Luxury Institute News

July 16, 2010

Martini Media Announces Milestone Affluent Study with Crowd Science, Morpheus Media, Luxury Institute

SAN FRANCISCO, July 15 /PRNewswire/ — Martini Media, a media network representing the world’s largest targetable affluent audience, today announced the launch of the groundbreaking Martini Affluent Study with partners Crowd Science, Morpheus Media, and the Luxury Institute. The Martini Affluent Study will generate deep audience profile data about the 45M unique affluent consumers across a publisher network of 1,100 sites in lifestyle & business. Martini Media will bring the findings and insights of this targeted research study to the public in Q3 of 2010.

“Our study so unique because we look at the specific behavioral profile of each respondent, and the context of that response, to control, verify, and supplement the survey data itself.  These behavior-survey profiles are not only interesting, they are very valuable in helping us serve our clients,” says Skip Brand, Martini CEO.  ”We are very excited to take advantage of Crowd Science’s best-of-breed online market research platform in our study, and are certain that this will hugely increase the overall understanding on the media side, while simultaneously growing the overall field of research.”

“Martini’s focus on the affluent audience makes them a very interesting research partner for us,” says John Martin, Crowd Science’s co-founder & CEO.  ”Because we combine behavioral and survey data, our research applications are able provide a much more comprehensive view of the affluent audience. That helps Martini’s brands get better value for their inventory in the media and advertising community.”

Martini’s Affluent Research Platform, powered by Crowd Science, to date has brought key proprietary insights to partners, including a wealth of understanding into Financial Advisor engaging with their businesses & lifestyles online, and a unique finding on automobile make and model purchase intent amongst consumers at HHI $100K-$249K versus HHI $250K+.

Morpheus Media, an independent digital agency, and the Luxury Institute, will be co-sponsoring the study, providing guidance to ensure utility to all brands seeking to understand and reach the $100K+ HHI audience online.

Shenan Reed, Morpheus Managing Director, says: “It is research like this that allows us to better serve our clients and their customers. We are thrilled to be working with such great partners to help break new ground.”

Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, finds the groundbreaking nature of the study in line with the goals of the Luxury Institutes goals. “We always look to innovate and cooperate in leading edge research,” Pedraza states. “This multi-dimensional research concept breaks new ground in the luxury industry.”

The Martini Affluent Study & Conference is expected in October, 2010. In addition to solidifying their prominence in the area, the study is expected to make Martini Media the thought leader of the affluent, online space.

About Martini Media Network (www.martinimedianetwork.com)

Martini Media Network is a horizontally focused media company reaching American consumers with household incomes over $100,000 -25% of the US internet population. Sophisticated audiences require sophisticated strategies - Martini’s high-engagement media in Lifestyle & Business, robust custom solutions & formats, deep data, targeting & technology, ensure success for Advertisers, Publishers & Consumers. With our invite-only publisher network of world-famous traditional titles & new media sites, Martini seeks to revolutionize the role of the media company in the 21st century with expertise in audience aggregation, technology solutions and advertising execution.

About Crowd Science:

Crowd Science (www.crowdscience.com) is redefining online market research by combining the benefits of web analytics and survey research in a single research platform. This revolutionary approach enables easier, faster, and more accurate online research results via low-overhead and highly automated research apps, opening up a new world of research possibilities.

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/martini-media-announces-milestone-affluent-study-with-crowd-science-morpheus-media-luxury-institute-98500019.html

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July 12, 2010

A shift in meaning for ‘luxury’ as shopping habits change

By Bruce Horovitz, USA TODAY

Steve Hundley dumped his Jaguar convertible. He stopped taking Baltic cruises. And he stopped buying his wife pricey jewelry.
But last year, just as the recession raised its head, the San Diego resident paid $6,500 for an outdoor artisan pizza oven.

“We don’t need the Jaguar or cruises to the Baltic,” says Hundley, who at 56, is semiretired following a heart attack two years ago. “But cooking healthy food is a big priority.”

Americans are dipping their toes back into the luxury pool — but with a mindset that’s been smacked down and radically reshaped by the recession, the lure of new technologies and emerging lifestyle twists that are often as much personal as cultural.

“The luxury brands are all trying to reinvent themselves and deliver a better experience,” says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, a research firm that consults for designer brands. “Apple is making all these companies rethink their business models.”

It wasn’t long ago that luxury primarily meant the accumulation of designer clothes, expensive jewelry and fancy cars. For some, it still does. But for many consumers, the new luxury is something seriously different.

For some, it’s about owning top technology-based products. Consider: The four brands most admired by Americans with six-digit incomes in a recent survey by the marketing specialist Affluence Collaborative were Apple, Microsoft, Best Buy and Sony.

For others, such as the Hundleys, the new luxury is about investing in a lifestyle experience that not only can help improve health but also escalate the experience of such mundane acts as baking a pizza at home. Sales of outdoor artisan pizza ovens at Kalamazoo Outdoor Gourmet — similar to ovens used at pizza parlors — were up 48% last year and are up 74% so far this year.

“It creates an experience — and isn’t consumable,” says Pantelis “Pete” Georgiadis, president of Kalamazoo. “You can keep enjoying it for a long, long time.”

For others, it’s about buying luxury goods only when they’re on sale — or at a steep discount. Nearly three in four wealthy women say they’ll only purchase luxuries if they can get a good deal, reports a recent survey by AgencySacks, a branding firm that consults for some of the nation’s top luxury brands.

Luxury spending slid 7.8% last year to $10.1 billion, says Spending Pulse, a consumer spending monitor from MasterCard. It’s bounced back up for the first five months of 2010. But even affluent customers continue to seek out discounts, bargains and sales, says Tim Murphy, chief product officer at MasterCard. In a recent MasterCard poll, some 64% of all consumers said they were shopping sales. “A few years ago, you’d just market access to the affluent. Now, you must market access — with a discount.”

All this was driven by the recession. “The recession made everyone stop and rethink luxury and value,” says Pedraza. “Even though we’re coming back, that realization has stuck.”

The new world of luxury is less about designer labels and glitz and more about shopping savvy and an I-feel-good-owning-this mentality. Marketers want to know: Will it last?

Pedraza certainly thinks so. He says that Apple and Sony are emerging as the newest luxury designer labels.

“With Apple, you get a better design, a better function and a better luxury experience than you do with most other luxury brands,” he says.

Pedraza recently asked the CEO of a giant European luxury apparel brand to name the company that he viewed as his toughest competitor. Without batting an eye, the CEO, whose company Pedraza won’t name due to client confidentiality, said it was Apple.

Apple declined to comment.

Not a need, but a want

But Yolanda Cummings, who works as a finance professional in Columbus, Ohio, says that to her, there are few things closer to luxury than owning her new Apple iPad. “I don’t need it. I just wanted it because it’s new, different and intriguing,” she says. She paid about $699 for it. She already has a $300 Apple iPod touch and $1,600 Apple MacBook.

“I used to go overboard buying clothes,” she says. “Now, I’m more inclined to purchase new technologies.”

Andrew Sacks, who is president of AgencySacks, says he bought an iPad the first week it was introduced.

“Part of it is escapist luxury,” he says. “We’re living in a world where it’s difficult to control a lot of things, so there’s a feeling that owning new technology allows me to be more organized, more efficient and have more time.”

The recession, he says, has helped to rejigger his own definition of luxury.

Recently, Sacks says, he reached into his closet and discovered a black leather John Varvatos jacket that he’d casually purchased several years ago for $1,500 at a New York boutique. He put the jacket in his closet — and forgot it about it.

But when he recently rediscovered it — post-recession — his view of the jacket had changed entirely. “I was a little embarrassed that I could take something so expensive and put it away and not even have it on my mind,” he says. “Today, I’d do a lot more research before even considering such a purchase.”

For Don Contreras, luxury is the flat-screen Sony TV that he plans to buy and install in the gazebo in his backyard.

On weekends, the federal government physician from Albuquerque likes to do yard work and prune the fruit trees he has in his backyard. But he also likes to watch sports on TV. By placing the Sony TV in his gazebo, he says, he’ll be able to do both.

He only wants a Sony, he says, because that’s the only electronics brand that he trusts. But he’s waiting to buy it until he finds a really good deal.

“I’m not an impulsive buyer,” he says. “I can wait.”

Executives at Sony have concocted a new term for the brand: “functional” luxury.

In a tough economy, says Stuart Redsun, marketing chief at Sony Electronics, “You don’t have to worry about your product breaking down quickly.”

Beyond that, he says, the functional luxury is from the product providing a new experience — such as the new Sony Cyber-shot camera that lets folks shoot panoramic photos or new 3D TV sets that let folks experience home viewing of movies in a new way.

Another example: Sony soon will be the first consumer electronics maker with a Google feature built into its TV sets. Folks watching any show will be able to use a special remote to search Google on the same TV screen.

Sony also has pushed the value message hard. Over the holidays, for example, it bundled a new Sony TV, PlayStation gaming system, game and Blu-ray movie for $900 less than it would cost to buy the items separately.

“We sold out of all the units in that promotion,” notes Redsun. It recently rolled out a similar bundled deal that ends July 17.

Value and luxury have become synonymous.

At Neiman Marcus, “our customers’ way of shopping has changed,” says Karen Katz, CEO of Neiman Marcus Stores. “She is responding well to the opening and middle price points.”

For example, many Manolo Blahnik designer shoes at Neiman Marcus typically sell for at least $500 — and some for upwards of $900. But in the spring, Neiman Marcus had great success selling a Manolo Blahnik ballet flat for $395. “Our customer was very happy to have a Blahnik shoe for under $500,” says Katz.

Bargain in the bag

It’s no accident that Coach, whose handbags used to start at about $250 — and whose average retail price for a handbag hit close to $350 before the recession — launched a new line last year, Poppy, which starts at $198.

Beyond that, Coach has added more bags at lower price points — and made them more function for women carrying devices from iPhones to iPads, says Michael Tucci, president of Coach’s North American retail division. “The last thing I want you to get from this is that Coach got cheaper. We got more compelling from a value standpoint.”

Consumers have responded. Coach sales are up 8% for first nine months of its fiscal 2010

Value, of course, is in the eye of the purchaser.

To Lori Wachs, a hedge fund partner from Philadelphia, nothing says luxury value like getting top-notch designer clothing at 40% to 70% off — simply by visiting a website.

Several times a week, she visits the luxury discount site Gilt.com, where shoppers have a restricted amount of time — sometimes a matter of hours or even minutes — to order luxury goods before someone else beats them to the limited number of items.

While Wachs won’t say exactly what she’s spent in the past 18 months, she says she’s spent “thousands” of dollars on the 100 or so items she’s purchased. Among them, a Chloé handbag, originally priced at $1,500, that she snatched for about $600.

“There’s an adrenaline rush when there is a certain brand that you love,” she says, “and after you click on it, you wait to see if it’s been added to your basket — or to someone else’s cart.”

In two years, Gilt Groupe has amassed more than two million members, says CEO Susan Lyne.

“A lot of people feel like chumps if they pay full price,” says Lyne. “When you get a deal on a luxury item, it makes you feel smart.”

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/retail/2010-07-11-luxury-buying_N.htm

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July 10, 2010

A Stitch In Time

Posted in Luxury Market

Sphere Magazine

The economic turndown has seen luxury brands refocus on the quality craftsmanship of their products as customers once more value substance over style.

http://edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk/launch.aspx?referral=other&pnum=&refresh=S1k5fL706b1D&EID=c67de078-dd3c-48a7-9f85-b1ed79711e90&skip=true

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June 28, 2010

Brand-loyal customers returning to recession-riddled retailer Neiman Marcus

Posted in Luxury Market, Retail
Tags:

Friday, June 25, 2010  
Dallas Business Journal
Kerri Panchuk Staff Writer

Incoming Neiman Marcus CEO Karen Katz says she is committed to building a consistent pattern in sales and merchandising - two staples of the Neiman Marcus brand. For the moment, that’s about all she is saying.

Katz is quietly plotting her course and spending the summer conducting research leading up to her Oct. 7 start date.

A three-decade veteran in the retail industry, Katz spent 25 years at Neiman’s before being named CEO in late spring.

“We have this amazing culture at Neiman Marcus,” Katz, who is currently executive vice president of Neiman Marcus Group said. “We still operate the business on the founding principles of merchandise excellence and high levels of customer service … Those things will not change, but the way you do those things could very well change as we move forward.”

Milton Pedraza, CEO of The Luxury Institute in New York, believes change is needed at Neiman’s.

Neiman Marcus saw its sales rebound in the first part of the year, but Pedraza says double-digit sales gains in the first part of 2010 subsided with the company reporting only single-digit sale increases in the most recent period.

Many analysts had expressed concern about how the high-end retailer would weather a storm that sent all shoppers - including those at the luxury end of the spectrum - running. In response, retailers like Neiman’s rolled out some discounting that had not previously been part of their sales plans.

Katz admits 2009 was a rough year.

“Luxury retail in general took the hardest hit during this recession,” she said. “Our customers pulled back dramatically from spending, so I think some of the nice increases we’ve seen these last number of months are because a year ago we were in the depths of the depression.”

She added “that being said, we are very happy to see that business is coming back. The customer is definitely back in the stores.”

Katz remains confident the brand was protected as Neiman’s kept its focus on exclusive merchandise while trying to make sales in 2009.

Pedraza says some of the discounting he saw at Neiman’s did have some short-term impact on the brand’s reputation for exclusivity, but he believes the Neiman Marcus brand remains intact overall.

“I think the brand clearly survived,” he said, “but it needs to reinvent itself in terms of the customer’s experience.”

Brian Sozzi, retail analyst with Wall Street Strategies, said Neiman’s wasn’t alone in efforts to create price points needed to make up for anemic sales. He agrees Neiman’s brand remains strong.

“I don’t think they are overexpanding along the lines of other retailers,” he said. “I don’t think they have as unfavorable a debt position as Saks.”

He does, however, see room for improvement.

“I think Neiman’s probably stands above Saks,” he said, while adding that the company may be below Nordstrom in terms of the upscale industry’s standard for customer experience.

Katz recognizes that change is inevitable, noting that e-commerce and online technology have changed the face of retail. She said those factors will continue to reshape how shoppers buy and retailers sell. While she remains coy about what the future holds, she hints that online will be an integral part.

“I believe that the intersection of traditional retailing, e-commerce retailing and social networking … all of that is going to come together in a very different way than we can see it today,” she said. “We are just starting to understand how powerful that intersection can be, so we’ll see where it evolves to.”

Pedraza said Neiman’s actually hit the online platform as one of the first to meet early expectations on the e-commerce side, but said other high-end retailers, such as Nordstrom, eventually pushed the online standard a bit higher. He, too, sees online as a major component of future retail, and one Neiman’s cannot ignore.

“They have to re-establish leadership because online has changed everything,” Pedraza said.

“They have to make the online experience better than even the offline experience,” he said.

In other words, according to Pedraza, the focus needs to be on combining the in-store experience with the multi-channel experience of better communicating with customers via mobile devices.

What Pedraza is most hopeful about is Katz.

“What’s wonderful about Karen is that she does care about culture and customer relationships,” he said.

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June 8, 2010

Rookwood Pottery looks to refire with new investors

Posted in Luxury Market

Business Courier of Cincinnati

Rookwood Pottery Co. is seeking new investors to recapitalize and raise $4 million in new equity to fund its continued production of high-end tiles and art pottery.

It’s in discussions with “great living Cincinnatian-type” investors and expects to complete a private placement in July that will bring significant new ownership, CEO Chris Rose said.

Rose and other local investors, including restaurateurs Martin and Marilyn Wade, own a majority of the shares. That could change, he said.

Rookwood was founded in Mount Adams in 1880 by Maria Longworth Nichols, and its art pottery and tiles are renowned for their high quality and innovative glazes. Certain pieces are highly sought after by collectors and sell for tens of thousands of dollars at auction.

Many of Cincinnati’s historic buildings, including the Carew Tower complex, are adorned with Rookwood tiles.

The Wades, also the company’s landlords, are providing bridge financing until permanent funding is in place. They could not be reached for comment.

The company brought in Cincinnati-based Chip DeMois to direct its fundraising efforts and serve as chief operating officer. Options for the new investment group could range from two investors at $2 million apiece or 16 people at $250,000.

Rose and DeMois said a private placement memorandum outlines five product lines to be more fully developed: architectural tiles, vases and other art pottery, corporate gifts and special commissions, cremation urns, and branding initiatives such as the Auctions at Rookwood (see box).

Revived in 2006 under Rose’s leadership, more than 40 years after Rookwood’s demise as an active business concern, the company is trying to re-establish the legendary name amid the steep economic downturn.

Its initial focus has been on corporate gifts and tiles, the latter marketed to a housing industry that has only recently begun to emerge from a severe slump.

The tile market peaked in 2006 just as Rookwood restarted operations.

Rose said some tile companies have gone out of business, and many have downsized. That allowed Rookwood to add key personnel to its staff this year as it prepares to increase production.

Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, said consumers of luxury goods are far more discerning today.

“That favors a company like Rookwood, because they are the real thing,” Pedraza said.

http://cincinnati.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/stories/2010/06/07/story8.html?surround=etf&ana=e_article&b=1275883200%5e3452761
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June 3, 2010

Men like nice clothes too, luxury execs say

(Reuters) - Men have long been treated as an afterthought by luxury designers and retailers, given that they spend far less than women on clothes and accessories.

But as men’s tastes grow more sophisticated, they are providing a new avenue for much-needed growth in the industry, executives said during the Reuters Global Luxury Summit.

That change is partly being driven by greater competition where men are being challenged to improve their appearance, and a rising professional class in countries like China.

“Men have become far more conscious of grooming, of taking care of themselves, of dressing well. And I think that is something that probably women have driven them into,” said Milton Pedraza, chief executive of New York-based Luxury Institute, a consulting firm.

“It is growing in Asia because people are now working in offices and they dress differently. It is more of a longer-term trend,” he said.

The sartorial shift has translated into sales gains for top brands.

Coach Chief Executive Officer Lew Frankfort said men’s accessories make up about 5 percent of sales now, and his company plans to open more stand alone men’s stores.

“We are thinking about urban and nearby suburbs outside major metropolitan areas where there is a more discerning male consumer,” Frankfort said.

He added that as Coach becomes a global brand, “The No. 1 opportunity for us is China. We believe the opportunities are boundless in that market.”

Oscar de la Renta, renowned for its cocktail dresses and evening gowns, is also thinking of jumping into the fray and developing a line of men’s clothing.

But Chief Executive Alex Bolen said the New York-based designer will be careful so as not to disappoint its clients.

“We are continuing to experiment with it. I want to do it, but I want to do it exactly the right way,” Bolen said, noting that the company would more likely do some high-end casual wear with a made-to-measure suit service.

Italy’s Valentino sees the men’s segment as a source of growth. Chief Executive Stefano Sassi said men’s items accounted for about 8 percent of sales, a portion that could double within three years.

GROWING, BUT STILL A NICHE

Despite the potential men’s luxury offers, it may be limited to a few cosmopolitan centers and to a certain niche group of men, some executives said.

“Putting aside gay men, still — what is it? 85 percent of the men’s underwear in America is bought by women? Wives still buy and still influence most of the purchasing habits for men in America,” said William Taubman, chief operating officer of U.S. mall operator Taubman Centers Inc (TCO.N).

Some luxury retailers opening men’s stores have done so primarily because of space shortages rather than deliberate strategy decisions, Taubman said.

“Having a separate men’s store creates an inconvenience,” he added.

At Saks, women’s apparel made up about 35 percent of total sales in 2009, more than double men’s clothing, and CEO Stephen Sadove said he did not expect that ratio to change much.

Men still lag far behind women in their shopping habits. Online luxury shopping club Gilt Groupe said that 25 percent of its members are U.S. men.

And some despair of ever converting a very large number of khaki-clad, T-shirt loving Americans to a higher sense of style.

“I believe the American male is largely uneducable. We need to focus on the segment of males that have real discerning taste,” said Coach’s Frankfort.

(Additional reporting by Antonella Ciancio in Paris, editing by Michele Gershberg, Leslie Gevirtz)

http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6520GT20100603

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June 2, 2010

News Release: Japanese High Net-Worth Consumers Rate the “Best of the Best” Luxury Brands in Five Fashion Categories

(NEW YORK) June 2, 2010 - The objective and independent New York City-based Luxury Institute reported today the results of the “Best of the Best” luxury fashion brands in Japan based on the 2010 Luxury Brand Status Index (LBSI) survey. This survey identifies the top brands that deliver true luxury based solely on the unbiased ratings of wealthy Japanese consumers. The following five luxury categories were rated: Women’s Fashion, Women’s Shoes, Women’s Handbags, Men’s Fashion, and Men’s Shoes.

The LBSI asks high net-worth consumers to rate luxury brands by category across four equally weighted components: Consistently Superior Quality, Uniqueness and Exclusivity, Making the Customer Feel Special Across the Entire Experience and Being Consumed by People Who Are Admired and Respected. 

The “Best of the Best” are: (LBSI score out of 10)

Women’s Fashion (Ready-to-wear)

  • o Hermes-7.28
  • o Chanel-7.27
  • o Giorgio Armani-6.80

Women’s Handbags

  • o Hermes-7.77
  • o Chanel-7.06
  • o Louis Vuitton-7.01

Women’s Shoes

  • o Christian Louboutin-7.39
  • o Hermes-7.20
  • o Ferragamo-7.18

Men’s Fashion (Ready-to-wear)

  • o Ermenegildo Zegna- 7.17
  • o Hermes-7.01
  • o Giorgio Armani-6.89 

Men’s Shoes

  • o John Lobb-7.34
  • o Testoni-7.32
  • o Ferragamo-7.11

“Japan may be a challenging market for luxury, but it is still a huge market compared to most other geographies”, said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute. “We see major efforts on the part of our luxury brand clients to differentiate themselves by dramatically out-behaving their competition rather than merely outperforming on products. Extraordinary customer experiences will be the drivers of luxury success in Japan’s large, but stagnant market”

The proprietary Luxury Brand Status Index (LBSI) survey is the only unbiased measure of the prestige of leading brands among wealthy Japanese. A national sample of 600 wealthy Japanese consumers, half male/half female, with a minimum household income of 15 million Yen (approximately $165k) was surveyed online. Males rated only the men’s categories and females rated only the women’s categories.

About the Luxury Institute

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.

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

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June 1, 2010

Unemployment casts shadow on luxury recovery

(Reuters) - A rebound in U.S. luxury spending remains fragile due to high unemployment and the specter of higher taxes and stricter rules on how Wall Street operates, a top industry consultant said on Tuesday.

“The aspirants will come back when unemployment comes down to 5 percent,” Milton Pedraza, chief executive of the Luxury Institute, said at the Reuters Global Luxury Summit in New York.

He was referring to shoppers with an average household income of about $150,000 to $300,000 who helped prop up the industry, many by living beyond their means, during the economic boom of the previous decade. They were the consumers who cut back the most, suddenly and dramatically, during the more recent recession.

The U.S. unemployment rate is expected to dip to 9.8 percent when figures are released on Friday, but Pedraza cited estimates that a decline to 5 percent could take as much as five years.

While luxury spending has rebounded strongly in the first part of 2010, the European debt crisis and the potential for higher taxes in Western countries as governments there plug holes in their budgets could stop luxury’s comeback, Pedraza said.

But he added that some top luxury purveyors such as LVMH (LVMH.PA), Tiffany & Co (TIF.N) and Richemont (CFR.VX) took advantage of the turmoil in the past two years to win market share, gaining greater clout in negotiating with suppliers and luring more consumers to their classic brands.

Pedraza also said top companies would likely prune their portfolios, which often house dozens of brands, to focus on their most-established names and supplement them with a few smaller assets.

THINK GLOBAL

Some U.S. luxury retailers who are still sticking close to their home turf for exclusivity might be hurting themselves in the long run.

Pedraza, who termed the strategy as a “self-imposed limitation,” said overseas markets like China could be key growth engines for luxury players. He also sees Japan as a “cash cow” for those brands who can manage costs well.

While many upscale retailers like jeweler Tiffany and leather goods maker Coach (COH.N) have looked at fast-growing markets abroad to boost sales, many others like department store chain Saks Inc (SKS.N) are still very focused on their domestic markets.

“What is holding them back is their own perception of the world — meaning they don’t see themselves as global brands, they see themselves as regional brands,” Pedraza said.

He sees room for all luxury brands to go global.

“I would argue that all American brands that are luxury — Harley Davidson — have an opportunity to expand globally,” he said.

(Reporting by Dhanya Skariachan and Phil Wahba; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Matthew Lewis)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6503VN20100601

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Noblesse oblige, but no service, for French luxury

June 1, 2010
Reuters.com-Shop Talk
From apparel reporter Nivedita Bhattacharjee:

LUXURY-SUMMIT/

Luxury brands in the United States might still have a lot to learn from the entrenched design houses in Europe, but their commitment to pleasing the customer serves them well as the market returns from recession.
    
Milton Pedraza, Chief Executive of the Luxury Institute, told us during the Reuters Global Luxury Summit today that the commitment to customer service could even become a real point of differentiation for American brands.
 
“The American brands and even the Burberrys of the world tend to be better at customer-centricity, at service, and could make that a competitive advantage, because the Europeans are not as service-oriented, more product-oriented,” he said.
    
“The Europeans are not as service-oriented, (they are) more product-oriented, and they will even tell you that.”
    
If one is looking for an explanation behind the attitudes, Pedraza invoked a time well before Hermes opened its doors in 1837.   
 
“A French executive told me that the word ’service’ … is equated with servility and (goes) back to the French revolution and is why the French don’t like to serve anybody.” 
(Photo: Reuters)

http://blogs.reuters.com/shop-talk/2010/06/01/noblesse-oblige-but-no-service-for-french-luxury/

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May 25, 2010

Dinosaurs, DNA & the End of the Party

Posted in Luxury Market
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Recently www.LuxurySociety.com published a variety of soundbites and statistics that are circling the luxury arena. By Libby Banks

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The get-it-cheap party for luxury consumers has ended.

Milton Pedraza, Luxury Institute CEO
(On the end of deep discounting) 
Bloomberg

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The old media model is a frozen  moment in time; a monthly magazine, a seasonal trend — it’s over. Digital culture is a constant stream. Either you adapt to it, or you are a dinosaur and you will die.  Jefferson Hack, Editorial Director of Dazed Group  Business of Fashion

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As long as men feel the need to spread their DNA to the four corners of the earth, they’re going to buy Porsches. And as long as women look for as many offers for mating as possible, they’re going to keep buying Manolo Blahnik shoes. Scott Galloway, New York University marketing professor (on why the understated luxury trend will give way to more glitz soon)  Newsweek

1/4 Of affluent consumers have “friended” a luxury brand on a social networking site (according to Unity Marketing) Biz Report

http://beta.luxurysociety.com/articles/2010/05/dinosaurs-dna-the-end-of-the-party

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