to balance the tension between this traditional world of exclusivity and the online world available to everyone?
This is the question for luxury brands. Embrace the ultimate democratisation and risk demystifying the category, or hold on to your ‘cloak of mystery’ and lose relevance by failing to keep up with the times?
Experience so far suggests that brands which have embraced digital are reaping the rewards, so maybe the two aren’t incompatible after all. There has been a wholesale shift in people’s expectations of customer service in the digital era. Amazon, for example, speeded up delivery times by using big data analysis to predict what its customers will order next, shipping products to nearby delivery centres before they have even ordered them.
The luxury sector can be no more immune to such trends than anyone else. Luxury brands are embracing the online world to improve both consumer journey and brand experience, with almost 6 out of 10 luxury sales said to be ‘digitally influenced’.
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From boutique appeal to everything online
Luxury shopping has become more effortless and easy for consumers in the era of e-commerce and more integrated customer experiences. Here are three examples of how the luxury and online world have connected seamlessly to open up new and exciting opportunities.
LVMH
A world leader in luxury goods, LVMH launched 24 Sèvres, a global e-commerce platform and mobile application opening the doors of the world’s first department store, Le Bon Marché in Paris, online in more than 70 countries worldwide. 24 Sèvres prides itself on the ultimate customer service – fast shipping, easy returns, 24 hour availability with bespoke add-ons including a personal shopper service.
Net A Porter
Net A Porter showed how luxury services be used to their maximum effect online with its ‘extremely important people’ programme offering a bespoke shopping service to its biggest spending customers. It includes priority shopping, front seat tickets for fashion shows, exclusive events and previews and a buying team on the lookout for items just for you. Online shopping will always be at its heart an egalitarian experience but luxury online retailers are increasingly going the extra mile to meet the expectations of their biggest spenders.
Farfetch
The online fashion retail platform sells products from more than 500 boutiques and 1,500 designers around the world. Unlike Net A Porter it doesn’t hold any stock, it provides the means to connect, peruse and buy from the latest brands and boutiques from around the world. Conde Nast was an early investor and it recently raised more than £300m for expansion, the majority in China, one of the fastest growing luxury markets.
Exchanging brand sacralization for brand experience
Experience-seeking millennials are changing the rules of the game in the luxury market. Luxury brands have come to realise that they need to find a way of removing the ‘cloak of mystery’ without sacrificing any of their brand appeal. In other words, they have accepted their brands and products need to be ‘desacralised’. You can do this in any number of ways.
Some of them, like luxury jeweller Fred, is using its Parisian stores to enable customers to personalise one of their iconic wristbands, Force 10, in 450 million different ways. Others, like Hermes, provide advice and exclusive content to its Hermes Career range through its Silk Knot mobile app, which now has around 50,000 downloads.
To stand out in a myriad of content, luxury brands have to go beyond storytelling to create involvement and a compelling consumer experience in which the customer takes charge.
From the 'happy few' to a global community, making luxury available to all
If they are to remain relevant in the digital age then luxury brands can no longer speak to the ‘happy few’. A growing number of big players understand they should better engage a broader community on social media, to make their brand more accessible and vivid in the eyes of consumers. That is also the case with Kenzo, which has developed a playful theme in its Instagram content to make it more approachable and inclusive for consumers. By taking the brand off its pedestal for a moment, it creates a horizontal platform for customer interaction.
But the challenge remains: how can luxury remain different from all other categories while using the same tools?
Cover image credit: 24Sèvres
Associate Director at Kantar Added Value
Laura Hurst helps her clients shape and implement growth strategies. At Kantar Added Value, she’s worked for luxury, retail, automotive and alcohol clients, including Audi and Pernod Ricard. With a decade’s experience in strategic marketing, client side, Laura is skilled in key stakeholder management and workstream alignment.