Showing posts with label luxury survey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luxury survey. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Luxury Consumers Curtail Conspicuous Consumption



The strong demand for luxury goods and services in the U.S. during the past two to three years has largely come to an end as conspicuous consumption seems to be out of favor with affluent households, according to the results of a recent survey.

Luxury consumer confidence as measured in the Luxury Consumption Index “took a deep dive to levels not seen since the recessionary period of 2008 and 2009,” said Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing, which produces the quarterly survey.

The LCI saw a decline of nearly 15 percent in the average amount spent on luxury in the fourth quarter of 2011. The latest luxury tracking survey was conducted January 7-18, among 1,333 affluent luxury consumers with an average income of $286.300. They represent the top 20 percent of U.S. households

“The LCI has been on a topsy-turvy course since 2010, one quarter it goes up, the next down. But looking over the course of the last two years, the LCI lost more than it gained,” Danziger said. “At the start of 2012 the percentage of luxury consumers expressing a definite willingness to spend more on luxury (one of the major components of the index) was down.”
 
Tom Bodenberg, Unity Marketing's consumer economist, says the results of the survey show that luxury consumers have become “non-committal.”  

“There appears to be a trend of non-conspicuous consumption—perhaps as fallout from the 'Occupy' movement—among North American luxury consumers,” he said. “Buying behavior will shift to an almost 'hidden' form of consumption of luxury goods—where ostentation is minimized. The actionable demand for luxury goods and services, on the whole, is flat and still substantially below the levels of two to three years ago. What is interesting is that this apparently 'recession-proof' segment of the marketplace has also been greatly affected by the downturn. Media reports of a 'renaissance' in the luxury market appears to be limited to an extreme top tier of consumers, a small number compared with the bulk of the luxury marketplace potential.”

Danziger says affluent customers are looking to find value when they shop and luxury brands need to recognize this.

“If your brand doesn't deliver a suitable return on investment, they'll turn to competitive brands that will give them high quality without such an extravagant investment,” she said. “Take Coach, for example, ranked this quarter as the top fashion boutique destination among luxury consumers, as well as the number one fashion accessories brand. Coach offers its customers high quality, long lasting and still luxurious handbags but with an average price around $300, making the bags expensive for the masses, but affordable for the 'classes.”

Monday, October 17, 2011

India Luxury Market Shows Double-Digit Growth in 2010


It’s not just the new wealthy in China that is enjoying a life of luxury. Its neighbor India is also showing that it has a taste for the good life as well.

The luxury market in India is grew 20 percent to 5.8 billion in 2010 and this growth is expected to continue into the near future, according to a survey by the Confederation of India Industry and A.T. Kearney Ltd. Luxury products grew by 29 percent, services 22 percent and luxury assets rose by 13 percent.

Luxury jewelry, electronics, cars and fine dining have grown beyond expectations, while apparel, accessories, wines and spirits have continued their strong growth, according to the report.

Meanwhile, Indians also are one of the youngest among Asia’s wealthy, with an average age of just 39, after China at 36 and Indonesia at 38 years. Of those, 75 percent are married with kids, 13 percent are married with no children, and 12 percent are single, according to the latest HSBC Affluent Asian Tracker.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Bergdorf Goodman Earns Top Ranking Among Luxury Consumers


For the second consecutive year, Neiman Marcus' Bergdorf Goodman subsidiary earns the top ranking among eight luxury retailers in the 2011 Luxury Consumer Experience Index survey of wealthy shoppers conducted by the Luxury Institute. Respondents rated retailers on store personnel, the shopping environment and whether the overall experience resulted in complete satisfaction.

Brooks Brothers earns the second highest overall LCEI score but ranks first for completely meeting wealthy customers' needs. Nordstrom receives the third highest LCEI score, and remains the most popular luxury shopping destination, visited by 38 percent of wealthy shoppers in the past 12 months. It is also earns the highest loyalty, with 98 percent of shoppers planning to come back.

“The top-tier brands of luxury with resources are now focused on becoming customer-centric global enterprises,” says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, a New York-based market research firm specializing on high net-worth consumers, which does the LCEI survey. “The only way to achieve this is to create establish a self-reinforcing culture of service to your associates and your customers. The work is extremely hard but the financial returns can be dramatic.”

Survey participants had minimum household income of $150,000, with average income of $271,000 and average net worth of $2.4 million.