CONSUMERS

Luxury Marketing in a Recession

by

Gregory Furman

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit: This is the featured image credit

Serving up a ‘recession cocktail’ of marketing advice, Greg Furman, Founder and Chairman of The Luxury Marketing Council, talks simple pleasures, the personal touch, superb service, inspiring loyalty and delighting the customer.

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

Serving up a ‘recession cocktail’ of marketing advice, Greg Furman, Founder and Chairman of The Luxury Marketing Council, talks simple pleasures, the personal touch, superb service, inspiring loyalty and delighting the customer.

Serving up a ‘recession cocktail’ of marketing advice, Greg Furman, Founder and Chairman of The Luxury Marketing Council, talks simple pleasures, the personal touch, superb service, inspiring loyalty and delighting the customer.

As the recession keeps depressing, most luxury brands are experiencing a wake-up call from this nasty cycle and a much-chastened, highly skittish luxury buyer.

For the first time, perhaps in our lives, even brands that have been successful by pursuing their strategies of “great product; major investments in image advertising” (the European model) are being forced to re-think the viability of this approach. Many are looking into tactics that are more “American packaged goods fully-integrated” in approach to grow revenues and margins.

Why?

What the media dubbed the “aspirational” or “symbolic” buyer – folks with household incomes of $250 to $500k – are gone.

The definition of luxury is RADICALLY changing. Words frequently used to telegraph this shift: EXPERIENCE, VALUE, BESPOKE, HERITAGE, STORY, DISCRETE, BUZZ-GENERATING, DISCOVERY, ADVENTURE, SOCIALLY-CONSCIOUS, POLITICALLY RESPONSIBLE, SELF-ENRICHING, CONNECTING, FAMILY-ORIENTED, INNER-DIRECTED, SIMPLICITY, THE LITTLE THINGS. CUSTOMER RATHER THAN BRANDS IN CHARGE.

True luxury will continue to be:

• Things or services distinguished by their inherent value or by what Mr. Stanley Marcus called, “the impact of the hand” – meaning the best that the mind of man can imagine and the hand of man create – that they stand out far above all others.

• NOW, more than ever, great experiences are high on the value scale: experiences so rare and sensually orchestrated, the experience and memories of them so precious that they are actually luxury products. These include ‘TIME OUT’/vacations, travel, sensual comforts. Pick your fav.

The most educated consumer is putting a premium even on things or experiences that cost little or nothing AND provide immense satisfaction: good water, knowing how to tie a bow tie, dry firewood, a hot bath after a long day, superb olive oil, fresh caught fish, a smile, beautiful wrapping paper or elegant packaging, staying in shape, afternoon tea, museum visits, cultural experiences, time alone, time with family and friends. And, did I say, time, time, time, FREE TIME

At no point in 15 years has the “best customer” – the 3.2 million with liquid portfolios of $1million or more –better mirrored Milton Friedman’s view that “Nobody (these days, especially – my note) spends somebody else’s money as carefully as he spends his own. Nobody uses somebody else’s resources as carefully as he uses his own.”

Focus on the best customer

Every thinking luxury brand is now obsessed with their best customers and focusing their marketing efforts on “surprising and delighting,” winning greater share of wallet, loyalty of and greater referral of customers from this elite group.

And here’s the bottom-line reason. This ‘best customer’ spends more, is more loyal over time, refers more IF asked and rewarded for referral, is willing to partner, wants favored/loved brands to succeed, forgives more readily IF a mistake is corrected, offers stronger word of mouth, is not PRICE but VALUE sensitive, is cheaper to keep than to find and increasingly more profitable over time.

This best customer, self-made, driven by middle-class values (only 10 percent of wealth in the U.S. is celebrity or inherited) is now: more curious about what is the best of the best and wants to articulate why great things/services are worth the price; demanding high-touch, sophistication, intimacy, intelligent ‘courting’ from brands; more demanding than ever in our lifetimes (loyalty is correlated directly to intelligence and quality of service/product); seeing wealth as something to be enjoyed rather than displayed; highly cynical about advertising and demanding more targeted, personal approaches to marketing and service; hungry to understand (‘the rise of connoisseurship’) what is the best and why it justifies premium price; searching for the unique the memorable and wanting to ‘tell the story of a great experience or product,” relying more on friends’ opinions and recommendations, social networks and ‘buzz’ than on traditional advertising.

What the smartest luxury brands are doing

• Increasingly marketing is seen as president’s job not just the marketing department’s. – And ‘marketing” which used to be seen as great product, great location and major investment in advertising is increasingly following a packaged goods model. Advertising is being cut and the remaining investment going to niche publications like Departures, Elite Traveler, The Robb Report, Modern Luxury, Niche Media titles and others.

• Marketing which used to be the first thing cut in tough times is now seen not as a cost but as an investment by the smartest brands. Those that continue to spend, while the rest of the herd is cutting, enjoy significant competitive advantage. Luxury Marketing Council research shows that those that continue to invest are putting their marketing dollars into: improving customer service and heightening the quality of interaction with best customers; investing in more ‘third-party-testimonial generating’ local public relations; engaging people/employees/sales folks” on the line”, with direct customer contact as strategic partners and genuinely soliciting their insights into the changing customer and market place and sharing with people/employess/sales folks insight into the bottom line in ways once deemed ‘for top management only.’

• Paying more than lip service to ‘competitive intelligence’. More companies are monitoring their top competitors’ advertising, public relations, merchandising, web-initiatives; special events and looking for ways to ‘one up’ their competition by being more creative, faster, more resourceful in the ways that engage their teams and the way their teams ‘touch’ their best customers.

• One-to-one top-management telemarketing. It’s no longer unusual to hear stories about how the president or CEO personally contact best customers to invite them to special events or solicit their thinking.

• The renewed interest in measure, qualitative and quantitative, as part of the discipline of doing business on a daily basis. Did it work? How do we know? What were the measures? If it didn’t work, why not? What should we do differently? All questions more aggressively asked than ever before.

• Loyalty rewards and programs, once seen as unnecessary COST and ‘money pit’ are more important than ever For best examples see Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus In-Circle.

• High -Touch Programs. Seadream Yacht club calls select guests after every cruise and offers to have the CEO fly out to their home and host at Seadream’s expense a brunch or reception for a dozen of the couple’s best friends. The cruisers tell the story of their cruise. Seadream offers a great rate to their guests and sell several cruises at $1,000 per person per night. Not to mention the friends of the couple telling their friends. This was so successful for Seadream that they abandoned most traditional advertising. When Steinway sells a Steinway Grand, they do something similar. They offer to host a social event for the buyer in their homes, have a Steinway artist perform. Both strategies are ‘out of the box’, highly personal and create a community of ‘brand evangelists’ who tell the story to prospective buyers/friends, precisely the right target group.

• Knowing the Best Customer Better and Segmenting that Customer more personally and more precisely. See Jack Mitchell’s “Hug Your Customers” if you haven’t already is all I can say.

• Rewarding best customers for referral. Something simple: a bottle of wine, an art book, a special offer on a passion of the customer. Too few brands ask. Too few brands reward

• Personal gifting, communications (hand written notes). The power of such a simple strategy multiplied is immense.

• Customer Councils. The conventional wisdom was that the richest of the rich won’t take time to share their thinking and time. Many won’t . Many will. Those companies that assemble that create customer councils enjoy disproportionate advantage.

• Collaborations and Partnerships. Any brand not engaging this way is missing a way to be smarter; to share costs; to win new customers by being more imaginative with ‘kindred spirit’ luxury brands. Example: Brioni, Escada and Mercedes worked together on the 11 city launch of a new top of the line Mercedes. They pooled their best customer lists having agreed upon confidentiality and each in 11 cities ‘won’ 600 new customers of the same profile.

• Scaling down and making more approachable ‘special events.’ Less about ‘wow’ and more about the right people in the room. Smaller, more discrete, more about taste than splash.

•¨One-to-one, with permission e-marketing: the greatest tool for cross selling and upselling; the best source of knowledge of the best customer; the greatest lever to work with other brands. Neiman Marcus in six years changed their e-business from a ‘remaindering’ business to a $500 million enterprise without cannibalizing their store or catalog businesses.

• Easy to say, harder to do but inspiring the entire team to have a passion for and placing a premium on creativity, ‘out of the box’ solutions and rewarding those who ‘raise the bar.’

• Focusing strategically on ‘niche markets’ often ignored: the millennials (young people 16 – 25); the black, African American community; the hispanic, latino community; the Asian community; the gay, lesbian, transgender, bi-sexual communities. There are consulting firms and publishers who specialize in reaching these people on their own terms.

• Instead of radical discounting, smarter luxury brands are turning to limited-time, special-price-off offers on categories that their customers haven’t purchased before. So, they – pick your category/brand – offer Brioni suit buyers a special opportunity to buy accessories or custom shirts or outerwear at a special price. This does two things: gives the loyal customer “a reason to shop” (critical these days), migrates the customer to new categories and preserves the pricing integrity of the product historically purchased , preserving profit and margins and avoiding the need to re-educated a ‘sale-price-off-‘trained’ customer back to full price when good times return.

One might think of the above list as a ‘recession cocktail’, the blend of any or all providing a way out of tough times and into the heart and mind and wallet of the best customer. And this is a laundry list of the best brands and how they are in fact thinking.

Footnote: The convergence of television, phone, computer, camera, fax, computer, web are revolutionizing the way the ‘new, young luxury consumer’ will buy and be influenced.

Wish I knew the answer to where this is going. But it’s definitely moving away from the old corporate model of PUSH, CREATE DESIRE to LISTEN, AND CREATE HAVING HEARD.

THE LUXURY CUSTOMER IS NOW IN CHARGE AS NEVER BEFORE.

This ‘recession’ is a call to be more creative, to assemble communities, to share best practices and to win by redefining the entire marketing proposition based on what our customers say it should be.

Greg Furman

Gregory Furman
Gregory Furman

Founder & Chairman

Bio Not Found

CONSUMERS

Luxury Marketing in a Recession

by

Gregory Furman

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit : This is the featured image credit

Serving up a ‘recession cocktail’ of marketing advice, Greg Furman, Founder and Chairman of The Luxury Marketing Council, talks simple pleasures, the personal touch, superb service, inspiring loyalty and delighting the customer.

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

Serving up a ‘recession cocktail’ of marketing advice, Greg Furman, Founder and Chairman of The Luxury Marketing Council, talks simple pleasures, the personal touch, superb service, inspiring loyalty and delighting the customer.

Serving up a ‘recession cocktail’ of marketing advice, Greg Furman, Founder and Chairman of The Luxury Marketing Council, talks simple pleasures, the personal touch, superb service, inspiring loyalty and delighting the customer.

As the recession keeps depressing, most luxury brands are experiencing a wake-up call from this nasty cycle and a much-chastened, highly skittish luxury buyer.

For the first time, perhaps in our lives, even brands that have been successful by pursuing their strategies of “great product; major investments in image advertising” (the European model) are being forced to re-think the viability of this approach. Many are looking into tactics that are more “American packaged goods fully-integrated” in approach to grow revenues and margins.

Why?

What the media dubbed the “aspirational” or “symbolic” buyer – folks with household incomes of $250 to $500k – are gone.

The definition of luxury is RADICALLY changing. Words frequently used to telegraph this shift: EXPERIENCE, VALUE, BESPOKE, HERITAGE, STORY, DISCRETE, BUZZ-GENERATING, DISCOVERY, ADVENTURE, SOCIALLY-CONSCIOUS, POLITICALLY RESPONSIBLE, SELF-ENRICHING, CONNECTING, FAMILY-ORIENTED, INNER-DIRECTED, SIMPLICITY, THE LITTLE THINGS. CUSTOMER RATHER THAN BRANDS IN CHARGE.

True luxury will continue to be:

• Things or services distinguished by their inherent value or by what Mr. Stanley Marcus called, “the impact of the hand” – meaning the best that the mind of man can imagine and the hand of man create – that they stand out far above all others.

• NOW, more than ever, great experiences are high on the value scale: experiences so rare and sensually orchestrated, the experience and memories of them so precious that they are actually luxury products. These include ‘TIME OUT’/vacations, travel, sensual comforts. Pick your fav.

The most educated consumer is putting a premium even on things or experiences that cost little or nothing AND provide immense satisfaction: good water, knowing how to tie a bow tie, dry firewood, a hot bath after a long day, superb olive oil, fresh caught fish, a smile, beautiful wrapping paper or elegant packaging, staying in shape, afternoon tea, museum visits, cultural experiences, time alone, time with family and friends. And, did I say, time, time, time, FREE TIME

At no point in 15 years has the “best customer” – the 3.2 million with liquid portfolios of $1million or more –better mirrored Milton Friedman’s view that “Nobody (these days, especially – my note) spends somebody else’s money as carefully as he spends his own. Nobody uses somebody else’s resources as carefully as he uses his own.”

Focus on the best customer

Every thinking luxury brand is now obsessed with their best customers and focusing their marketing efforts on “surprising and delighting,” winning greater share of wallet, loyalty of and greater referral of customers from this elite group.

And here’s the bottom-line reason. This ‘best customer’ spends more, is more loyal over time, refers more IF asked and rewarded for referral, is willing to partner, wants favored/loved brands to succeed, forgives more readily IF a mistake is corrected, offers stronger word of mouth, is not PRICE but VALUE sensitive, is cheaper to keep than to find and increasingly more profitable over time.

This best customer, self-made, driven by middle-class values (only 10 percent of wealth in the U.S. is celebrity or inherited) is now: more curious about what is the best of the best and wants to articulate why great things/services are worth the price; demanding high-touch, sophistication, intimacy, intelligent ‘courting’ from brands; more demanding than ever in our lifetimes (loyalty is correlated directly to intelligence and quality of service/product); seeing wealth as something to be enjoyed rather than displayed; highly cynical about advertising and demanding more targeted, personal approaches to marketing and service; hungry to understand (‘the rise of connoisseurship’) what is the best and why it justifies premium price; searching for the unique the memorable and wanting to ‘tell the story of a great experience or product,” relying more on friends’ opinions and recommendations, social networks and ‘buzz’ than on traditional advertising.

What the smartest luxury brands are doing

• Increasingly marketing is seen as president’s job not just the marketing department’s. – And ‘marketing” which used to be seen as great product, great location and major investment in advertising is increasingly following a packaged goods model. Advertising is being cut and the remaining investment going to niche publications like Departures, Elite Traveler, The Robb Report, Modern Luxury, Niche Media titles and others.

• Marketing which used to be the first thing cut in tough times is now seen not as a cost but as an investment by the smartest brands. Those that continue to spend, while the rest of the herd is cutting, enjoy significant competitive advantage. Luxury Marketing Council research shows that those that continue to invest are putting their marketing dollars into: improving customer service and heightening the quality of interaction with best customers; investing in more ‘third-party-testimonial generating’ local public relations; engaging people/employees/sales folks” on the line”, with direct customer contact as strategic partners and genuinely soliciting their insights into the changing customer and market place and sharing with people/employess/sales folks insight into the bottom line in ways once deemed ‘for top management only.’

• Paying more than lip service to ‘competitive intelligence’. More companies are monitoring their top competitors’ advertising, public relations, merchandising, web-initiatives; special events and looking for ways to ‘one up’ their competition by being more creative, faster, more resourceful in the ways that engage their teams and the way their teams ‘touch’ their best customers.

• One-to-one top-management telemarketing. It’s no longer unusual to hear stories about how the president or CEO personally contact best customers to invite them to special events or solicit their thinking.

• The renewed interest in measure, qualitative and quantitative, as part of the discipline of doing business on a daily basis. Did it work? How do we know? What were the measures? If it didn’t work, why not? What should we do differently? All questions more aggressively asked than ever before.

• Loyalty rewards and programs, once seen as unnecessary COST and ‘money pit’ are more important than ever For best examples see Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus In-Circle.

• High -Touch Programs. Seadream Yacht club calls select guests after every cruise and offers to have the CEO fly out to their home and host at Seadream’s expense a brunch or reception for a dozen of the couple’s best friends. The cruisers tell the story of their cruise. Seadream offers a great rate to their guests and sell several cruises at $1,000 per person per night. Not to mention the friends of the couple telling their friends. This was so successful for Seadream that they abandoned most traditional advertising. When Steinway sells a Steinway Grand, they do something similar. They offer to host a social event for the buyer in their homes, have a Steinway artist perform. Both strategies are ‘out of the box’, highly personal and create a community of ‘brand evangelists’ who tell the story to prospective buyers/friends, precisely the right target group.

• Knowing the Best Customer Better and Segmenting that Customer more personally and more precisely. See Jack Mitchell’s “Hug Your Customers” if you haven’t already is all I can say.

• Rewarding best customers for referral. Something simple: a bottle of wine, an art book, a special offer on a passion of the customer. Too few brands ask. Too few brands reward

• Personal gifting, communications (hand written notes). The power of such a simple strategy multiplied is immense.

• Customer Councils. The conventional wisdom was that the richest of the rich won’t take time to share their thinking and time. Many won’t . Many will. Those companies that assemble that create customer councils enjoy disproportionate advantage.

• Collaborations and Partnerships. Any brand not engaging this way is missing a way to be smarter; to share costs; to win new customers by being more imaginative with ‘kindred spirit’ luxury brands. Example: Brioni, Escada and Mercedes worked together on the 11 city launch of a new top of the line Mercedes. They pooled their best customer lists having agreed upon confidentiality and each in 11 cities ‘won’ 600 new customers of the same profile.

• Scaling down and making more approachable ‘special events.’ Less about ‘wow’ and more about the right people in the room. Smaller, more discrete, more about taste than splash.

•¨One-to-one, with permission e-marketing: the greatest tool for cross selling and upselling; the best source of knowledge of the best customer; the greatest lever to work with other brands. Neiman Marcus in six years changed their e-business from a ‘remaindering’ business to a $500 million enterprise without cannibalizing their store or catalog businesses.

• Easy to say, harder to do but inspiring the entire team to have a passion for and placing a premium on creativity, ‘out of the box’ solutions and rewarding those who ‘raise the bar.’

• Focusing strategically on ‘niche markets’ often ignored: the millennials (young people 16 – 25); the black, African American community; the hispanic, latino community; the Asian community; the gay, lesbian, transgender, bi-sexual communities. There are consulting firms and publishers who specialize in reaching these people on their own terms.

• Instead of radical discounting, smarter luxury brands are turning to limited-time, special-price-off offers on categories that their customers haven’t purchased before. So, they – pick your category/brand – offer Brioni suit buyers a special opportunity to buy accessories or custom shirts or outerwear at a special price. This does two things: gives the loyal customer “a reason to shop” (critical these days), migrates the customer to new categories and preserves the pricing integrity of the product historically purchased , preserving profit and margins and avoiding the need to re-educated a ‘sale-price-off-‘trained’ customer back to full price when good times return.

One might think of the above list as a ‘recession cocktail’, the blend of any or all providing a way out of tough times and into the heart and mind and wallet of the best customer. And this is a laundry list of the best brands and how they are in fact thinking.

Footnote: The convergence of television, phone, computer, camera, fax, computer, web are revolutionizing the way the ‘new, young luxury consumer’ will buy and be influenced.

Wish I knew the answer to where this is going. But it’s definitely moving away from the old corporate model of PUSH, CREATE DESIRE to LISTEN, AND CREATE HAVING HEARD.

THE LUXURY CUSTOMER IS NOW IN CHARGE AS NEVER BEFORE.

This ‘recession’ is a call to be more creative, to assemble communities, to share best practices and to win by redefining the entire marketing proposition based on what our customers say it should be.

Greg Furman

Gregory Furman
Gregory Furman

Founder & Chairman

Bio Not Found

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