Strategies and Structure of the Luxury Clothing and Accessories Sector: A Critical Analysis based on Porter's Five Forces Model
Book Details
Author(s)Mirela Orlovic
PublisherDiplomarbeiten Agentur diplom.de
ISBN / ASIN3838669673
ISBN-139783838669670
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank14,907,710
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Diplomarbeit, die am 14.11.2002 erfolgreich an einer Universität in Deutschland im Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät eingereicht wurde. Introduction: The luxury goods industry is a fascinating field. As Jean-Louis Dumas-Hermès, chairman and CEO of Hermès, explains: "Le luxe, c'est créer un rêve qui perdure." In addition to the dream dimension that defies scientific analysis, the luxury goods companies have kept highly secretive. Alain D. Perrin, President and CEO at Cartier International, elucidates: "One of our strengths is our ability to maintain a certain mystery about the economic entity which is the company. We bring magic and dreams to consumers who don't want to see their favourite brands discussed in the media, and lacking any sense of the romantic." Systematic research confines itself mainly to specialised marketing literature, especially that of French scholars. But recent developments have raised various questions and call for more systematic research in diverse fields. Over the past two decades, luxury companies in particular in the clothing sector have had to face an increasingly turbulent environment. On the supply side, French dominance especially in the haute couture sector has been challenged as competition has increased mainly from Italian and American fashion houses. Furthermore, the traditionally fragmented luxury industry has become more concentrated, a visible sign for the consolidation was the merger of Louis Vuitton and Moët Hennessy in 1987. Finally, as a result of diversification strategies, most fashion houses have extended to more accessible luxury products and as a result, realize now a substantial part of sales in both, clothing and accessories. But also the demand side has been substantially changing. In 1899, the American economist Thorstein Veblen published the first proper study of consumerism, in which he identified and analysed the traditional luxury customer
