Abundant Rarity: The Key To Luxury Growth: Jean-Noe L Kapferer
Abundant Rarity: The Key To Luxury Growth: Jean-Noe L Kapferer
Abundant Rarity: The Key To Luxury Growth: Jean-Noe L Kapferer
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KEYWORDS
Luxury; Prestige; Brand equity; Growth; Elites; Marketing syndicates
Abstract Although Western economies have not yet transitioned out of crisis, the luxury sector is growing again, especially at the high end. In emerging countries, the luxury sectors expansion has reached double digits. However, as luxury products continue to penetrate global markets, the prestige of brands like Louis Vuitton has not declined at all. This seems at odds with the concept of luxury being tied to rarity and exclusivity. Thus, how can we reconcile these facts with theory? In order to capture mounting demandsnot only from extraordinary people, but also from ordinary individualsluxury brands enact virtual rarity tactics, construct themselves as art, and adopt a fashion business model while deemphasizing exceptional quality and country of origin. Rarity of ingredients or craft has been replaced by qualitative rarity. Further, the cult of the designer is a potent tool in building emotional connections with a vast number of clients. Today, brands in the luxury sector are actually selling symbolic and magic power to the masses. There exists a culture gap between Asia and the West; namely, Asian consumers feel safer buying prestigious Western brands with which individuals around them are familiar. The insights offered herein provide clues for entrepreneurs attempting to launch luxury brands. # 2012 Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
this time of nancial struggle, it is the high-end, inconspicuous, and fully priced products that are ying off shelves (Clifford, 2011). Todays economic crisis has prompted the afuent populationthe top 20% of income earners who together represent 60% of the marketto refocus on real value and great classics, and to pay the price for them. A sign that the sector is booming once more, 2011 was a year of new acquisitions of luxury companies and brands by investment funds in Asia and the Middle East, and by luxury groups such as LVMH, PPR, and Richemont. In all cases, the high multiplesaround 20measuring the valuations of these companies demonstrate that investors share a dream. They believe that the sectors prospects for
0007-6813/$ see front matter # 2012 Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bushor.2012.04.002
454 growth are huge, and they are right; the future is bright, especially in the BRIC countries (i.e., Brazil, Russia, India, and China) and soon in the CIVETS countries (i.e., Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey, and South Africa). In all these countries, gross domestic product (GDP) growth is high, a ne prospect since Bernstein Research nancial analysts showed that luxury market growth is strictly correlated with GDP growth because the latter creates a middle class and fosters optimism. Unlike consumers in Europe, consumers in these countries generally do not save for their retirement but rather spend money on newly available products, especially those that confer status and serve as symbols of selfachievement. In BRIC and CIVETS countries, there is no middle range. Consumers buy local brands or global fast-moving consumer goods brands to meet their everyday needs, and luxury foreign brands to spoil themselves. Having developed consumption societies quite late, people in these countries advance by leaps and bounds and claim their right to luxury. For instance, visiting newly built luxury malls is a favorite leisure-time activity for individuals in these countries. What was once described as the Malling of America (Kowinski, 2002) has now become the malling of Asia, or even of the world, with retail and entertainment mixing into retailment within superb luxury stores. To take advantage of the mounting demand for luxury goods in newly rising cities, major luxury retailers are now engaged in a very dynamic store-expansion strategy. For example, Louis Vuitton announced that it would enter so-called third-tier cities, mainly provincial capitals, in China to attract more consumers. Today, the brand has 37 stores across 29 cities in China. This move is driving other luxury brands, such as Gucci, Zegna, Coach, and Burberry, into these same third-tier cities to get a cut of the prot. This fast-paced retail expansion strategy would be good news for the luxury sector if only it could twist the basic equation that luxury = rarity, which predicts (Figure 1, A) that a products luxury statuswhich is crucial for charging high priceswill be diluted when its penetration rate increases because too many people will own it. A less stringent prediction is that increasing penetration rst boosts a products luxury status by making the brand visible and recognized, but then reaches a tipping point beyond which luxury status dilution occurs (Figure 1, B). Returning to our example, third-tier Chinese cities represent big numbers demographically speaking, but by entering such cities, luxury brands run the risk of becoming provincial themselves. Brands like Louis Vuitton have thus far succeeded in postponing this tipping point. Half of the women
Figure 1.
J-N. Kapferer
The luxury-rarity relationships
in Tokyo ofces own a Louis Vuitton bag (Chadha & Husband, 2007); however, according to Ipsos (2011) data, consumers in Japan still regard this brand as the most luxurious. Is the luxury industry actually creating a new phenomenon (Figure 1, C) in which luxury status is not diluted, but actually reinforced, by penetration rate?
Abundant rarity: The key to luxury growth that it is expensive. This is luxurys core, latent sociological role, despite the overt excuses or rationalizations that consumers may provide when asked in surveys why they purchase luxury items for themselves. Interestingly, when asked, What examples of luxury spontaneously come to your mind? typical answers mention inaccessible products or lifestyle elements of the very rich: helicopters, private jets, and private islands in paradise seas. Luxury as an absolute concept needs no brand (Kapferer, 2010) as people talk more about lifestyle elements than about products. However, if the interviewer instead asks, What brands come to your mind when you hear the word luxury? then the answers change and refer to products or services with the list being more or less the same worldwide: Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Gucci, Rolex, Ferrari, Dior, Prada, Bulgari, Ritz Carlton, et cetera (Ipsos, 2011). Note that these brands are more accessible than the former evocations. They also communicate a lot in the media and through their extravagant stores.
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2.2. My luxury
My luxury has a different meaning, most often referring to a small personal luxury purchase. Take, for example, the lipstick effect: a term attributed to Este e Lauder, founder of the skincare company, who was surprised by the increase in lipstick sales during the Great Depression. This notion is an example of the well-known phenomenon whereby, after experiencing psychological stress, individuals purchase affordable luxuries as a substitute for more expensive items. For instance, a woman may purchase Dior lipstick ($30.00) to feel a sense of luxury. My luxury is clearly a break from plain, normal life and its many constraints: an escape into an ideal world of beauty, pleasure, taking care of oneself, and a bit of eternity. Individuals compulsorily buy what they do not needwhether it is a product or serviceat a price far above what functional values command, and they do this to pamper or reward themselves. However, in order to feel the full effects of my luxury, these products or services need to be from prestigious brands. That is, self-healing requires big names for its magic to operate. This is exactly the same mechanism underlying the placebo effect, by which patients illnesses disappear because they believe they are taking a real medicine. The lipstick effect only works with brand names that evoke the lifestyles of the rich and famous. It also requires a sacrice of money. As Hubert and Mauss (1981) showed, this high-price sacrice is necessary for the product to become sacred and to endow the buyer with its luxurious effects.
456 contagion of desire (Girard & Gregory, 2005). Thus, a high number of consumers buying the same fashionable product ceases to be a problem, especially in Asia where Confucian rules discourage individuals from being too original. Unlike in individualistic Western societies, in Japan, wearing the same Louis Vuitton product reinforces a feeling of togetherness, which is very important in that culture. In fact, in Asia, luxury creates both distinction from others and a sense of belonging at the same time. Second, many luxury companies have abandoned a major obligation of the luxury business model: no delocalization. For example, by making some of its products in China, Prada has reduced its production costs and improved its gross margins thanks to low labor wages. In addition, the company is even more appealing to Asian investors who can now buy the companys shares on the Hong Kong stock exchange, and lower production costs also allow brands to invest more in communication to build the dream consumers associate with them.
J-N. Kapferer placements in the blockbuster James Bond movies; that is, so everyone in the streets could recognize one, thus endowing the driver with admiration.
Develop direct one-on-one relationships with cli Do not delocalize production: Luxury is the ambassador of the local culture and rened art de vivre. ents: Luxury means treating all clients as VIPs. This necessitates direct, personalized, one-onone interactions, ideally in exclusive stores that represent the dream in 3D. This luxury business model can be applied to companies in any sector. Thus, Apple, MINI, and Nespresso are typical examples of companies that are not considered to be luxury, but nevertheless follow the luxury business model. There are other business models among more high-end labels, including the fashion business model and the premium business model. The main characteristic of the fashion business model is that it delocalizes production in search of low-cost labor forces. Unlike luxury, fashion does not sell timelessness. As soon as the
Abundant rarity: The key to luxury growth fashion season ends, sales and super-sales slashing margins are employed to eliminate inventory. Fashion does not worship quality like luxury does. As for pricing, in the luxury business model, average prices should always go up because there are enough newly rich consumers to justify this strategy as long as they dream of the brand. When this dream falters, many luxury companies prefer to expand downward, selling to more people thanks to protable accessories that have more accessible prices and can be produced in larger quantities in countries with low labor costs. Such accessories can then be bought repeatedly by consumers, a sign that the luxury brand has moved to a fashion business model where originality and change are valued, not rarity and timelessness. The premium or super-premium business model rests on a brands willingness to create the objectively best product. Grey Goose super-premium vodka, for instance, advertises itself as the worlds best-tasting vodka since it has received many awards from expert juries. Unlike luxury, which refuses to bear any comparison, super-premium brands look for it and build their fame through it.
457 period? This is typically what most famous chefs holding the Michelin three-star recognition do. The second line builds the chefs star brand awareness, and the three-star restaurant keeps the ame alive for those rare few who can access it after a long wait and an important sacrice of money.
458 offer longer series and extended production entails regularly launching limited editions, which capture media attention and uphold desirability of the brand via ephemeral rarity. Another essential lever for creating an aura of privilege is selective, if not exclusive, distribution. Luxury rarity is built at the retail level. Thus, for instance, until now, there was no Louis Vuitton fragrance because the brand refuses to sell anywhere but in its own stores. Fragrances, however, are closer to mass market and need wide exposure. Most luxury fashion brands have chosen to sell their fragrancesa key lever of brand awareness, image, and prots through selective distribution in high-end department stores. This practice endows these brands with a halo of glamour and an air of exclusivity. At a Chanel skincare and makeup counter within a department store, for example, any woman can be cared for like a VIP. . .even if only for a few minutes. Finally, communication builds virtual rarity. To construct the dream, the luxury brand must communicate far beyond its actual target. The brand, its products, and its prices must be known by many even though only a few should be able to buy. This is why Chanel typically advertises its most prestigious jewelry line, rather than the more accessible one. Luxury rms even capitalize on celebrities as brand ambassadors to spread their luxury branding message. Moreover, their systematic use of social events aims at exhibiting the brands selectivity based on whoand who is notdeemed worthy of an invitation. Brands must show that not just any celebrity can attend, but rather only a select few judged precious enough to represent the brand.
J-N. Kapferer with art because, like art, it aims at being perceived as intemporal; diamonds are forever, as is a Porsche 911. This intense proximity between art and business has another goal: to position products as authentic pieces of contemporary art, each one blessed by the hand of the designer. By doing so, luxury brands deemphasize craftsmanship, which requires time and effort and is not compatible with volume (Catry, 2007). This association with art also enhances a brands extensibility beyond its core products (Hagtvedt & Patrick, 2008). Thus, the transformation of luxury fashion designers as art icons is a consequence of the search for growth through democratization. Designers who succeed in the luxury sector are those who have personality, and are able to create followers and emotional bonds among larger audiences. Such designers are avant-gardeperhaps even polarizing and they purposefully do not appeal to everyone, creating a cultural elite of followers. These designers capitalize on a cultural segmentation; namely, people who like to think of themselves as the creative elite. The media and social media make designers into cultural icons, and their charisma is a source of authority that is embodied as an aura, bits of which are passed to clients through the designers products. When one buys a special item in the Marc Jacobs e-boutiquefor example, a Rubixcoin purse at $18 or neon rain boots at $28one has the feeling that these items have actually been designed by Marc himself. Despite their low price, this feeling of owning an extraordinary object is reinforced by the fact that they are exclusively available at Marc Jacobs stores, just as the luxury business model prescribes. Finally, the purchase of luxury products indicates ones advanced taste and serves as a social marker. Art and culture create elitism for all, which can be leveraged by selling more products to more people without diluting their appeal because these products are held as artistic objects, not as commercial products. The desire to look non-commercial and appear fully engrossed in the world of art is exemplied by advertising. Nowhere should luxury advertising obey the classical rules taught by Procter and Gamble. As regards luxury, the less explicit and understandable advertising is, the better it is. In this realm, advertising seeks to create a distance while simultaneously trying to communicate to the masses. This social construction of advertising as art holds communication as a full product of the creative brand. For instance, Dior ads are to be treated as its bags or dresses. This is why luxury brands do not have communication directors; rather, the creative director imposes his or her vision on all the brands productions. To communicate this vision,
Abundant rarity: The key to luxury growth some luxury brands go so far as advertising their new ads: discussing the famous director recruited to create it, the top models featured within it, the incredible location where it was shot, and so forth. Similarly, luxury brands now put videos on YouTube and other social media sites, documenting the making of their TV commercials. Since advertising is in essence non-credible, by focusing on the artful construction of their advertisements, luxury brands defuse their commercial undertones.
459 wide array of products available, ranging from attainable accessories to extremely expensive items. As a result, both the Tokyo administrative assistant and the CEO could buy the same brand at the same store, but of course they bought very different products. Thus, price distributes rarity through discriminatory levels. There is a price for the many and a price for the few. Even the lowest price must be seen as a sacrice, though, or else the magic of luxury does not work. The same process is now taking place in China, with millions of consumers eager to show they are succeeding while they remain novices in terms of knowing what is or is not a luxury product. Chinese consumers love leading brands. This is clearly an advantage for brands with high brand awareness and a network of stores in all major capital cities, and now even regional cities. For a local Chinese consumer, buying a luxury good is a way to participate in the world of consumption. It is also egalitarian.
460 technical reproduction of products. Iconic products are meant to look intemporal, almost eternal. This is achieved in two ways. First, they are permanently in the catalogue like the Porsche 911, Chanel N85, or Jaeger Lecoultres famous Reverso watch. They are also made intemporal by relating them to some highly signicant moment in the life of the brands founder. The spirit attached to this moment and the story that accompanies it endows the product with part of the aura its production in long series has destroyed. The iconic product becomes an object of the cult. One needs to possess at least one of these products once in ones lifetime. Luxury brands also cultivate mythical stories about their foundation and maintain secrecy regarding back-ofce happenings, such as details concerning production sites and quantities/nance. Their agship stores, magnicent pieces of urban art designed by famous architects, have been compared to modern cathedrals in which faith is reinforced. In these stores, each product is put on a pedestal like a holy statue or icon. The stores act as closed shrines where a subtle secret order reigns and where one is introduced selectively, thus leading to lines outside. Consumers visit the stores in small groups, making a pilgrimage and wishing to attend rituals delivered on a one-toone basis: welcoming services, demonstrations, explanations of the exceptionality of each item, et cetera. This comparison with religion is most revealing: luxury likes to present itself as an elevating cultural force. It belongs to the upper tier of Maslows pyramid, that of self-realization (Maslow, 2011). Religions like big numbers and large communities, unless they wish to remain a small sect. As this comparison with religion has its limits, however, we should instead speak of magic. As its Latin root suggests, religion ties people together in their belief of a god in heaven. Magic, on the other hand, invokes supra-natural forces in action on earth thanks to the mediation of objects, icons, and shamans. As Arnould, Price, and Curasi (1999, p. 264) wrote: Their possession links the owner or holder with immanent powers to achieve certain ends. There is something magical about possessing luxury goods. They endow the owner with the ability to become another person just by wearing a blessed cloth, jewel, or accessory. The starication of modern fashion designers is an essential prerequisite if luxury brands want to appeal to larger audiences. These designers are not mere humans anymore, but leaders who take their followers into the world of art, creative culture, taste, and sensory experiences thus far restricted to the elite. Their magic touch is passed along by contagion from the designer to the end user. As such, there is no longer the need to link luxury to rarity or a nite number of clients.
J-N. Kapferer As expressed by the dream equation of Dubois and Paternault (1994), the larger the number of clients, the more famous the name must be to keep the dream alive.
Abundant rarity: The key to luxury growth the adoration of iconic gures, experiential selective distribution, and highly visible creative communication play a central role in reinforcing the faith of the many and the symbolic power of the brand. However, there is a danger: the tradeoff between the short term and the long term. Knowing that luxury can be dened as the ordinary of extraordinary people and the extraordinary of ordinary people, a natural question arises: How long will the former dream about such brands? These people play the crucial role as the reference group for the mass of followers. Amaldoss and Jain (2008) demonstrated that the elite are ready and willing to pay more to reduce the number of followers; namely, conformists. Thus, to keep these elite consumers, brands must produce supra-luxury products, services, and events. Will having elite consumers trade up to buy the most expensive, upper ranges of a brand sufce in maintaining the illusion of rarity and feelings of privilege? Is there a point beyond which Louis Vuitton will have gone too far in penetration and diffusion? For instance, the brand has now decided to open stores in so-called C-towns in China. From a quantitative standpoint, these towns are bigger than many Western capitals. Why, then, do they not create a luxury market there too? From the standpoint of Shanghais or Beijings modern elites, though, what does it mean for the brand to go deeper into Chinese provinces? If luxury brands always need to be perceived above the mainstream to sustain their dream, how does this distribution strategy maintain the aura? Will stratication between stores with a clear hierarchy differentiating a few experiential agships in capital cities from more normal stores in the provinces be enough? Brands also develop what could be termed invisible luxury: exclusive, very private services for the rich and powerful. An example would be organization of a dinner for an elite group of individuals at the newly-built House of Vuitton in London. Such invisible luxury is designed to make even extraordinary consumers feel privileged. As for the hierarchy of stores, luxury brands aim at making the provincial client in a C-town still dream of accessing the slightly more upscale store when he or she visits a more cosmopolitan city. Clearly, there is a long-term risk here. This may be one reason why LVMH has taken an uninvited 20% share in Herme `s, whose present CEO, Patrick Thomas, said: When one of our products gets too successful we stop [selling] it (Kapferer, 2010). Herme `s wants to remain a luxury brand, not become a fashion brand. It could potentially act as the post-Louis Vuitton brand in the LVMH multiplebrand brand portfolio.
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