M3 - Main - Product and Brand Management
M3 - Main - Product and Brand Management
M3 - Main - Product and Brand Management
BRAND
MANAGEMENT
Module 3
M3 - Content
1.
2.
Definition of Trends
3.
4.
5.
Complexity in
Fashion
Complexity in
Fashion
Luxury
Fashion
Trends
Seasonal Collections
Fashion brands propose new collections every
season according to what seasonal trends will be
Trends might last just a season, or even less named
as fad, or last for many years becoming a classic
Usually for every trend that gets acceptance there
is an opposite trend in the following seasons
From straightforward dresses of the early 1940sto
the feminine shapes ofDior's post-war New Look
From the bold colors, jewelry, and exaggerated
shapes of the 1980s, to the minimalist of the '90s
Trends
Trends in the Past
The textile industry was used to envision fashion
trends almost three years before the fashion
collection entered the store
For decades there has been a consensus in the
fashion pipeline among
> trend forecasters
> textile producers (yarns and fabrics)
> fashion designers
> opinion makers (fashion editors)
> retailers
> about trends in terms of colors, shapes, materials
Trends
Trends Today
Social media has opened up fashion to other
influencers, bloggers first
Speed, combined with cheap prices and
the 24-hour accessibility of online shopping,
makes it easy for todays consumers to scout and
also create new trends
Instead of a trickle down process from the textile
pipeline and fashion designers to the street, a
bottom up process, from the street up to the
catwalk and a trickle across phenomenon, a trend
spreads horizontally within different socioeconomic
groups at the same time
Fashion bloggers
http://www.style.com/ ; http://www.thesartorialist.com/ ; http://www.manrepeller.com/ ;
http://www.garancedore.fr/ ; http://www.theblondesalad.com/
Stylistic Identity
Stylistic Identity
Most brands follow the same trends but eventually
they look different as they interpret trends through
their own style
Stylistic identity is made up of some aesthetic
elements including the brand logo, colors, fabrics,
patterns, details, lines and the shape of a piece that
make a brand unique.
> Bottega Venetas intrecciato woven leather and
the knot,
> Missonis zigzag pattern on colorful knitwear,
> Cline contemporary minimalism with couture-like
finishing.
Not only ready-to-wear designer but also medium
and premium brands have their unique style
> The Gap, American classic with a twist
> Zara, collection very cool and very refined
Stylistic Identity
Role of Heritage & Country of Origin
The country of origin is a strong source of inspiration
for fashion brands:
> the Sicilian baroque for Dolce & Gabbana
> the Milanese fog for the greige shades of
Giorgio Armani
> The bold style recalling the Italian Calabria
region for Versace
> the American East Coast style and native
Americans for Ralph Lauren
> Canada for Dsquared2
Country of origin in luxury is also associated to
made-in and a special know how, as in the case of
brands such as:
> Tods
> Bottega Veneta
> Salvatore Ferragamo
Stylistic Identity
Icon Products
They are usually historical products embodying the
brand heritage and which became timeless best
sellers present in every collection:
> the Kelly bag of Herms
> the business jacket for Giorgio Armani
> the Chanel 2.55 Purse
> the trench for Burberry
> the D-bag for Tods
> the Wayfarer for Ray-Ban
> the Vara shoe for Salvatore Ferragamo
> The 501 for Levis
Iconic models are seasonally reinterpreted often in
collaboration with
> department stores
> bloggers
> celebrities
10
Stylistic Identity
The Seasonal Collection
In fashion the collection represents the brand
seasonal offer, a set of products grouped according
to different criteria
> price
> occasion of use
> product typologies and categories
Historically, the collection comes from French
haute couture where the couturier usually
presented a limited series of completely new
models every six months, Spring-Summer and
Autumn-Winter (or Fall-Winter)
11
Stylistic Identity
The Seasonal Collection Timing
Modern collections are the result of a mix of models:
> Totally renewed from one season to the next
> Carried over with small changes
> Iconic models
This mix between seasonal and continuative items in
each collection changes depends on the positioning of
the brand (Luxury, Premium, Fast Fashion, Sportswear, )
A fashion company starts working on the collection
three to twelve months before the presentation to retail
clients and usually works on three seasonal collections
at the same time (results of past collection,
merchandising the current collection, designing the next
collection)
Fast fashion retailers are much faster in terms of time to
market!!!
12
Stylistic Identity
Fashion Collections Scheduling
Fast Fashion
Time to Market
3/12 months
Up to 2 weeks
Number of
Collections (per
year)
Up to 24 (2 each month)
13
The Product
Development Process
Fashion Product Development Process: Roles and Activities
Brand Manager,
Merchandiser,
Commercial
Network
1.Collection
Planning
Design Director,
Product Designers
2.Collection
Creation
> Developing
collection themes
and products
Product Managers
and Suppliers
3.Sampling
Sales Force
Collection
Presentation
> Prototyping
> Materials
purchased
> Sample collection
production
> Pricing
14
Dsquared2
Dsquared2
Best case for the stylistic identity of a fashion
designer brand
15
Bottega Veneta
Bottega Veneta
Best case for the stylistic identity of a luxury brand
VIEW
VIDEO
16
Product VS Brand
Strategy
17
Product VS Brand
Strategy
Brand Strategy
In any industry the brand is a promise made to the
customer about certain benefits
Benefits can be :
Functional or tangible
> Performance
> Safety
> Durability
Emotional or intangible
> Status
> Fun
> Pleasure
> Coolness
We will investigate this second level of meaning,
emotional benefits delivering symbolic meaning to
brands and products
Read the article | Brand with a Soul by Stefania Saviolo
18
Product VS Brand
Strategy
Different Kinds of Benefits Delivered on the Marketplace
According to the reinterpretation of a scale proposed by
Aaker emotional benefits can be segmented into:
> Auto-directed benefits respond to a need for personal
gratification of the individual. You can identify this category
of benefits if you can answer the question "when I buy or use
this brand I feel...
> Hetero-directed benefits meet the need of the customer to
express its personality in a social context. They answer the
question "when I buy or use this brand I am" This is typical in
the field of fashion and luxury brands. Louis Vuitton is a status
symbol and, as like most luxury goods, expresses a "social
license", making those who own it appear "successful
> A third category of benefits are Social benefits, that allow
the person to express, more than just individual aspects of his
or her personality, the belonging to a certain lifestyle,
responding to the human need of self-actualization, feeling
part of a community, a group or a part of society sharing
common attitudes, opinions and interests. The answers the
question "when I buy or use this brand, the types of people I
relate to are
Read
Aakers
ar+cle
about
Benets
|
h7ps://www.scribd.com/doc/54790167/Aaker-Beyond-Func+onal-Benets-1
19
Product VS Brand
Strategy
Product VS Brand
Strategy
SCOPE
Iconic
Brands
Uncorrelated
Targets/Categories
Lifestyle
Brands
Correlated
Targets/Categories
Authority
Brands
Single
Target/Category
Auto-directed <
Emotional Benefits
> Hetero-directed
Social Benefits
BENEFITS
Source | Marazza A., Saviolo S., "Lifestyle Brands. A guide to Aspirational Marketing", Palgrave 2013
21
Product VS Brand
Strategy
Authority Brands
Authority | the power to influence others, especially
because of ones commanding manners or ones
recognized knowledge about something
Oxford Dictionary
These brands are considered as a real authority in
their business
They have a narrow scope (specialised) and they
often focus on patents, innovation and distinctive
styles or products, and are enriched by experiential
product benefits auto-directed
> Loro Piana
These are brands that have the power to influence
and persuade by virtue of their particular expertise
By adopting these brands you feel reassured and
gratified, a benefit that goes beyond the functional
aspect
22
Product VS Brand
Strategy
23
Product VS Brand
Strategy
Iconic Brands
Icon|an important and enduring symbol, one who
is the object of great attention and devotion, an
idol
Oxford Dictionary
Iconic Brands are like religious signs and
personalities. They become the carriers of universal
values and stories that they express through a wide
range of products characterised by instantly
recognisable and iconic codes
This happened for the French luxury brands such as:
> Herms
> Chanel
> Cartier
Icons are timeless and it takes time to create an
icon
Fashion brands become iconic when they are able
to move beyond fashion by consolidating the
iconic elements that have made them successful
over time in products, communication and in-store.
> Bottega Veneta
24
Product VS Brand
Strategy
Lifestyle Brands
Lifestyle|the way a person, or a group, lives
Oxford Dictionary
A lifestyle includes
> patterns of social relations
> consumption
> entertainment
> dressing styles
Lifestyle brand is a brand that clearly and deeply
represents an individual or a group:
> the way of living
> the way he/she wants to look to the other people
25