At a recent luxury industry conference, I was taken aback at the matter-of-fact assertion, repeated by executives in sectors as diverse as luxury real
estate and jewelry, that ecommerce isn’t a factor with big-ticket luxury items. Their thesis: such sales can only be conducted face-to-face, a necessary condition to getting high-end customers
comfortable with such big numbers.
However, a few months later, CNBC reported that a Middle Eastern customer booked a $500k private jet flight—via an
iPhone app. You can also buy a $4.85 million Rockwell painting—on Amazon. Oh, and Mark Cuban bought a $40 million private jet online.
The (Luxury) Times, They Are A-Changin’
The global affluent will purchase even ultra-big-ticket items via ecommerce as
long as certain matters of trust remain inviolate. Far from irrelevant, ecommerce can be a core profit center for luxury brands if managed properly, from clicks to bricks. But it is precisely at the
intersection of trust, relationship, and loyalty that luxury brands can strategically differentiate themselves from both mass-market wannabes and their
less-Web-savvy luxury competitors.
Aspirational lifestyles of the global affluent are deeply intertwined with Web connectivity; thus, luxury players looking to woo high-end clientele must integrate their services
seamlessly within such lifestyles.
However, those luxury executives still skeptical about the role of ecommerce are correct in the sense
that the prevailing surveillance-driven ecommerce paradigm, though highly profitable for Silicon Valley, can be destructive to luxury brand equity in the long run.
Commodification of Luxury
Indeed, these executives sense a seemingly inherent mercenary
element in mainstream ecommerce. In a world where mass-market leaders such as Amazon and Google set the ecommerce bar, skepticism by luxury players is warranted. Here loyalty and long-term
relationships are replaced with relentless surveillance, the life blood of Silicon Valley’s ad-driven profit model.
The problem,
of course, is that here the consumer is the product. Naturally, she responds to such cynicism with growing price sensitivity, expectations of sundry “deal” gimmicks, short attention
span … and/or eroding brand loyalty.
But for luxury purveyors, such cynical treatment of the consumer is inapposite to the long-term
vitality of their valuable brand equity. Meanwhile, Amazon, eBay, et al., are determined to disrupt all corners of the luxury sector.
Web
Privacy is the New Luxury
Relationships, and thus loyalty, are built on trust. But the central problem for the luxury sector is
that in real life the most coveted clientele expect the utmost in discretion and privacy, as key components of a true luxury experience. Yet Silicon Valley strips consumers of both, to
maximize its own profits. As a result, Web privacy is the new luxury: valuable yet rare.
In the real world, luxury purveyors set the bar
in what to aspire to in a high-end buying experience. So why would they now passively follow the no-privacy, no-discretion path Silicon Valley has architected for mass-market
ecommerce?
Luxury = Privacy + Discretion
It is here—translating
online the privacy and discretion of their real-world brand experience—that the luxury sector can seize leadership in high-end ecommerce away from Silicon Valley, as these are alien concepts in
the prevailing surveillance-driven, ad-supported Web ecosystem.
But just what is luxury ecommerce, anyway?
Silicon Valley can already deliver great service: same-day delivery, Mayday service, etc. Consumers can summon such amenities and get
1-click service even while lounging at the pool. And yes, Amazon, et al will continuously move upmarket with their merchandising.
So
what makes your luxury brand’s e-commerce experience, well, distinctly luxurious, matching your real-world brand experience?
The answer: privacy and discretion are indispensable elements of any high-end experience, whether offline or online—the very elements Silicon Valley must remove to maximize its
own profits. However, savvy luxury brands can restore these essential elements of the luxury experience back to ecommerce.
Luxury Leadership
This is the only defensible path by which luxury brands can seize leadership from Silicon Valley: by
demonstrating best practices in luxury ecommerce, in the same way such brands set the service standard in the real economy.
The
luxury sector is ripe for leadership in challenging the commoditized, no-privacy regime that rules today’s ecommerce. The opportunity lies in replacing the Silicon Valley-led paradigm with one
that comports fully with the aspirations of the global affluent.