Luxury Brand Strategy of Louis Vuitton Shin’ya NAGASAWA* * Graduate School of Commerce‚ Waseda University Tokyo‚ Japan‚ nagasawa@waseda.jp Abstract: By systematically breaking down th e strategy of the single Louis Vuitton luxury brand into the four Ps (Product‚ Price‚ Place‚ and Promotion)‚ our aim in this paper is to extract the rules or principles of its brand marketing that differ from that of general consumer goods. In other words‚ the object is to distill the rules and principles of
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Strategic Management LVMH Executive summary ‘’ Represent the most refined qualities of Western Art de Vivre around the world.’’ This is one of the beautiful statements that have helped Louis Vuitton Moet Henessy (LVMH Group) to become the world’s largest luxury goods corporation. The Groups portfolio consists of 60 different prestigious brands with more than 200 stores worldwide. In this report‚ LVMH’s distinctive competencies and the leading strategies will be analyzed in relation to its current
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are continuously launched into the luxury perfume market each year. DKNY’s recent addition to the perfume market is DKNY Pure. As a competitor intending to introduce a similar product into the luxury fashion brand perfume market‚ consumer behaviour has important implications for the design of a successful marketing strategy. This paper will outline which key factors marketers should attempt to influence in the design of a marketing strategy to introduce a new luxury brand perfume to the market. Through
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Diversification Diversification can be briefly defined as the expansion of a firm into a range of different product areas. Firms may choose to diversify for either of two reasons. First‚ diversification may benefit the firm’s owners by increasing the efficiency of the firm. Second‚ if the firm’s owners are not directly involved in deciding whether to diversify‚ diversification decisions may reflect the preferences of the firm’s managers. Singapore Airlines (SIA) serves as a typical example of diversification
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LVMH’s Diversification Strategy into Luxury Goods The problem After the case and readings the problems of LVMH there are several problems such as the declining demand for luxury goods because it is linked to political events‚ situation and social trends. (After the attacks of 9/11 an impact on luxury goods has dropped and had automatically an impact on LVMH sales) Secondly luxury products are easy to counterfeit‚ some countries such as china‚ turkey‚ and other still have to improve their
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2 CPEI LVMH: Strategic Integration and Expanding Brand Dominance in Asia 1 1 http://fashionrules.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/lvmh.gif 1 Table of contents INTRODUCTION……………………………….…………………………………......…3 I. LVMH and its environment ……...…………………………..……….………………..3 A. The luxury market and it segmentation……………………...………….………………3 1. Analysis of the luxury market: « The luxury-goods industry »…..………………...3 2. Segmentation……………………………………...…...….…………………......….4 B. LVMH presentation…………………………………
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& STRATEGIES.8 7.0 CONCLUSION9 8.0 APPENDICES11 Appendix 1: Porters 5 Forces11 Appendix 3: Luxury Goods Group & Brands Top Ten Competitors13 Appendix 4: Industry Map*.14 Appendix 5: Financial Performance14 Appendix 6: PESTLE Analysis15 Appendix 7: SWOT Analysis16 Appendix 8: Evaluating industry Attractiveness and Competitive strength19 Appendix 9: A Nine Cell Industry Attractiveness-Competitive Matrix20 Appendix 10: Cross Business Strategic Fits20 Appendix 11: Evaluating the Strategy of a
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non-essential luxury goods or services are paid very highly. The wage rate is not the economic value of a good or service‚ but more to social factors or fashion. The economic theory of wages is‚ therefore‚ of little use in explaining wage differentials. Assess this argument. Intro: Labor market supply and demand‚ wage determination‚ wage differentials general‚ ECONOMIC THEORY OF WAGES P1: production of luxury goods vs. other normal/inferior/Giffen/Veblen goods. Demand for this good influenced by
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M a n a g e m e n t o f I n t e r n a t i o n a l G r o u p s ABSTRACT Throughout this report written for the coursework of ‘Financial Analysis and Management of International Groups’ taught by Professor George Iatridis at EDHEC Business School‚ the LVMH Group will be thoroughly analysed and elaborately discussed. In order to be able to situate the analysis‚ we decided to compare LVMH with two of its industry competitors: Kering and Richmond. LVMH is a French multinational luxury goods conglomerate
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statement: "Despite worldwide softness in the sale of luxury goods‚ LVMH has cemented its position as the world ’s largest and most profitable player in the category. To stay there it must keep its customers loyal and its brand strong and find new markets worldwide" (Hazlett C. 2004). That is why in its mission they state to represent the most refined qualities of Western " art de vivre" all around the world. Their objective is to be the leader in the luxury market‚ continuing to transmit elegance and creativity
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