Let us approach this topic with integrity and honesty. Please raise your hand if you are a proud owner of New York’s latest luxury item? I am not talking Manolo Blahniks or Tiffany & Co keys I am talking counterfeits! My hand is up and I know yours is too! Well congratulations counterfeit owners, these knockoffs are finally achieving luxury status. A special crime unit in New York has police raiding locations in Manhattan’s Chinatown for counterfeit goods. Within the first two days of the operation $ 1 million worth of fake handbags and watches were seized.
Sure blame New York, but the black-market knock- off industry is a global issue. China’s virtual explosion in counterfeit cell phones, known as “shanzai”, sells counterfeit phone for less than $20. The “Hi-Phone”, for example is openly sold as a knock-off of Apple’s iPhone. China has yet to launch its own citywide raid, despite complaints from legitimate manufacturers.
In today’s money tight market, the cheap fakes of Chanel, Rolex, Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Tiffany are more popular than ever. The expensive price tags, brand association and luxury status are what drive demand. The raids are one way brands are reclaiming their images and brands. Nevertheless,no raid of any stature will control the world of counterfeits until consumers stop buying them.
Showing posts with label luxury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luxury. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Ebay's run in with luxury becoming quite costly

For brands to maintain luxury status they must protect their reputations of exclusivity and value. Ebay is experiencing the wrath of luxury brands when selective distribution is exercised to its fullest. LVMH is fining Ebay €1.7m for not having done enough to prevent the trade of goods made by LVMH, which owns exclusive brands including Louis Vuitton, Moet Hennessy, Givenchy and Christian Dior.
LVMH is a French holding company and one of the world's largest luxury goods conglomerates. It is the parent of around 60 sub-companies that each manage a small number of prestigious brands. These daughter companies are, to a large extent, run autonomously.
Underpinning this issue is not just the sales of knockoffs, which can negatively devalue the brand, but the issue of whether brands can dictate the way they are sold. By selling genuine LVMH goods online, reselling them and providing them secondhand through internet retailers is a denunciation for the French company. An open market is the opposite of the brand of total control exercised by LVMH as part of its attempt to remain exclusive and, crucially, expensive.
Luxury goods rely on being able to control the way they are distributed. Luxury companies will release goods to certain exclusive areas of the world, charge consumers vastly different prices in different areas and restrict the public's ability to buy by selling only through certain shops or exclusive boutiques.
These companies take the benefits that globalisation gives them – cheap labour and materials – but won't pass those benefits on to the ordinary buyer.
Ebay refers to the fine as "disproportionate" and states that it will be appealing the decision in higher courts, since it believes that the injunction constitutes an unfair restriction of trade.
This battle between free trade and selective distribution brings to mind the luxury pyramid and the hierarchy within the pyramid that contributes to a brands exclusive reputation. After all, the mirage of exclusivity is the driving force behind the lust for luxury goods, and if any old online retailer can sell luxury goods at knockdown prices, perhaps it's not really much of a luxury at all.
Labels:
brand reputation,
ebay,
fair trade,
luxury,
luxury pyramid,
online retailers
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