Luxury Institute News

August 7, 2012

10 Things Apple Won’t Tell You

From customer service to app safety and even how its devices affect our relationships, here are 10 things Apple won’t likely tell you about its products and its business.

By Quentin Fottrell
SmartMoney
August 6, 2012

1.”Our customers are worn out.”

All that initial excitement over the first iPhone or iPad has quickly given way to what analysts are dubbing “upgrade fatigue” — with even Apple’s most loyal customers upset about the steady stream of newer models. In fact, when people buy Apple’s latest product, the company is usually already preparing its replacement, says technology consultant Patchen Barrs, who has owned 25 Apple products over the last 20 years. “Everything we buy from them is already out of date,” he says. Take a count: Since 2001, there have been six iPods, two iPod minis, six iPod Nanos, four iPod Shuffles and four editions of the iPod Touch. Apple has released five iPhone models since 2007 and has had three iPads since 2010.

Of course, newer models have their upsides: They’re usually slimmer, faster and have additional features like better cameras and improved screen quality. And Apple, which declined to comment for this story, has said that such improvements more than justify the fast pace of their new additions. (In March, for example, Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller said the latest iPad delivered a “stunning” screen display.) But that argument isn’t enough to appease some cash-strapped consumers. Almost 50% of consumers say they’re increasingly unwilling to buy new products for fear that they will be rendered outdated by even newer versions, according to a recent survey of 2,000 people by Marketing Magazine in the U.K.

Click the link to read the entire article which includes a quote from Milton Pedraza, CEO of Luxury Institute: http://www.marketwatch.com/Story/Story/?guid={61E63842-DFED-11E1-961B-002128049AD6}

July 13, 2012

Did Apple Tame the Salesman?

By Quentin Fottrell
SmartMoney
July 12, 2012

Salesmen are going soft. They’re toning down their pitch and ditching the “always be closing” approach. And consumers largely have the Apple Store to thank – or blame.

Industry experts say Apple’s blue-shirted smiling staff is now the envy of other retailers. Best Buy is remaking its “Geek Squad” in Apple’s image, in a pilot program at its Richfield, Minn., location. General Motors plans to institute “no-haggle prices” on some models, which will remove some of the salesman’s role in negotiating a car purchase. “Apple has had a tremendous amount of influence,” says Milton Pedraza, the president of Luxury Institute LLC, a marketing firm.

The floor staff at Apple emphasizes customer service over sales, with new employees taught an APPLE acronym for their “five steps of service,” says Carmine Gallo, a communications coach and author of “The Apple Experience.” (Approach in a warm manner; Probe politely; Present customers with a solution that may not involve a sale; Listen carefully; End with an invitation to return. ) “AT&T retail is closely following these steps,” he says.

Click the link to read the entire article which includes quotes from Milton Pedraza, CEO of Luxury Institute: http://blogs.smartmoney.com/advice/2012/07/12/did-apple-tame-the-salesman/?link=SM_hp_ls4e

April 3, 2012

Wealthy smartphone users less likely to play games, tweet

Wealthier smartphone users are less likely to play games or tweet and will opt for news, travel or finance apps, according to a new study.

By Natasha Baker
Reuters
April 2, 2012

The research by The Luxury Institute focused on app usage among wealthy consumers, who earn an annual income of $150,000 or more. They tend to be older, with a mean age of 52.

“As you get older and have family and significant others, aging parents, and a lot more assets and investments, you’re going to need apps for far more relevant things than playing games and chatting with your peers,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of The Luxury Institute.

The findings are in contrast to smartphone usage as a whole, which research firm Nielsen showed is dominated by games and social networking categories.

The wealthy use Facebook and Angry Birds, the two most downloaded apps of 2011, but overall, higher-income consumers use apps for entertainment far less than the average smartphone user, according to Pedraza.

While wealthy consumers are only slightly more likely to have a smartphone than the general population, Nielsen said the breakdown of devices owned differs considerably.

Forty-five percent of wealthy smartphone users own an iPhone, followed 35 percent with an Android device and a quarter who had a Blackberry. But Nielsen found that overall Android had 46 percent of market share, followed by the iPhone with 30 percent and Blackberry with 15 percent.

“Google’s strategy with Android is that they have multiple manufacturing partners,” explained Jonathan Carson, the CEO of digital at Nielsen. “There’s a broader choice with Android in the number of devices, and that may offer some opportunities for lower-end consumers.”

He added that the iPhone has always done quite well with high-income consumers.

Carson also noted an upswing in the number of smartphone users adopting iPhones within the last few months, which he attributes to the iPhone 4S, and Apple’s strategy to keep lower-priced models on the market at lower-price points to appeal to a wider range of consumers.

The study also showed that more than 80 percent of affluent consumers have downloaded apps and many have opted for paid apps and in-app upgrades. But on average, wealthier consumers download about half as many apps as the average consumer.

Among wealthy smartphone users, 67 percent have used their mobile device to shop for products or services online with tickets, gift cards, food or electronics the most popular purchases.

“There are a large number of people that still love to shop in the store, and I don’t think it’s only older people,” Pedraza said, adding apps can augment the in-store experience.

The marketing firm Plastic Mobile polled 603 consumers whose mean income was $295,000 and net worth was $2.8 million for The Luxury Institute study.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/02/us-app-wealthy-idUSBRE83108920120402

October 13, 2011

NEW STUDY SAYS LUXURY BRANDS LOSE 80-90 PERCENT OF CUSTOMERS EVERY YEAR

By Hedda Schupak
The Centurion
October 12, 2011

New York, NY—Despite burgeoning sales for 2011, most luxury brands have an appallingly low customer retention rate, losing between 80% and 90% of their customers in any given year.

No, that’s not a typographical error. Most luxury brands are deficient in retaining even half of their top customers, says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, a global luxury consulting and research firm. These figures are the central focus of the Luxury Institute’s most recent white paper, Wealth and Luxury Trends 2012 and Beyond: Raising Customer Loyalty in the Midst of an Uncertain World. (The Luxury Institute data is aggregated from all its clients; it doesn’t release individual company figures.)

“Nobody likes to publish those numbers because they’re not pretty,” Pedraza said in an interview with The Centurion this week. “But 80/20 doesn’t have to be the rule.”

Contrast those grim metrics to non-luxury e-tailer Zappos’ customer retention rate of 75% (the company does release figures) and it’s clear there is much opportunity for luxury brands that create customer-centric cultures, both in-store and online.

Luxury brands really fall down when it comes to customer relationship management (CRM), an area one would most expect them to shine, says Pedraza. Very few have a truly customer-centric culture, very few do proper clienteling, and many have surprisingly poor service for what’s supposed to be a special experience.

The good news is that customer retention figures for multi-brand luxury retailers—like jewelers—typically are a good bit higher than for single-brand shops. And the other good news is that most luxury brands and retailers already have the tools for increasing customer retention; all they need to do is use them.

Creating a customer-centric culture starts at the top, and assuming staff compensation is competitive, comes from three things: being expert at what you do, earning the trust of customers, and having a pleasant personality. Luckily, luxury jewelers excel in these areas, but Pedraza says it’s essential to ensure your employee compensation isn’t counterproductively holding you back.

“If you pay a low salary and expect sales associates to ‘eat what they kill’ as many luxury retailers call it, your customers are going to be attacked by sharks.” Better, he says, is to set commissions based on group sales and include customer relationship building goals as part of the total package.

Get social—or don’t. One of the biggest misconceptions about social media is that it’s the greatest marketing development since ads for sliced white bread. Yes, luxury consumers are online and on Facebook. And, yes, many luxury brands have millions of fans that “like” them on Facebook. But despite the fact that Facebook regularly tries new ways to influence purchases online, the Luxury Institute says there’s no evidence that having millions of fans has helped luxury brands acquire new customers or build business significantly.

But CRM metrics have shown that customers who have a human relationship with a brand ambassador (be it owner or sales associate) typically buy double from that brand and stay loyal for a longer period of time. The long-term success of the brand depends on the individuals who interact physically with the customers. This means both minimizing staff turnover, and doing a lot of old-fashioned legwork: knowing the customer’s likes and dislikes, calling when something special comes in, sending handwritten notes, knowing their special dates and life milestones, and so forth.

“I don’t mean that social media isn’t good. Does it build awareness? Yes, and that’s good. Does it build relationships? It might, but clienteling is better,” Pedraza told The Centurion. Social media is appropriate for most luxury brands—but not all. For an upscale community jeweler who uses it to have an ongoing conversation with customers, it’s wonderful, but for a super-high luxury brand whose cachet is extreme exclusivity, customers don’t want it to be where “everyone” has access to it.

Ironically, one brand that still uses mainstream advertising—TV, print, and even billboards—more than social media is Apple. And while its legendary in-store retail experience is central to Apple’s image and success, Pedraza thinks the brand could do even better if it would follow up after sales, an area where it’s surprisingly lacking. He says he’s never been contacted by an Apple associate following any of his purchases. (Editor’s note: We own two Apple computers, two iPhones, and countless iPods, but we haven’t ever been called for follow-up, either.)

Luxury predictions for 2012. While 2011 was the year luxury came back—indeed, a banner year that topped even 2007 sales figures for many brands—next year growth is likely to slow down, especially on a global scale, says Pedraza. He predicts there will be modest single-digit growth for luxury in the United States—in the area of about 5%—but that growth may be driven by price increases, not volume.

“The top 20% of consumers are doing well. In the intermediate term, we will see the affluent continue to buy,” he said, but cautions that the continued bifurcation of the U.S. consumer marketplace is not healthy for the long term. Furthermore, while the affluent are somewhat insulated from economic ups and downs, they’re not immune.

“For long-term [economic] success we need a strong middle class,” he told The Centurion.

Much of the pre-recession growth in the luxury market came from just such middle class spenders, sparking the proliferation of aspirational, “mass luxury” items to target a wider audience. Then, during the recession, luxury retailers, including many jewelers, found that lower-priced items were the saving grace that kept the doors open.

But with the big spenders coming back, is it now time to reassess? Have too many luxury retailers abandoned the market that made them in the first place? Or is it too soon to cut the affordable-product lifeline?

“Those who serve the ultra-wealthy can have extremely high priced product, but it’s not scalable,” says Pedraza.

“The brands that are most resilient are the ones that have diversified. Tiffany sells both a $250 bracelet charm and engagement rings starting over $10,000,” he says. And they do it very well, he emphasizes. Louis Vuitton is another brand he says has been able to successfully serve mass without losing class.

Achieving the right mass-to-class balance is both an art and a science—and a very fine line that’s often invisible until you’ve crossed it, warns Pedraza. Too much logo, too much bling, and you get too many of the customers that really aren’t your market while alienating those that are.

Even if the price point stays high, straying too far from a brand’s point of view isn’t healthy either, as evidenced by this recent Harper’s Bazaar article detailing the Italian fashion house Bottega Veneta. The brand, famous in the 1970s for its costly but low-key woven leather bags and advertising “when your own initials are enough,” had become a caricature of itself. From the epitome of refined, restrained elegance, by the late 1990s it was sporting hot-pink punk and leopard spots. In 2001, its new creative director Tomas Maier stripped away the wretched excess and restored the brand’s core aesthetic of restraint, till once again it became a brand sought by the world’s tastemakers.

How to reach down successfully?

“The key is in how you define your entry level,” says Pedraza. “You don’t want to go so far down that you make your customers uncomfortable, but having entry level product was a Godsend for many stores [in the recession].”

But diversification is a better strategy than discounting. The fire-sale prices offered by panicked luxury retailers in 2008-2009 may have cleared out inventory, but they also retrained customers to expect a discount every time.

“It makes it very difficult to raise prices [afterward]”, Pedraza told The Centurion.

http://news.centurionjewelry.com/articles/view/new-study-says-luxury-brands-lose-80-90-percent-of-customers-every-year

August 31, 2011

Luxury retailers turn to social media for Hurricane Irene

By Rachel Lamb
Luxury Daily
August 30, 2011

Although luxury brands took precautions and prepared for the worst this past weekend, Hurricane Irene did not do much to hamper sales of luxury goods.

Brands have done their best to keep sales going despite the bad weather in the northeast by promoting their ecommerce sites and other online platforms. Others have even reached out via social media to ensure the safety of consumers and to offer valuable emergency resources.

“I don’t think that luxury branded sales were that affected,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of New York-based Luxury Institute. “If anything, they  just lost a weekend’s worth of sales from local buyers and from tourists.

“There is significant geography where shopping is a large part of culture, but I think that  consumers will make it up,” he said. “There was more of a lag than a foregone sale.”

Boarded up
Luxury brands, most notably New York-based retailers, took advanced precautions by deciding to shut down locations in the Northeast on Saturday Aug. 27 and Sunday Aug. 28 when the storm was supposed to be the worst.

For instance, department store chain Bloomingdale’s posted store hours and property closings on its Facebook page.

Bloomingdale’s also posted a picture of its stores being boarded up in preparation for the storm.

The retailer was joined by Bergdorf Goodman, which announced that it had boarded its windows and would “see consumers on the other side of the storm.”

“Like all messages, [luxury brands promoting] news of a storm has to be relevant,” Mr. Pedraza said. “You can overdo it because customers certainly have a lot more to worry about than luxury in a hurricane.”

However, other luxury brands decided to use the platform to aid their Facebook fans.

For instance, Mercedes-Benz USA posted a link to the Red Cross Web site with a checklist of preparations for consumers to take note of before a hurricane hits.

“If messages are lending a hand with true resources, that is wonderful,” Mr. Pedraza said. “Otherwise, I think that the messages in the height of an emergency are trite and irrelevant.

Shaken, not stirred
Despite the worries from the past weekend, luxury sales are actually doing well.

Retail stocks are up post-Irene, possibly because retailers emphasized ecommerce options despite the closing of physical retail locations.

Although the effects of this storm were less than those of other natural disasters, it is still encouraging that luxury brands stepped up to help.

Brands may not have posted links like Mercedes had, but many of them reached out to consumers to wish them safety and good thoughts.

For instance, in the height of the London riots earlier this month, luxury department stores Harrods, Selfridges and Harvey Nichols used social media to communicate and express sympathy to consumers.

“Disasters are topical,” said Chris Ramey, president of Affluent Insights, Miami. “Facebook and other Internet media are the fastest ways to communicate with clients.”

Luxury brands may feel the need to reach out to affluent consumers because brands see their customers as family, Mr. Ramey said.

Indeed, social media may be a better approach than sending out an email or another form of digital advertising, since that could just alarm or panic consumers.

“It’s about your relationship,” Mr. Ramey said. “Treat your customers with the same care you’d show your family.

“A deepening relationship always benefits the brand,” he said.

http://www.luxurydaily.com/were-luxury-sales-affected-during-hurricane-irene/

July 1, 2011

With Facebook protest, Israeli consumers shift from talking the talk to walking the walk

By Yael Shpiller
JWT Intelligence
July 1, 2011

In a recent chat JWTIntelligence had with Luxury Institute CEO Milton Pedraza, he forecast that Facebook activism will expand from Egyptian-style political protest to consumers organizing short-term actions to force change. “Ralph Nader isn’t going to be one person anymore, it will be the collective action of people online using social media,” he said. A great example comes from Israel, where average consumers have banded together on Facebook to help put the high cost of cottage cheese on the national agenda.

The price of this beloved staple (now 8 shekels for a 9-ounce container, about $2.30) has almost doubled in the last few years, since the government stopped regulating prices on many dairy products. While we Israelis are not a nation of bans and protests—we tend to talk a lot but not do much—a Facebook event page calling for a boycott, started by a young cantor earlier this month, has more than 100,000 people “attending,” including some members of parliament. Extensive media coverage of the protest sparked national debate, and the government is discussing a deal with dairy brands and retailers to drop the price for a year as long as price controls are not resumed.

The cottage cheese uproar suggests a shift from civic to consumer activism on Facebook, with the social network utilized not only for social and environmental causes but to change the way brands act toward their stakeholders. Israelis are particularly active on the site (spending more time per month on social media than any other citizens, according to comScore), and it seems to be changing how consumers perceive themselves—as having real power and influence over brand behavior. Brands, especially those in industries whose customers are already aggravated, will need to think twice before moving forward with initiatives that negatively affect the average consumer, not only financially but emotionally. And as politicians become drawn into the debate, they’re learning that a happy consumer is a happy citizen, and vice versa.

http://www.jwtintelligence.com/2011/06/facebook-protest-israeli-consumers-shift-talking-talk-walking-walk-2/

May 4, 2011

The Tastemakers

How Generation Y is helping to save luxury brands

By Fiona Soltes
Stores
May 2011

In the first quarter of 2011 alone, the British luxury brand added more than 600,000 “likes” to its Facebook page. At that rate, it’ll reach 10 million by the middle of next year…

…Milton Pedraza, CEO of research firm Luxury Institute, says “legacy” products are key, and that’s where luxury brands are gaining ground. Millennials typically view expensive purchases as necessary investments in themselves – falling more into the “need” than the “want” category – but “people still don’t spend as much on luxury as they did before,” he says…

Click the link to read the entire article which includes several additional quotes from Milton Pedraza, CEO of Luxury Institute: http://www.stores.org/STORES%20Magazine%20May%202011/tastemakers

March 21, 2011

Gilt City sells experiences to Facebook Deals

By Elizabeth Zelesny
Luxury Daily
March 18, 2011

Flash-sales experience site Gilt City will be one of the first companies to participate in Facebook Deals, which lets consumers sign-up for deals and share them with friends.

Gilt City will start testing the integration through Facebook Deals in five cities nationwide. In the coming weeks, Gilt City will allow users to purchase the site’s coveted experiences on Facebook and share them with their friends.

“I know that Gilt as a company is one of the most sophisticated analytics companies in the world,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, New York. “Social networking has such an influence on what you buy and what you do these days.

“It makes sense that Gilt City would have to embed themselves inside Facebook Deals in order to personalize experiences,” he said.

Facebook is planning to offer multiple deals every day, focusing on activites that can be shared with friends. The company is squaring up to the likes of Groupon and LivingSocial with this discount deals program.

While the exact details have not be organized, consumers can expect similar deals from Gilt City like wine tastings, exclusive restaurant deals, cultural workshops and medical treatments.

Facebook steals
Local businesses will soon be able to sign-up to use this feature for Facebook users to find deals on the social network.

Gilt City provides access to a broad range of local services at exclusive prices to its membership. Each sale lasts seven days and features many of the city’s most sought-after restaurants, spas and concerts.

The Gilt City service is currently available in New York, Boston, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco and Los Angeles. It is a subsidiary of Gilt Groupe Inc.

The beauty of the Facebook platform is that affluent consumers and luxury brands are there, so there is marketing in the social network itself.

The Gilt City experience builds on Facebook’s existing Deals program, which is offered as part of Facebook Places.

“A lot of luxury brands have no idea what to do with social media,” Mr. Pedraza said. “Luxury brands need to incorporate the power of social media with the power of their own marketing.

“You can leverage the power of both organizations like Gilt City and Facebook to provide for customers,” he said. “They are what the consumers are and I think that’s one of the first rules of multichannel marketing.”

Loop on
This development may come as something of a blow to Groupon, which is on the verge of an IPO. But with 60 million users, Groupon has big head-start.

“Luxury brands have to be where consumers are to influence them and you have to do it in your own brand DNA,” Mr. Pedraza said. “The fact that Gilt City is personalizing consumers is the way marketing should be done at the luxury level.”

http://www.luxurydaily.com/gilt-city-takes-experiences-to-facebook-deals/

March 9, 2011

Wealthy Web Users Flock To Facebook Seeking To Stay In Touch And Find Good Shopping; Access Via Mobile Devices Gains Traction

(NEW YORK) March 8, 2011 – According to a new WealthSurvey from the Luxury Institute, 64% of U.S. residents earning at least $150,000 per year are currently on Facebook, while another 4% will join soon.  Wealthy members, on average, have 145 “friends” with 18% reporting 250 or more Facebook friends.

Age is a big factor in adoption: 72% of wealthy 21-34 year-olds are now on Facebook vs. only 56% of those 65 and older. Millionaires are less likely (60% vs. 69%) than modestly wealthy Web users than to have a Facebook account; men are less likely than women (69% vs. 58%) to join.

Almost half (48%) report joining Facebook even though they want to restrict access to personal information on their profiles, and 44% fear that information could be vulnerable and lead to identity theft.

Wealthy Web users cite maintaining existing personal relationships (49%) and locating and reacquainting with old friends (46%) as the top two reasons for taking the Facebook plunge.  One in three joins Facebook to be able to view photos and read what others have to say. 

Nearly one-third (29%) of wealthy users access Facebook via mobile devices, mostly smartphones, but 10% use tablets like Apple’s iPad. One in five use location services to find Groupon-style local deals.

“For luxury firms who advertise with Facebook or simply post news and offers on their Facebook profile, there is clearly rich potential for creating closer relationships with customers,” says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute. “Closer relationships lead inevitably to higher sales.”

About the Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com)

The Luxury Institute is the objective and independent global voice of the high net-worth consumer. The Institute conducts extensive and actionable research with wealthy consumers about their behaviors and attitudes on customer experience best practices. In addition, we work closely with top-tier luxury brands to successfully transform their organizational cultures into more profitable customer-centric enterprises. Our Luxury CRM Culture consulting process leverages our fact-based research and enables luxury brands to dramatically Outbehave as well as Outperform their competition. The Luxury Institute also operates LuxuryBoard.com, a membership-based online research portal, and the Luxury CRM Association, a membership organization dedicated to building customer-centric luxury enterprises.

For Further Information, Please Contact:
The Luxury Institute, LLC
Martin Swanson
Vice President
(914) 909-6350
mswanson@luxuryinstitute.com

January 21, 2011

Younger, digitally engaged consumers exhibit upscale shopping behavior: study

By Elizabeth Zelesny
Luxury Daily
January 20, 2011

Consumers who are single tend to have a higher disposable income and this audience represents significant buying power for luxury brands.

A study by International Demographics titled “The Media Audit” reveals that social media Web sites such as Facebook and Twitter have reached critical mass with consumers who are in important life stages.

“Younger people are more digitally engaged,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of The Luxury Institute, New York. “They have more time than older people with families and over time, as people get older, they have less time to use Facebook and Twitter.”

International Demographics develops syndicated research studies for the marketing, communications and media industries.

The study was conducted among 65,000 consumers, skewing more towards those who are younger and single, or who have young children living at home who frequently visit Facebook and Twitter.

Findings
According to The Media Audit report, 51 percent of U.S. adults surveyed have visited Facebook or Twitter in the last month.

However, among adults who are under 35 and single with no child, 80 percent have visited these sites.

The report also reveals that these same adults have extremely active lifestyles and exhibit upscale shopping behavior.

In addition, these single consumers are less likely to own a home, which in turn, frees up more income.

According to the study, this group is 25 percent more likely than the general population to shop at Neiman Marcus and 20 percent more likely to shop at Nordstrom.

Adults who are under 25, with no children and single are 12 percent less likely to be heavily exposed to outdoor billboards, 52 percent less likely to be heavily exposed to a newspaper and 13 percent less likely to be heavily exposed to television.

Critical factor
Age plays a major role in how likely a person is to engage in social media, but important demographic characteristics also matter.

Life stages of a consumer and their ability to use social media, as well as their concerns as shoppers, make them of interest to marketers.

Even though young, single consumers without children are more likely to shop at upscale retailers than the general population, Mr. Pedraza believes they are not the most important customers.

“One thing I would guarantee is that they are not likely to spend more than people in their 40s and 50s,” Mr. Pedraza said. “They are probably likely to have a lower transaction spend than the older population. They are not the heavy buyers.

“They may be more likely to shop at these department stores,” he said. “But by no means are they the most important shoppers at these stores.”

http://www.luxurydaily.com/single-adults-are-25pc-more-likely-to-shop-at-neiman-marcus-than-general-population-study/

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