Luxury Institute News

May 8, 2013

Neiman Marcus sale could build more customer-focused brand

By Danielle Abril
Dallas Business Journal
May 7, 2013

While private equity investors of Neiman Marcus Group Inc. consider their exit strategy, a luxury retail expert predicts a move that could result in an increased emphasis on customer relations.

Milton Pedraza, CEO of The Luxury Institute LLC, said he belives that the next logical step for Dallas-based Neiman Marcus is to go public. The move would allow Neiman Marcus the freedom to focus on building relationships with its consumers.

“Neiman will have a very solid structure if they go public,” Pedraza said. “It will be customer-centric rather than shareholder-centric.”

Bloomberg reported earlier this week that TPG Capital and Warburg Pincus LLC, Neiman Marcus’ private equity investors, were considering selling the company or taking it public. The firms held their investment for eight years, 60 percent longer than the norm, according to Bloomberg.

Neiman Marcus declined to comment.

Neiman Marcus could take four different directions, according to Randall Ray, partner with Munck Wilson Mandala LLP. Ray has spent almost 25 years dealing with corporate legal matters and said one thing is clear in this situation: TPG and Warburg will choose the path that ends with the highest profit for them in the least amount of time.

The four options, according to Ray, are: filing an initial public offering, selling to a private equity firm, selling to a strategic buyer and choosing a dividend recapitalization.

Pedraza said it was “less likely” that the firms would sell to another private equity firm.

“It would take a very special private equity firm to do the things Neiman Marcus needs,” he said. “You need patient money to rebuild the brand.”

Pedraza cites online retailers Amazon and Zappos as companies that have benefited from answering solely to the consumer. He also said that other retailers, such as Nordstrom and Michael Kors, have been successful in their transformations to becoming publicly owned.

Pedraza also said the recovering economic climate offers an opportunity for TPG and Warburg Pincus to sell to the general public.

“It’s a good time to go public,” he said, adding that a booming economy would offer the best conditions for the move. Whatever road Neiman Marcus chooses, there will be few clues as to its direction until the transaction is complete.

“Unless Neiman Marcus feels compelled to make this information public, there won’t be a lot of transparency in the process,” Pedraza said.

http://www.bizjournals.com/dallas/news/2013/05/07/sale-of-neiman-marcus-could-impact.html

September 11, 2012

Wealthy Shoppers Rank Experiences At Online-Only Luxury Retail Sites Ahead Of Traditional Brands; Barneys is best among brick-and-mortar but MR PORTER, SSense prove more pleasing

(NEW YORK) September 11, 2012 – Wealthy shoppers with minimum annual income of $150,000 rate the online experience at websites of 10 traditional luxury retailers and 16 online-only retailers in the 2012 Luxury Online Experience Index (LOEI) survey by the independent and objective New York-based Luxury Institute. LOEI scores include evaluations of a site’s navigation, visual appeal, selection of products, ability to deliver product feature information, ease of purchase, availability of human help and trustworthiness to keep personal data.

It appears that upstarts have made quick inroads. One-year old men’s luxury site, MR PORTER, earns the highest score (86) of all retailers, online and traditional, followed by fashion site SSense (85) and My-Wardrobe and Shopbop (both 84). NET-A-PORTER and Zappos Couture earn scores of 83 and 82, respectively.

Barneys New York earns the highest LOEI score (84) among luxury retailers that also operate physical stores, followed by Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, Intermix and Scoop all with 82.

Nordstrom is the brand most likely to be recommended (92%) and the site that most wealthy shoppers plan to return to for their next online shopping experience. Among online-only sites, Zappos is the most recommended (88%) and eBay Fashion Vault (95%) enjoys the highest rate of return visits.

“Online luxury retail proves that smaller and newer brands can shake up incumbents with the right technology, product mix and site design,” says Luxury Institute CEO Milton Pedraza. “The proliferation of web and mobile shopping truly creates opportunity.”

Respondents reported average income of $310,000 and average net worth of $3.6 million.

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.

September 5, 2012

Get Ready for the Loyalty Marketing Renaissance of 2013

Six New Ways to Serve Loyal Consumers in a Smartphone Age
By: Adam Broitman
AdAge.com
September 04, 2012

The essence of loyalty marketing has not changed since its invention; incentivize your best customers and they will not only remain patrons, they will tell their friends about their experiences with your brand. The rise of social technologies has multiplied the positive effects of a brand supporter and underscores the importance of influential evangelists.

Though the substance of loyalty has not changed in the past 30 years, the tactics and technologies required to implement a loyalty program have been displaced — so much so that history may designate the years between 2012 through 2015 as a renaissance in customer loyalty. Here are a few guidelines to use when planning your customer loyalty programs for 2013:

Don’t Just Be Social, Be Helpful
According to a survey by American Express one in five American’s have used social media for customer service. Furthermore, customers, on average, are willing to spend 21% more with companies that provide great service. Given that social media is an ideal channel to directly interact with your customers, a strategic approach is imperative. The mere presence on popular social networks is no longer enough. Simple, canned responses to comments on social networks no longer meet consumer expectations. It is crucial for social media to be treated as a service channel in addition to a promotional channel. The installation of an uninformed employee, armed with no more than a hyperlink to a customer service page is only slightly better than ignoring comments made within social networks.

Forget Gamification, Learn The Game
The Gamification gold rush has led many brands to the construction of superfluous “cart before the horse” initiatives in which badges and leaderboards serve little to no strategic purpose. There are countless theories that marketers can borrow from games, but in order to accurately take advantage of such ideas in an effective manner, marketers must dig deeper and strive to realize the various compulsion loops and social dynamics that make games “sticky” (apologies for the late 90′s lingo). Here are a few links for inspiration:

  • http://www.mud.co.uk/richard/hcds.htm
  • http://www.mud.co.uk/richard/Shoreditch.pdf

Feel The Power of Post-PC
The post-PC era has put massive computing power, packed in every shape and size screen, in the palm of the everyday consumer. If your legacy POS system is getting in the way of allowing you to implement a cutting edge loyalty program, consider taking advantage of consumer grade products to get the job done.

Take a look at the following payments systems that have integrated elements of loyalty into their platform:

  • Square
  • SAIL (Verifone)
  • PayPal Here
  • NCR Silver
  • Revel Systems

Learn to Outsmart “Showrooming”
“Showrooming” has become a plague for retailers. According to eMarketer, 59% of US smartphone owners have engaged in “showrooming”. Ironically, the very same mobile device that consumers are using to “showroom” can be used to create value. Marketers should look at the way in which luxury brands create value. Luxury marketers are notorious for creating value adding experiences in lieu of price breaks—as such, mobile has become a no-brainer for luxury marketers. According to the Luxury Institute, luxury shoppers expect the following from mobile applications:

  • 46% expect loyalty programs
  • 45% expect early access to sales
  • 53% want access to a sales professional that can help with finding the right product

Remember That Likes Don’t Equal Loves
These days, it is all too easy to create a “like-gated” promotion yet many of the programs that ask for personal information in exchange for entrance into a contest fall flat when it comes to any type of long term engagement. In the endless debate about the value of a “like,” many marketers have concluded that a like is only as good as the communications that follow it. Loyalty can certainly begin with a like, but a like is not guaranteed to get you to a “love”. According to eMarketer, nearly half of branded “likes” have no influence on consumer purchase decisions.

Make Love
Though last on this list, this is the most important thing a brand can do. We have seen brands like Zappos and Warby Parker take brand “amore” to new heights. Each brand uses social media and technology in exciting new ways, but each brand also manages to present their costumers with something marketers and advertisers speak about ad nauseam, “surprise and delight.” There are a variety of new brands such as Warby Parker that are set up as B Corporations. This corporate structure requires a company to generate some sort of “general benefit for society” as part of the way it defines profit. While long established plans will likely not reincorporate, this model has loyalty baked in and big brands should be looking at the types of ways these companies do business

As you are planning your loyalty efforts for 2013, do your best not to get so caught up in the trees that you forget to look at the forest. The seemingly endless number of mobile and social loyalty platforms can be so overwhelming, they can divert even the most savvy of marketers from their core objectives. With the above guides and a constant eye on ROI, 2013 should be a banner year for customer loyalty.

http://adage.com/article/digitalnext/ready-loyalty-marketing-renaissance-2013/236999/?utm_source=daily_email&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=adage

September 20, 2010

Luxury brands must regain focus on customer experience: study

Posted in Luxury Market
Tags: ,

SEPTEMBER 16, 2010
luxurydaily.com

Half of luxury consumers have noticed a decline in the quality of high-end products and services, according to Luxury Institute.

Fifty-seven percent of high-income shoppers identify superior customer service as a defining quality of luxury goods, yet 50 percent have noticed a marked decline in the customer experience. This downturn poses a significant threat to upscale brands, per Luxury Institute.

“Luxury brands need to start focusing on what customer service means,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, New York. “They need to start to out-behave – not just outperform – the competition.

“The customer experience at the store and Web site has to be extraordinary, and consistently so, in order for luxury consumers to develop long-term relationships,” he said. “There’s very little clienteling right now – no follow-up.

“We know from previous reports that consumers will give you twice as much of their wallets if they have relationships with sales people, but we also know that the state of clienteling right now is dismal.”

Luxury Institute surveyed U.S. consumers earning at least $150,000 per year to compile its semiannual State of the Luxury Industry report.

The average yearly household income of respondents was $286,000. Their average net worth was $2.7 million.

Back to basics
The luxury industry is fighting the perception that the qualities that differentiate luxury brands – superior quality, craftsmanship, customer service and design – are declining.

Seventy-six percent of respondents said that superior quality is a defining quality of luxury goods. Fifty-one percent say quality is declining.

Meanwhile, 56 percent of consumers said the craftsmanship of luxury products is down.

Finally, 48 percent said luxury products are losing their design value.

While many luxury brands have sacrificed quality, craftsmanship and service, not all brands are getting it wrong, Mr. Pedraza said.

Luxury icons such as Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons, Lexus, Porsche, Louis Vuitton, Chanel and Tiffany’s have maintained strong customer experiences and have enjoyed success as a result, even amidst a recession.

However, the luxury industry as a whole has taken a step back.

“To their credit, some brands are trying to make customer experience better,” Mr. Pedraza said. “Still, outside of the luxury world, brands like Zappos are outbehaving and outperforming luxury brands in terms of experience, and they shouldn’t be.

“Kudos to Zappos, but luxury brands should be famous for service,” he said. “When you’re paying for the best, you’re paying for the best quality, craftsmanship, design and service.

“Those create a compelling experience that consumers are willing to pay for.”

Outbehaving and outperforming
Customer service is vital to creating long-term relationships with consumers, according to Mr. Pedraza.

However, maintaining a rich consumer experience can prove challenging for large, global brands, especially during the middle of a worldwide spending slump.

The key to developing the exceptional customer service regimen that luxury shoppers demand is scalability.

“Bigger brands that can scale their cultures are going to be winners,” Mr. Pedraza said. “It’s not just about great products – it’s important that the customer experience is scalable.

“That’s easy when you have a small bakery, but not so easy when you have 30 or 100 or 200 points of sale,” he said.

Shift to thrift
In the long term, an increased emphasis on customer service is of utmost importance for luxury brands looking to regain their luster.

However, in the near term these brands should prepare for a dip in consumer expenditure for high-end products.

Thirty-six percent of respondents said they plan on decreasing overall spending on luxury goods and services through year-end, versus 6 percent who say they plan to spend more.

The jewelry sector could take the worst hit, per Luxury Institute.

Meanwhile, other luxury categories susceptible to consumers’ tightening purse strings include home furnishings, gifts, watches, handbags, shoes and cars.

Additionally, as brands lower the prices of their high-end products, consumers could start spending.

Twenty percent of luxury consumers plan to spend more on marked-down luxury goods and services this year.

Likewise, 25 percent already paid out more for discounted upscale offerings in the first eight months of 2010 than they did in all of 2009.

Mr. Pedraza said that overall luxury spending could be up compared to last year.

Still, some sectors such as leisure travel, dining, fitness and technology should expect above-average increases in spending.

“We’re still going to be scraping along the bottom in luxury,” Mr. Pedraza said. “I expect [overall] sales to pick up a bit, but that’s compared to a dismal last year – comparables will be easy this year.

Final Take
Peter Finocchiaro, editorial assistant at Luxury Daily, New York

http://www.luxurydaily.com/luxury-brands-must-regain-focus-on-customer-experience-study/