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AllenCrawley
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Seven New Faces of the Global Luxury Consumer [according to Bain & Company]
- The Omnivore (25% of spending, at an average €2,350 per year): These shoppers are typically new entrants to luxury. On average, they are younger than the other clusters and have a high willingness to experiment with products and brands. They are primarily women. They tend to purchase high-ticket items, focusing on the jewelry and watch categories. They prefer to shop in brands’ own stores. Many of their purchases are made while traveling. They prefer aspirational brands, and while they have high advocacy for luxury brands, their loyalty level is relatively low. These attitudes are common among Chinese consumers from Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities.
- The Opinionated (20% of spending, at an average €1,750 per year): These are highly educated Generation X and Y shoppers. They favor leather goods and watches, and are highly aware of the differences between brands. They shop often within their hometowns, and are influenced by online information and social networks. They dominate China’s Tier-1 cities and are also prevalent in Western Europe and the United States.
- The Investor (13% of spending, at an average €1,450 per year): These shoppers pay the greatest attention to the quality and durability of luxury materials. They favor long-lasting leather goods and watches that can be handed down from generation to generation. They carefully evaluate luxury purchases with research and referrals from other consumers. The segment is skewed to shoppers from Japan, the Middle East and mature markets where discretionary spending is more cautiously allocated.
- The Hedonist (12% of spending, at an average €1,100 per year): These shoppers are infatuated with luxury goods and the luxury shopping experience. They have a high affinity for brand logos and much of their purchasing is within accessories categories. They are most influenced by advertising. Despite their interest in luxury for show, they exhibit the lowest levels of advocacy for brands, often due to cognitive dissonance sometimes following a purchase. This is the only cluster represented across all nationalities and generations.
- The Conservative (16% of spending, at an average €1,000 per year): These are mature and mainstream shoppers, both men and women. They favor watches and jewelry from big-name brands. They shop in multi-brand stores, and are influenced primarily by what friends and family recommend. They are mainly in mature markets, but also in China.
- The Disillusioned (9% of spending, at an average €800 per year): These are mostly baby boomer shoppers who suffer from “luxury fatigue.” They purchase leather goods and beauty products. They look for products that last more than one season, but are unswayed by brand messaging or advertising. They tend to shop infrequently and shop online when they can. The segment is dominated by women. They are found in the United States, Europe and Japan.
- The Wannabe (5% of spending, at an average €500 per year): These predominantly female shoppers look for entry-level items in beauty and shoes, valuing affordability, and are highly likely to mix and match outside of the luxury spectrum. They are impulse shoppers who demonstrate little brand loyalty, primarily influenced by what their friends say and what they see in fashion publications. They come from the global middle class, especially in the United States, Western Europe and new consumers in Eastern Europe.
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