It Takes More Than Superior Quality and High Price to Create a New Luxury Brand, Luxury Marketing Expert Pam Danziger Says; 'New Luxury' Branding Paradigm Focuses on How Well the Product Delivers a Luxury Experience to the Consumer.STEVENS, Pa. -- As 'new luxury' replaces 'old luxury' in the consumer marketplace, marketers must embrace a new luxury branding paradigm to build and sustain their luxury brand. In Pam Danziger's latest book, Let Them Eat Cake: Marketing Luxury to the Masses--as Well as the Classes (Dearborn Trade Publishing, 2005, $27, hardcover), she explains how marketers can't rely anymore simply upon creating the 'best of the best' product to capture the attention of today's new luxury consumer. "The bar has been raised in the 'new luxury' market. It isn't enough anymore to just design a fabulous, luxurious product and offer it as the ultimate luxury," Danziger explains. "Luxury marketers have to do more. They must enhance the luxury experience that the product promises to deliver." Through research among luxury consumers (incomes of $75,000 or more, representing the top 25 percent of U.S. households) and profiles of 'new luxury' marketers, including American Express American Express (NYSE: AXP), sometimes known as "AmEx" or "Amex", is a diversified global financial services company, headquartered in New York City. The company is best known for its credit card, charge card and traveler's cheque businesses. , KitchenAid, Starwood Properties, Polo Ralph Lauren Polo Ralph Lauren (NYSE: RL) is American fashion designer Ralph Lauren's luxury lifestyle company. Polo Ralph Lauren specializes in high-end casual/semi-formal wear for men and women, as well as accessories, fragrance, and housewares. and Crystal Cruises, Let Them Eat Cake offers specific, actionable advice to marketers about building a new luxury brand. The 'New Luxury' Branding Paradigm 'New luxury' marketers must focus on the experience for the consumer -- how their product or service delivers a feeling of luxury throughout the entire buying and consumption process. "Superior quality still counts, but people expect a lot more than just great product when they buy luxury," says Danziger. The keys to building a 'new luxury' brand boil down to a few ideas: --A luxury brand must be expansive: It must be a big idea that gives the marketer new places to venture and new opportunities to meet in the consumers' personal life. There are no instant luxury brands and the truly great ones have been around for decades, even a century. They keep reinventing themselves over and over again. Burberry, for example, was founded in 1856, yet it is one of the hottest luxury brands today. --A luxury brand must tell a story: Story telling is a fundamental way human's transmit and process information. Brand recognition is no substitute for brand connection and it's through brand stories where consumers can connect. It is through brand story telling that corporate strategy connects with the consumer. Polo Ralph Lauren's brand embodies totally different worlds or stories presented through their different product lines that the customer can try on and become part of. --A luxury brand must be relevant to the consumers' needs: A luxury brand must be relevant to consumers' needs, meeting their passions and desires emotionally and physically. And a luxury brand must stay relevant as luxury consumers' needs change, thus the necessity to have an expansive brand that gives marketers room to grow. For example, Unity Marketing's research has shown that the luxury dining experience is primarily defined by the service personnel, the atmosphere, and the way customers are treated in the dining room. Fine food, on the other hand, is simply taken for granted Adj. 1. taken for granted - evident without proof or argument; "an axiomatic truth"; "we hold these truths to be self-evident" axiomatic, self-evident obvious - easily perceived by the senses or grasped by the mind; "obvious errors" . This finding has huge implications for the restaurateur res·tau·ra·teur also res·tau·ran·teur n. The manager or owner of a restaurant. [French, from restaurer, to restore; see restaurant. who devotes 80 percent of his or her time to what is happening in the kitchen. Rather, to align their restaurant with the luxury expectations of the consumer, they should be spending 80 percent of their effort on the dining room. --A luxury brand must align with consumers' values: Consumers are bringing a new sensibility into the marketplace that is about more than having and getting. They want their consumerism to provide a greater meaning and they are looking to 'do good' when they shop. A new magazine called Plenty is written for a socially-responsible and ecologically-conscious consumer, who values the finer things in life, like organic food, designer clothes and elegant furniture made from sustainable resources. Plenty presents an editorial point of view that celebrates 'plenty,' not in the sense of luxurious, over-the-top living, but 'plenty' as reflected in a plentiful lifestyle based upon making the right choices in terms of our planet's natural resources. --A luxury brand must perform for the consumer: The experience of a luxury brand all comes down to how well the brand performs its experiential duties for the customer. If it makes him or her feel wonderful, special, unique, as well as performing its specific material role or purpose wonderfully, whether it be a cooking pan, an evening dress, a set of sheets, or a new PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) A handheld computer for managing contacts, appointments and tasks. It typically includes a name and address database, calendar, to-do list and note taker, which are the functions in a personal information manager (see PIM). , then it meets the consumers' performance expectations. It is luxury. Performance, therefore, becomes the new 'P' in the luxury marketing and branding equation. For media, a review copy of Let Them Eat Cake is available upon request. Pam Danziger has prepared a new white paper entitled "The Six Myths of Luxury Branding -- How to Build a 'New Luxury' Brand" available free with registration at http://www.unitymarketingonline.com/downloadPDF2.php About Pam Danziger and Unity Marketing Pamela N. Danziger is a nationally recognized expert in consumer insights for luxury marketers, whether they sell luxuries to the masses or the 'classes.' She is president of Unity Marketing, a marketing consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee consulting company business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a she founded in 1992 to unite marketers with their target markets through consumer insights. She taps consumer psychology to advise clients such as Lenox, Cartier, Herend, Spring Air, Sears, The World Gold Council, The Conference Board and American Express. Her latest book, Let Them Eat Cake: Marketing Luxury to the Masses -- as well as the Classes, (Dearborn Trade Publishing, $27, hardcover) was published in January 2005. She also authored Why People Buy Things They Don't Need: Understanding and Predicting Consumer Behavior (Chicago: Dearborn Trade Publishing, 2004). She has appeared on CNN's In the Money, CNN International CNN International (CNNI) is an English language television network that carries news, current affairs and business programming world-wide. It is owned by Time Warner, and is affiliated and shares much content with CNN, which is limited to the United States and Canada. , NBC's Today Show, CNBC CNBC Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (artificial intelligence) CNBC Consumer News and Business Channel CNBC Congress of National Black Churches, Inc. , CBS News Sunday Morning CBS News Sunday Morning is an early morning news program CBS airs on Sunday mornings. The typical time is from 9:00 to 10:30 a.m. ET, though west coast stations often air it earlier due to conflicts with sports programming later in the day. , Fox News' Your World with Neil Cavuto Your World with Neil Cavuto (written on-air as Your World Cavuto), which debuted as the Cavuto Business Report on the network's launch in 1996, is an American business television program appearing on Fox News Channel. , ABC ABC in full American Broadcasting Co. Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928. News' Money Matters, NPR's Marketplace and is frequently called upon by the Wall Street Journal, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times, American Demographics, Women's Wear Daily Women's Wear Daily (WWD) is a fashion-industry trade journal sometimes called "the bible of fashion."[1][2] It is the flagship journal of Fairchild Publications, Inc.[3] WWD's publisher is Ralph Erardy, Sr. , Forbes, USA Today USA Today National U.S. daily general-interest newspaper, the first of its kind. Launched in 1982 by Allen Neuharth, head of the Gannett newspaper chain, it reached a circulation of one million within a year and surpassed two million in the 1990s. , Associated Press, Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name). , Chicago Tribune for insight. |
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