Luxury Institute News

May 28, 2013

Insight: Luxury brands position for U.S. boom

By Astrid Wendlandt & Phil Wahba
Reuters
May 24, 2013

Most men might balk at spending $600 on a pair of Dior sneakers but for U.S. shoppers like Ephraim, an upbeat 30-year-old, such indulgences are becoming increasingly commonplace.

Ephraim is the kind of man who gives luxury goods makers high hopes that the U.S. market can fuel future growth, as China runs out of steam and demand in Europe sags.

“There is a cultural shift,” Ephraim says while browsing at Saks Inc’s New York City flagship. “Men are becoming more fashion forward.” The growing appeal of luxury goods to men and increased confidence among affluent spenders as the U.S. economy and asset prices recover have boosted sales and encouraged luxury brands to step up their investments in the United States.

Click the link to read the entire article which includes a quote from Milton Pedraza, CEO of Luxury Institute: http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/24/us-luxury-us-insight-idUSBRE94N0IY20130524

February 14, 2013

What Recession? Americans Regain a Craving for Luxury

By Nadya Masidlover and Christina Passariello
Wall Street Journal
February 13, 2013

PARIS—While all eyes have been focused on luxury-goods growth in China, another market has quietly been bolstering the business of high-end goods purveyors: the U.S.

French silk-scarf maker Hermès International RMS.FR -0.36%SCA said Tuesday that fourth-quarter sales rose 21% in the Americas to €184.6 million ($247.5 million). That comes on top of a slew of strong U.S. performances for its peers, such as LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA MC.FR -1.20%and Cartier owner Cie. Financière Richemont SA. Gucci parent PPR SA PP.FR -0.44%could confirm the pattern when it reports full-year profits on Friday.

Click the link to read the entire article including a quote from Luxury Institute’s CEO Milton Pedraza:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324880504578300291357105904.html

February 11, 2013

US stores luxuriate in Chinese cash

By Yu Wei
China Daily
February 8, 2013

Yu Yang, from the central China city of Wuhan, was laden with shopping bags and beaming, surprised at the ease of his retail excursion in New York State.

Although Yu doesn’t speak English, Mandarin-speaking store clerks at some of the Woodbury Common outlet mall stores made him comfortable by explaining products and converting international sizing charts to US sizes.

“Our customer-service supervisor at Woodbury Common is Chinese. We have several designer stores that also employ sales personnel who speak various dialects of Chinese,” said Jean Guinup, a marketing executive with Simon Property Group Inc, which operates the outlet mall, about an hour’s drive south.

The mall, which opened in 1985 and is filled with more than 200 designer-label stores that sell clothing and housewares at reduced prices, has long attracted busloads of tourists visiting New York City. Now Woodbury Common and its retailers court Chinese shoppers with services in Mandarin and Cantonese, including currency exchange, public-address announcements and other information.

“Last year, we saw increases in the number of Chinese visitors who visited our centers, including during Chinese New Year,” Guinup said.

Based on that experience and inquiries from potential shoppers, Simon is expecting greater numbers this Chinese New Year, to factory outlets such as Woodbury Common and the company’s other properties, including the high-end Mills malls.

“We have been aware of the increased volume of Chinese visitors arriving to the United States over the past several years, as well as the projections for continued increased growth,” Guinup said. “The relationship with our Chinese shoppers is very meaningful and we continue to develop programs to entice and excite this key audience.”

According to a report by Bain & Co, an adviser to the global luxury-goods industry, Chinese consumers now make up half of all luxury purchases in Asia and nearly a third of those in Europe. Globally, one in four purchases of personal luxury goods is made by a Chinese consumer.

Although retailing of luxury brands isn’t new to China, customers there still prefer to buy high-end goods during trips abroad. Research firm McKinsey & Co reports that two-thirds of luxury consumers on the Chinese mainland travel overseas to make purchases, thus avoiding China’s high sales taxes.

Although rich Chinese tourists don’t need to be told what to buy, they do benefit from having someone facilitate their purchases.

At the new Burberry boutique at the landmark Macy’s department store in Manhattan, a sales clerk named Jeniffer, who declined to give her last name, said six or seven Mandarin-speaking assistants are on the staff.

The British brand has put its red-colored products on display in the shop’s most prominent position and will hand out special red envelopes as a gift with purchases during the Chinese New Year.

Montblanc, which sells fine-quality fountain pens and writing accessories, has both red envelopes and window decorations done in a red floral motif with Chinese symbols at its US locations.

“We have a corporate policy to have at least one Chinese-speaking staff member in each of our boutiques,” said Nicole Dabaghian, a spokeswoman for Montblanc North America.

The retailer saw an influx of Chinese shoppers during the last Chinese New Year and is expecting even more this month.

“We most definitely value the Chinese tourist – so far as to have created special products such as a currency holder or wallet specifically for Chinese currency,” Dabaghian said.

China is one of the fastest-growing countries of origin for tourists in the US. A record number of Chinese – nearly 1.1 million – visited the country in 2011, and the US Commerce Department estimates that 1.54 million came in 2012.

“We have seen many Chinese visitors during last year’s Chinese New Year celebration, and we expect to see even more visitors this year,” said Matthew Bauer, president of the Madison Avenue Business Improvement District, a merchants association.

He said three-quarters of luxury stores on Madison Avenue between East 57th and East 86th streets accept China UnionPay, the most widely used card-payment system in the Asian country. Many of the association’s member retailers have special promotions planned for the upcoming holiday.

“To accommodate clients from abroad, Madison Avenue retailers have long maintained sales associates familiar with a variety of languages, and certainly many of our retailers have sales associates who speak Mandarin,” Bauer said.

Italian fashion line Emilio Pucci opened a store on Madison Avenue late last year and the boutique has a full-time Mandarin-speaking associate.

“This will be our first Chinese New Year in the location, and we very much look forward to welcoming Chinese tourists during the celebration,” said Katie Antonucci, the company’s retail director.

She said Pucci’s spring collection has a strong “Indochina influence”. “This collection will be in the store and large dragon tails – a theme used throughout the collection – will be on display in the window of the store,” she said.

The surge of Chinese visitors gives luxury-goods companies a chance to gauge the impact of their business strategies in China itself.

“The luxury brands need to understand that for the future, the purchasing power and discerning taste of the Chinese consumer will be important not just in China, but around the world, in major capitals of tourism and culture, as these highly educated world travelers eagerly discover the world and bring their vast purchasing power along with them,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, a New York-based research and consulting firm.

“The luxury brands must not only deliver great products,” he said, “but also associates who speak the language and who have the personality and skills to build long-term, mutually beneficial relationships with individuals, not just groups, of Chinese consumers.”

Chinese who travel and shop abroad have captured high-end retailers’ attention because they know what they want, buy in large quantities and are less interested in bargains than high-quality design, craftsmanship, and service, Pedraza said.

http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/epaper/2013-02/08/content_16216681.htm

September 12, 2012

Poor Burberry earnings point to problems for luxury market

By Stacey Vanek Smith
Marketplace
September 11th, 2012

Shares of Burberry are down more than 18 percent this morning. The luxury retailer slashed profit forecasts and warned that the luxury goods market is headed for hard times.

The main cause, says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, is global slowdown. Even while other retailers struggled, luxury retailers were boosted by sales from overseas, especially in Asia.

“China had been the engine of growth for the last several years,” says Pedraza, “[and] it generated a tremendous number of tourists who had been holding up the European luxury market.”

The Chinese slowdown, therefore, has not only affected the luxury market there, but also in Europe.

Luxury retailers could react in a number of ways, says Pedraza, from lowering their prices to reducing their inventory. Most importantly, though, he thinks they will “go after retaining customers who have purchased before,” hoping to increase customer culture and keep previous customers coming back.

http://www.marketplace.org/topics/business/poor-burberry-earnings-point-problems-luxury-market

February 21, 2012

Mystery Shoppers on Luxury Brands In-Store vs. Online

By Accessories Staff
February 20, 2012
Accessories

New York—Burberry earned top marks for its in-store and online experiences among luxury brands in a recent mystery shopper study, according to the WealthSurvey from the Luxury Institute.

Conducted by Professor Veronica Marlow of Brooklyn College, the mystery shoppers survey recruited a panel of 167 fashion marketing and merchandising students who paid some 263 visits to Manhattan store locations of Burberry, Chanel, Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Prada. The mystery shoppers also logged another 257 visits to the same brands’ websites to evaluate design, navigation and whether they would likely prompt a purchase or recommendation to friends or family.

“In its store, Burberry succeeds at creating a friendly atmosphere, with 85% of mystery shoppers saying they felt comfortable wandering around and browsing the merchandise,” the Luxury Institute reported. “Only Gucci came close to duplicating Burberry’s success in creating a comfortable atmosphere with 67% of shoppers saying they felt at ease inside of Gucci.”

Burberry scored top marks online, too, with 77% of visitors impressed by its visual appeal and 75% citing the superior design and ease of navigation.” Louis Vuitton also ranked high on site design with 75% of visitors favorably impressed. Burberry’s website also excelled for ease of completing purchases at 85%.

Interestingly, in its 2011 Global Brand report, Intrabrand last fall specifically cited Burberry as a top riser among luxury brands. “Burberry bested them all by focusing on its core competencies in fashion, digital innovation and global expansion,” Intrabrands reported.

As to whether they’d make a purchase online in the future, Burberry tied with Gucci as 42% of visitors said they would return to make a purchase. Whereas Chanel.com (22%) and Prada.com (24%) garnered the lowest among those who were willing to recommend the site to others.

Among the mystery shoppers others findings:

•Sales associates’ behavior and demeanor had a major effect on how “polite” a brand was viewed. About 96% said Burberry’s in-store staff was “pleasant” while only 60% said the same of Prada. Burberry and Chanel both received more than 90% on having staffs that were articulate and educated.

•Sales associates were more likely to offer assistance to shoppers at Burberry (75%) while Prada staff offered help only 55% of the time. “When you asked them a question, they quickly responded with little detail and walked away quickly,” observed one mystery shopper about Prada’s associates.

•Overall sales associates at Burberry (92%) and Louis Vuitton (91%) were seen as polite and courteous. Only 69% said the same of Prada’s staff.

•Prada, however, scored the highest on its store design with 91% applauding the aesthetics. Next was Burberry at 82% and Gucci at 75%.

“Ultimately shoppers are just as likely (42%) to make a purchase at Prada as they are to shop at Burberry in the future; 50% plan to return to Chanel. Chanel also earns the highest score (58%) for deserving a recommendation to friends or family.”

For additional information about this study and others, see www.LuxuryBoard.com

http://www.accessoriesmagazine.com/36740/mystery-shoppers-on-luxury-brands-in-store-vs-online

 

August 23, 2011

In-store mobile devices can help employees increase luxury brand CRM

By Kayla Hutzler
Luxury Daily
August 22, 2011

Luxury brands can significantly increase their CRM and deepen customer relationships by enabling employees to use mobile devices and applications in-store.

Brands that implement a mobile strategy for their employees have the ability to cater directly to each customer’s needs and increase customer retention. Mobile is becoming the best way for luxury brands to deliver superior experiences since affluent consumers expect a higher quality of service for the high price-points they are paying.

“Brands should use mobile in the store to help the salespeople collect and use data to create relationships,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, New York.

“Say the store is empty, employees can use the mobile device to send recent customers information and deals and offer to make them an in-store appointment,” he said.

“Every employee with a mobile device can be far more effective at creating customer relationships.”

Check it out
Luxury brands can use mobile in-store in a variety of different ways that increase the salesperson’s ability to better serve each customer.

“The mobile medium is particularly effective when used as an extension of the luxury sales associate that is capable of synchronizing the on-premise and off-premise experience with the brand,” said Scott Forshay, Dallas-based director of mobile strategy at Morpheus Media, a Createthe Group company.

Mobile devices can be effective for checking inventory without leaving the customer’s side and can also allow salespeople to easily order the item to the store or direct the customer to a nearby retailer that has the product in-stock.

By providing employees with detailed product information at their fingertips, they immediately become experts on every luxury good in the store.

In addition, the salesperson can show the interested consumer any videos or campaigns relating to the product.

Mobile apps can allow salespeople to seamlessly make a transaction without having a customer wait on a register line.

Furthermore, mobile devices can allow salespeople to look up a returning customer so that they can access spending habits and offer appropriate product suggestions.

If a customer chooses to share details such as family members and important dates, employees can also cater direct marketing approaches revolving around birthdays and anniversaries.

“Luxury brands, by and large, are highly personalized, deeply consultative and fanatically service-oriented,” Mr. Forshay said.

“Brands should use the mobile medium in ways that accentuate what makes them, by definition, luxurious,” he said. “It is this innovation that luxury shoppers expect from the brands they most covet.”

Lighting the way
Brands such as Nordstrom, Benefit Cosmetics and Burberry along with many luxury hotels are already using the iPad to increase CRM.

For example, luxury department store chain Nordstrom recently revealed plans to start using iPod touch devices to quickly and effectively help customers check-out and find products in-store.

In addition, Benefit Cosmetics is using an in-store-only iPad app that educates users about services and products through videos, reviews and comparisons, as well as serving as an in-store shopping assistant.

Also, Burberry used the iPad in-store to let VIP customers view a livestream of the Fall 2011 runway and immediately pre-order the items.

Furthermore luxury hotels are using the iPad to help with traveler check-in as well as with concierge and in-room services.

The St. Regis hotel in New York’s e-butler app acts as a virtual concierge for hotel guests, allowing them to browse restaurant, shopping and event suggestions as well as make reservations through the app.

Taking it one step further, The Plaza hotel in New York implemented a digital concierge service that allows guests to order room service, book spa appointments, contact a concierge and make dinner reservations through in-room televisions, laptops and iPads.

Overall, mobile usage in-store is all about increasing CRM and providing a luxurious shopping experience.

“CRM is absolutely critical, especially when there is a fear of an economic downturn,” Luxury Institute’s Mr. Pedraza said.

“Companies that have consumer data and the ability to go out there and build a relationship have an advantage over companies that have no data and are going to have to resort to deep discounts,” he said.

http://www.luxurydaily.com/in-store-mobile-devices-can-help-employees-increase-luxury-brand-crm/

March 10, 2011

Consumers: We want Gucci or Target. Forget the Gap

By Jessica Dickler
CNNMoney
March 9, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Consumers are ready for a little luxury. Despite cutting back in other areas, such as dining, they are showing a clear preference for select high-end apparel brands, such as Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Burberry.

After taking a hit at the height of the recession, sales of luxury goods have rebounded strongly, up 10%-12% last year in the U.S., according to estimates by Telsey Advisory Group, a retail equity research firm. Comparatively, retail sales across the board rose just 6%.

“People are willing to pay a premium on something that delivers on luxury,” noted Milton Pedraza, the CEO of the Luxury Institute, which tracks spending among wealthy consumers with a minimum annual income of $150,000. “They will buy fewer but more expensive things. There’s a lot more value consciousness.”

But with an eye on value, shoppers are also hunting down designer brands at steep discounts, frequenting stores such TJ Maxx and online sale sites such as Gilt Groupe.

Ed Jay, senior vice president of American Express Business Insights, calls this “the barbell effect.”

Who’s buying homes? The rich

“They are more high and low in the way that they are spending,” Jay said of today’s consumers. “High-end brands are holding ground among consumers, while spending at value oriented stores has also been pretty stable. It’s a tough place for mid-tier right now,” he said, referring to retailers like the Gap, Chico’s and Ann Taylor.

Susan Towers, who owns her own design business in New York, admits she shops high and low, but nothing in between.

“I shop at Barney’s and Bergdorf’s and take a walk through Loehmann’s every so often,” she said. Lately she says it’s more Loehmann’s and less Barney’s, but still “I’ve never really believed in buying mid-priced stuff.”

She has had to make sacrifices to afford Barney’s, though, because she makes about half of what she used to bring in before the recession. “I had to cut back, eat out less, take less vacations, things like that,” Towers explained.

Part-time French teacher Geraldine Trippitelli also says she would rather have one luxury item, which she pairs with other much less expensive clothing, than more mid-range brands.

“I prefer one Chanel jacket with cheap jeans and T-shirt, but just one, and then I have to be careful for a long time,” said Trippitelli, who shops either in high-end boutiques in New York or discounters like TJ Maxx and Target.

And other shoppers seem to be following suit. Overall luxury fashion spending is up 35% in the past year, while mainstream fashion spending gained just 8% since last year, according to the most recent data by American Express Business Insights, which tracks the spending habits of its 90 million cardholders.

And while high-end department stores like Nordstrom and Saks have rebounded strongly from the recession, more middle-of-the-road shops, such as Macy’s and JC Penney, have struggled to gain ground.

Same-store sales, an important barometer in retail, rose 5.8% at Macy’s and 5% at Kohl’s in February, while Nordstrom jumped 7.3% and Saks was a whopping 15.3% higher. The Gap and Banana Republic both had same-store sales below where they were a year ago.

Part of this trend, explained Robert W. Baird & Co. retail analyst Erika Maschmeyer, is the shift in focus to quality rather than quantity during the recession. “People got used to a different standard of living in the boom area and once you’ve traded up, it’s hard to shift back down,” she said.

Still, as the economy improves and consumer confidence continues to increase, Maschmeyer predicts even those mid-level stores will eventually see stronger sales. “I wouldn’t bet against the American consumer; we like to spend money,” she said.

http://money.cnn.com/2011/03/09/pf/consumers_prefer_luxury/

February 17, 2011

Burberry, Bottega Veneta in-store experience gets mystery shopper thumbs-up

By Elizabeth Zelesny
Luxury Daily
February 16, 2011

A study by The Luxury Institute finds that Burberry and Bottega Veneta excel far better than other companies at having enthusiastic brand ambassadors in their stores who are interested in helping customers.

This was one of the key findings of the report titled, “Leading edge insights into the world of the wealthy.” Mystery shoppers commissioned by Luxury Institute said that the layout, location and atmospheres of the Burberry and Bottega Veneta stores were what they appreciated most.

“A customer-centric culture is something that is a self-reinforcing system that creates consistently extraordinary customer experience,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of The Luxury Institute, New York. “Service values, service standards and education on operational and cultural functions need to be in place.”

Brand stores vs. department store
The Luxury Institute conducts research with wealthy consumers about their behaviors and attitudes on customer experience best practices.

Another finding of the report was that the mystery shoppers preferred the customer service and aesthetics in brands’ retail locations over the experiences in department stores selling that specific brand’s products.

Mystery shoppers found the company stores to be better maintained, with a more welcoming environment, than the brand’s area within a department store.

The findings provide insights into how well luxury brands take advantage of the opportunity to control the environment in which they present their goods. The findings illustrate that most brands excel in their own stores.

The mystery shoppers said that company stores provided better experiences because the staff had welcoming smiles, a friendly greeting on entry and a good-bye when they leave.

Creating a culture-centric environment
Luxury brands understand the value of creating a customer service experience in which everyone in the company participates in.

Mr. Pedraza said that luxury brands need to design a customer-centric environment geared towards culture, not projects. He also said that brands need to create a culture in which they can sustain and thrive even in the absence of a CEO.

“Luxury brands should have a set of service values,” Mr Pedraza said. “They need to educate and hire the right people. Whenever a new store opens, brands need to make sure they test employees for personality.

“They need to be educated in the customer experience and the culture of the brand, not just how to work a register,” he said. “We know every luxury brands CEO gets luxury brand customer service.

“They just don’t know how to do it. They don’t understand that the entire group of associates needs to be inspired to become customer-centric, and there are techniques on how to get this done.”

http://www.luxurydaily.com/59pc-of-consumers-would-rather-shop-at-brands-store-than-department-stores/

November 22, 2010

APPS-PAREL

In contrast with their reputation as leaders on catwalks the world over, luxury brands have perfected the slow embrace when it comes to technology. Will it be to their detriment?

By Hannah Tattersall
The Australian Financial Review
November 19, 2010

It’s 1am in Sydney. A woman wakes up and turns on her iPad. She opens her Burberry app and goes to the latest catwalk parade live from London Fashion Week. She zooms in on a model sporting a trench coat, moving her cursor from the shoulder of the garment down to its belt. As soon as the show finishes, she logs her interest and waits for a customer service representative to call and take her details. 

In six to eight weeks – four months ahead of its arrival in store – she receives her product. 

This ecommerce initiative, which ran for a week after the recent London show, was a world first, the brainchild of Burberry chief creative officer, Christopher Bailey.  So excited was he by the move, after the show he tweeted that the fashion house was “now as much a media content company as a design company because it’s all part of the overall experience”. 

Burberry has 2 million fans on Facebook.  Conservative by nature, luxury brands such as Chanel, Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Bulgari have been slow to embrace ecommerce. They pride themselves on the store experience they offer customers. And that experience -with personal service (champagne at times), and a touch and look approach – cannot be recreated online. Furthermore, these brands argue, even if you could sell luxury online, the affluent consumer isn’t interested.

Until now.

In October, New York based Luxury Lab released its second annual L2 Digital IQ Index of 72 luxury brands, ranking websites and mobile applications, digital marketing strategies and social media initiatives to quantify brands’ digital competence. Coach ranked number one, Ralph Lauren two and Burberry six. 

A Luxury Institute survey found 34 per cent of affluent respondents have downloaded apps to their smartphones, with another 11 per cent saying they intend to do so in the near future. 

Luxury brands are now scurrying to be recognised as having the knowhow to compete in a digital world. “Today, nobody questions doing ecommerce,” Milton Pedraza, Luxury Institute chief executive says,”but a few years ago there was a silly debate in the luxury industry about whether they should sell online or not. That’s been put to rest.”

Pedraza says this is because luxury brands were in the “same constellation but not of the same planet as mass brands”.

They didn’t see the web as able to replicate the store experience, without which, they believed, luxury brands weren’t luxury.

“They weren’t like Amazon.com; they weren’t like Zappos.com,” Pedraza says.  “They didn’t quickly embrace the convenience factor of the internet. They were afraid of it.”

He says it’s time luxury brands moved away from Flash sites that take minutes to load and annoy users, to embrace mobile applications.

Sites such as Foursquare can inform sales staff when clients enter a store. “Luxury needs to use that as the centrepiece to groom relationships,” he says. “You’re using the mobile device to enhance the consumer and also to enhance the sales professional and make it easier to interact between the [two].” 

The biggest mover and shaker in the luxury market, Asia, has spurred the need for brands to recognise online mechanisms globally. A 2008 study by KPMG International found Asian respondents felt most comfortable making financial transactions on their mobile.

Luxury brand consultant Melinda O’Rourke says in China alone, 60 to 70 per cent of luxury consumers are 20 to 27 years old. “Luxury brands have to look overall at their strategies because for the first time there’s such a big youth market,” she says.

Many global brands are yet to view Australia as a profitable market – in critical mass terms, we are not as important as China or the US. But Australia proved it was a robust market when it came through the global financial crisis relatively unscathed. And with our dollar at parity with the US dollar, Australians are embracing online retail in droves. We are the third biggest users of luxury shopping site NetAPorter, where the average annual spend per Australian customer is £728 ($1190), when the international average is £313.

In a survey conducted by O’Rourke’s firm, MO Luxury, in Australia in September, 57 per cent of respondents claimed to have visited luxury beauty websites. O’Rourke says NetAPorter has increased confidence in the online luxury market. The Richemont Group bought a 33 per cent stake in NetAPorter in April.

Associate professor of marketing at Melbourne Business School and luxury brand consultant Mark Ritson says luxury brands like to break rules and push fashion forward.

“But when it comes to business strategy, that’s not the case,” he says. “In business strategy, most luxury brands take pride in moving very slowly . . . they think about things in a decade or double decade way.”

While other luxury brands might see Burberry as a shelf down from them in the luxury store, Bailey’s moves in the online world have not gone unnoticed.

Francesco Trapani, chief executive of Bulgari, says his luxury house has “made a massive leap in the scope and sophistication of its online initiatives” in the past few years. It has a Facebook page about its brand, products, events and activities around the world, shares campaign videos on YouTube, and uses Twitter in the US to engage with customers – it has about 4000 followers.

“We’re evaluating the roll out of Twitter to other markets, but to date we haven’t seen high demand for it elsewhere,” Trapani says. “Expect to see more mobile activity next year.”

His company has noted an increase in product research and brand engagement online, he says. For now, however, it has no plans to launch online shopping in Australia.

Juliet Fallowfield, Chanel Australia and New Zealand’s corporate communications manager, says the company has been streaming shows from Paris to Australia within 24 hours, allowing consumers to watch and zoom in on product detailing. But it has not yet embraced ecommerce and she is unaware of any plans to do so. Chanel has a Facebook page and uses its website to alert consumers to news and announcements.

One thing Facebook can’t provide is tangibility. “Our customers are aware they receive more than just access to the physical product when they visit Chanel,” she says. “They won’t just come in, have a look and hear about the price. They’ll have the expert advice, the tailored Chanel environment, which gives a complete luxury experience.”

Trapani agrees the luxury consumer expects more than what can be provided by mobile and online devices, particularly when it comes to the brand’s high end jewellery ranges.

“Each high jewellery purchase is a major investment from both financial and emotional perspectives, so the human touch is vital,” he says. “In comparison, customers who purchase our fragrances need an initial physical experience to learn about the scent, but once they’ve become a fan of a particular scent, they generally prefer the convenience of finding the product online.”

Critics, however, say by being so accessible, brands risk losing the exclusivity that comes with being a true luxury brand. “Brands have to compete and make sure they’re relevant,” Pedraza says. “But they still need to show they’re a luxury brand. The risk with moving online is that anyone can access the brand.”

With social media “anyone can be involved, have a dialogue,” O’Rourke says. “And although they’re very consumer focused these days, it’s still about coming to our house and respecting our rules. We’ll serve our clients but we’ll serve them in our own environment.

“What’s fundamental is luxury is very much about the experience . . . Luxury brands are all about control. They have beautiful stores you walk into, this seamlessness, whether it’s Tokyo, London, New York, Sydney or Melbourne. There’s a consistent look. They can control their environment, everything from product to the store’s look, staff, knowledge.

http://afr.com/p/luxury_online_the_slow_embrace_RgYXqTdd1nrBPpxdry8HTK?hl

March 11, 2010

News Release: Burberry, Louis Vuitton Lead Luxury Firms For In-Store Customer Experience

Luxury Institute Mystery Shoppers Rate Retailers on Merchandise, Ambiance, and Store Personnel

NEW YORK (March 11, 2010) – “In-Store Customer Experiences,” the latest WealthSurvey from the objective and independent Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com), analyzes 240 visits to luxury retail stores in Manhattan by 78 students in Prof. Veronica Manlow’s Fashion Marketing and Research Methods class at Brooklyn College. 

The top three factors that shoppers consider before recommending a brand are merchandise, service and store atmosphere.  Two standouts across several criteria are British fashion house Burberry and French luxury outfit Louis Vuitton, with 77% of shoppers saying they would recommend Burberry to family and close friends, and 74% saying the same about Louis Vuitton. 

Polite, informed, articulate and appropriately dressed personnel lead to better experiences, as does the ability to put customers at ease while browsing the store. Mystery shoppers report that on 94% of Burberry visits the staff made them feel comfortable; Vuitton did the same 76% of the time.

Making customers feel special can also boost sales. “My salesperson made me feel important to the point that I ended up purchasing a pocketbook,” says one Louis Vuitton customer.  Burberry and Vuitton top the rankings for making customers feel special, doing it on 52% and 42% of visits, respectively.

“Stores are the front lines of luxury retail and this is where luxury brands can do some of the greatest good or ill for their reputations,” says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute. “Putting polite, informed and well-groomed sales personnel on the floor is just the start, but done well it can be a true differentiator.”

 About the Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com)
The Luxury Institute is the uniquely independent and impartial ratings, research, and Luxury CRM consulting institution that is the trusted and respected voice of the high net-worth consumer. The Institute provides a portfolio of proprietary publications, research and consulting services that guide and educate high net-worth individuals and the companies that cater to them on leading edge trends, high net-worth consumer rankings and ratings of luxury brands, and best practices. The Luxury Institute also operates LuxuryBoard.com, the world’s first global, membership-based online community for luxury goods and services executives, professionals and entrepreneurs.

For Further Information, Please Contact:

The Luxury Institute, LLC
Martin Swanson
Vice President Business Development
(914) 909-6350
mswanson@luxuryinstitute.com