Franchising, retail, business



 

Cartier, Tiffany and Mercedes Benz among highest ranked luxury brands

01Cartier Santos watch

23/06/2018 - French luxury jeweller and watchmaker Cartier ranks highest in an index of the most luxurious brands. Research conducted by Kadence found that factors such as heritage and quality resonate the most with consumers as they are determining the luxury positioning of a brand. While there were a number of global trends, individual markets valued some characteristics and brands more than others.

“For many Cartier remains an aspirational brand, still slightly out of reach, and our study showed that aspiration forms a key dimension of luxury,” said Greg Clayton, managing director for Kadence International, London.

“Equally, Cartier has glamorous, even romantic associations,” he said. “Lastly, the French provenance of Cartier reinforces the romantic brand image.”

Kadence’s “Luxury Index 2018” is based on almost 6,000 consumer interviews across 13 countries. The survey polled consumers on characteristics such as quality, distinctiveness, status, exclusivity, history, timelessness, feel-good factor and experiential.

Cartier was the top brand globally in Kadence’s index. While the jeweller also earned the top spot in the West, German automaker Mercedes-Benz led the rankings in Asia.

Around the world, cars are the category most likely to be seen as luxury, followed by jewellry, watches and airlines. Accordingly, the global top 10 is dominated by automakers, with Rolls-Royce, Ferrari, Lamborghini, BMW and Porsche making the list.

Kadence points out that these manufacturers are well-known and widely coveted, helping to propel their luxury status.

On the opposite side of the spectrum, some categories, including watches, gain prestige from being exclusive. For instance, Graff Diamonds scored high on the luxury index, but is not a household name.

While the idea of luxury was traditionally tied to rarity and high price points, Kadence’s report found that exclusivity was the least important of the eight traits it measured.

Another trend in the index was the impact of brand history on positioning. In general, those with a longer heritage scored better.

While Cartier had a fairly even perception around the globe, a number of luxury brands performed better in their home market than abroad. This was true for Tiffany & Co., which came in sixth globally but placed first among a U.S. audience.

Much of the focus in marketing today centers on creating experiences, but the index found that “experiential” was the second least important trait to determining a brand’s luxury status. However, this trait is more important to millennials than it is to those over the age of 35.

There is an ongoing push and pull in the luxury business today between the heritage brands with decades or even centuries of history and tradition behind them and the newer, younger brands that still have something to prove.

“The results point to a valid formula for luxury being the maintenance of exceptional quality standards over time,” Mr. Clayton said. “In prosaic terms, this might equate to reliability, but luxury depends on establishing desirability through premiums in design, performance, scarcity, positioning or experience – the aspirational je ne sais quoi.

“There can then be localized effects – we saw that national pride appears to have played a role in Tiffany’s high placing within the U.S. market and Singapore Airlines being at the top of the list in Singapore,” Mr Clayton said. “Heritage and provenance certainly play a role – and we believe that it will be many years before we see a globally recognized luxury brand emerge from a developing market.”

Fonte:https://cpp-luxury.com/cartier-tiffany-and-mercedes-benz-among-highest-ranked-luxury-brands/

LEGGI GLI ALTRI BLOG


Disclaimer per contenuti blog

Questo blog non rappresenta una testata giornalistica in quanto viene aggiornato senza alcuna periodicità. Non può pertanto considerarsi un prodotto editoriale ai sensi della legge n° 62 del 7.03.2001. L'autore non è responsabile per quanto pubblicato dai lettori nei commenti ad ogni post.Verranno cancellati i commenti ritenuti offensivi o lesivi dell’immagine o dell’onorabilità di terzi, di genere spam, razzisti o che contengano dati personali non conformi al rispetto delle norme sulla Privacy. Alcuni testi o immagini inserite in questo blog sono tratte da internet e, pertanto, considerate di pubblico dominio; qualora la loro pubblicazione violasse eventuali diritti d'autore, vogliate comunicarlo via email. Saranno immediatamente rimossi.L'autore del blog non è responsabile dei siti collegati tramite link né del loro contenuto che può essere soggetto a variazioni nel tempo.

Logo FEPbyFFF dates UK

 

ImmagineCompanyProfileUK2ImmagineCompanyProfileIT2

Logo Store inout BrD piccoloL’idea di creare un blog giornaliero per  il mondo del retail nasce grazie ai continui feedback positivi che riceviamo dalle notizie condivise attraverso diversi canali.
Rivolto a tutte le tipologie di distribuzione presenti sul mercato: dal dettaglio ai grandi mall, dal commercio locale e nazionale alle catene di negozi internazionali, investitori, ai nostri fedeli clienti e chiunque altro è realmente interessato allo studio e all'approfondimento su ciò che guida il comportamento dei consumatori. E' anche un blog per tutti coloro i quali lavorano già nel mondo del Retail.
Verranno condivise le loro esperienze, le loro attitudini e le loro experties. Un blog di condivisione, quindi.
Ospitato sul sito della BRD Consulting, che da decenni lavora nel mondo distributivo Italiano ed Internazionale, il blog Store in & out riguarderà il business, i marchi e i comportamenti d'acquisto propri di alcune delle più grandi aziende.
Ci saranno anche notizie in lingua originale per dare evidenza dell’attenzione della nostra Azienda nei confronti del global.
È possibile raggiungere lo staff  a: info@brdconsulting.it

 

Questo sito utilizza cookie, anche di terze parti. Continuando la navigazione su questo sito accetti che vengano utilizzati.