jeudi 19 juillet 2007

New luxury and masstige : consumption polarization

[en français ici]
I'm finishing Mickael Silverstein's impressive book Treasure Hunt and I trully feel that he put his finger on a major trend. The market of almost every goods and services is increasingly polarized. Both ends of the consumption spectrum are gaining valuable shares, while brand in the middle are slowly but steadily losing the marketing battle. The autor calls it "Death in the middle"

Silverstein makes it clear that it's a trend and we have to remind us that middle-market products and services are still earning the major part of every but few categories.

In a fragmented market, why is that polarization occuring ?

The main reason has to be the popular perception that every goods are made equal. Consumers (all of us) see less and less differences in technical features, performance, life span and general product value. Categories in which we can make a difference between products (in which we are a kind of expert) become our trading up categories. We are basically over-spending for these goods because we understand why we are paying a premium.

The market reaction : make luxury products available to (almost) every budget. In the 80s, brands took the luxuty market over Signatures and the "masstige" category was born making some luxury-like goods available to mass market. The starting point of that micro-trend would be Karl Lagerfeld & Sonia Rykiel Kookaï ad campaign¹.

From the demographic perspective

An alternate way to explain the trend would be wealth inequality.

The high net worth Canadians (those with a net worth of at least US$1 million excluding primary residence) grew of 7.2% in 2005. The Select Club of Canadian dollar millionaires now has 230,00 members.² That make a luxury good market raise possible. But it doesn't help to explain the pressence of so many Volvos at Dollorama...

My cool is cooler than yours
The demographic reasons aren't the only explaination, there also is a consumption choice. The expected return to un-materialistic values (common idea in the 80s) didn't happen. Individuality and the quest for social standing helped luxury goods to gain in importance.
We tend to gain prestige and status by possessing fashionables, state-of-the-art gadgets, luxury goods, valuable objects, etc. In order to afford these "treats", we have to cut on something else. Because we hate privation, we tend to rather go for a trade down. Volvo owners go to Dollorama because they choose a different budget segmentation. Instead of decreasing the amount of goods, consumers prefered to push further the competitive consumption. The enlightening Nation of Rebel remembers us at which extend we are constantly seeking for differenciation and status, while contribuing to the vicious circle of overconsumption. If no one ever bougth a $40-k car, it would be a need for anyone.

Because I deserve it...

Lets not forget that we are living in an increasingly stressful world. Time is in short supply for new riches and treats are a major consumption trigger. From your daily Starbucks to expensive night care products, every goods join the "shopping therapy" and the pleasure hunting.

Because luxury depends on your everyday consumption, choices of new luxuries will depends on one's taste and budget. The same restaurant can be consider as a regular destination for someone and the "going out" treat of the year for someone else. "Starbucks, early on, recognized that while not everyone can afford to go to Tiffany's, they can enjoy the small indulgence of a grande nonfat latte."³

From standing to showing off
Some Internet sites, namely eBay and eLuxury, made luxuous goods more affordable and reduced the importance of the shopping experience. Premium brands have to find a new way to ensure their exclusive nature to avoid the erosion of the "Rarity principle"⁴

«To maintain their dream value and avoid the risk of commoditization, luxury brands must be desired by all... but consumed only by the happy few.»
Craven & Read - Emerald Management

On the top of new distribution channels that increasingly bring luxury products within everyone's pocket, copies and conterfeits take a part of the market. According to many, copies would now worth between 5 and 7% of overall sales.

Facing that challenge, tradionnal (new) luxury brands have to ensure their relevance by pushing further the prestige of shopping in their boutique destination and distinctive signs of their originality. More and more Starbucks-to be will try to get their share of the "I deserve it" market.

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¹ Luxury, just live it - BrandChannel.com
² According to Dennis Pickett, CEO Amex Canada in Rich Reward - Marketing Magazine
³ Why Up-Branding is Here to Stay - Ad Age - May 28, 2007 (subscribers only)
Online Luxury for the Masses - BrandChannel.com

vendredi 13 juillet 2007

The End of Alphabetical Order

(En francais ici)
I would like tospend more time on that subject one day. The observation: the raising generation (give it the letter you feel is the right one) was born and always lived with search engines (SE). Not so brand new idea, you would say... Right. The questions beyond : what did the SE change in the development, learning process and the they see the world. It is not an easy one. Any help or thoughts are so welcome.

The most evident impact of SE : with data bases (and later the google-istic universe of Internet), anyone under 20 never searched in a library folder, relying only on its knowledge of the alphabetical order. They never had to get to the "beaver" section, shelf 900.48, and take the 7 or so available books on the subject. Those books, only 10 to 15 years ago, use to represent the only available knowledge on the subject. Today, elementary school students can get much more information to realize (or copy) its exposé within 3 clicks.

How does this omnipresence of SE alterates the way they see and understand the world. I've a particular interest in the material consumption, therefore, I would like to dig how does a SE-borned organize its material world ? Its workplace ? How does s/he learn to classify objects ? Is he involved in collecting ? When she looses something, how does she looks for it ? Is he refering to the family's search engine : "Mom, have you seen my blue tshirt ?"

It's only a preleminary thought, I'll probably get back to it...

mercredi 4 juillet 2007

Buzznaming : How to Give a Name to a New Idea.

Bonjour,
Reading my morning paper on BrandChannel, I was astonished by a new and very imaginative buzzword. After the blogosphere (aka blogspace), we now have to deal with "tubosphere". Brand new, still unknown, this neologism doesn't have its article on wikipedia, millions of refered pages in google, nor monthly stats by Technorati... yet. It's sometime enough to make you sick.

The web industry is a fertile ground for new buzzwords. With the User Generated Content (UGC), the web-put your number here- . -zero, the word-of-mouse, the click-and-mortars (that is so 2004!?!) and many more, you can pick your favorite one. (Please visit the very entertaining Web Economy Bullshit Generator.)

The function of all these neologisms ? Mainly branding the business consultants that invented them. Buzzwords are most often used by compagnies seeking for a diffentiation among a cluttered web consultant industry, and they aren't used to explain a somehow-difficult-to-understand-innovative-idea rather that to produce a sexy sells pitch.

Marketers love it
Buzzwords are popular in Ad Agencies and their clients' offices, with no one seeing them as a threat to clear ideas and actions (the only apparent resistance: Buzzword or Bullshit Bingo). No need for a new technology or indescriptable abstract concept to formulate new buzzwords... Daily, blogs and litterature publish new evocative words such as Lovemark, wikinomics, maven and a never ending list of acronyms seeking for new process that will give marketer access to the Garden of Eden of retail sales and brand equity : USP, USL, OWE (one word equity)*, VBB (value based brand)... and now the marvellous "tubosphere".

Countrary to appearances, buzzwords aren't limited to the marketing-o-sphere(TM, just in case). Medias invent new words or give a huge coverage to neologisms that become keywords to explain a trend X. These buzzwords help the comprehension (even approximative) of new ideas and give people the tools to re-distribute the new ideas. Buzzwords also help to give ones the impression of being in the known. From Weapon of Mass Destrruction, to Omega-3 or the infotainment, it takes a name to get good visibility in the medias. The use of buzzwords give the impression of newness, which is the number 1 ingredient to seduce trendhunting journalists.

Their Function
When they are not reduced to a sing-and-dance role in front of prospect clients, conference audiences or college students (maybe new dates, who knows?), buzzwords can still be usefull to democratize general marketing knowledge. New ideas always push old ones and being able to name new concepts help this sharing process... Things don't really exist before having a name, are they ?

Buzzwords are a fabulous example of idea packaging for commercial use as well as sharing with others. They are much more than passing trends, they become a popular testimony of the way we understand our world/industry. For example, see how passionate people are about naming the different generations (Silent, Beat, BabyBoomers - aka PapyBoomers, Jones, GenX, GenY, etc.), fashion periods (Metal, Grunge, HipHop, etc.). Even serious scholars get involved in the semantic fight about the evolution of eras (modernism, postmodernism, hypermodernism, neostructuralism, etc.).

All in all, buzzwords have the double-function of creating the lingo that identifies those in the known AND of giving names to abstract and not-easy-to-explain concepts. Therefore, they have the same value than the subject they represent. Lets not get hypnotized by good sounding empty-of-sense buzzwords.

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* This one was brough to you by Saatchi