State of Lux

The Changing State of Luxury

Rarely has there been a more aptly titled presentation for a blog post.  This is @timstock’s beautiful and informative deck, which tackles a number of pressing luxury issues and illustrations of where we’re at.

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Facebook Fashion Index

Posted in Fashion, Insight, Social media, Trends by stateoflux on February 8, 2011

Just stumbled upon the very handy Facebook Fashion Index by Stylophane. Well worth bookmarking.

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Fashion brands in a digital world

Posted in Insight, Online marketing, Opinion, Trends by stateoflux on July 1, 2010

The following article, written by State of Lux co-editor Chris Mair,  is currently featured in Just-Style.

It’s been a busy couple of years for fashion marketers looking to establish a strong digital presence. But as fashion brands realise how to make these platforms work for them, they are genuinely beginning to innovate in the field of digital marketing, writes Chris Mair.

In the early digital years fashion brands were notoriously slow starters when it came to developing their brands online. There were some notable exceptions, such as Diesel and Nike. But for the most part brands, especially luxury ones, were reluctant to cede control and invest in anything other than their beloved glossies.

If a couple of years is a long time in fashion, in digital it is an eternity. The past few years have witnessed some of the most dramatic changes to the digital landscape in its short lifetime.

The explosion of social networking, the ever-expanding blogosphere and a feast of powerful new platforms to consume content have all contributed to a new type of web. A web that marketers will ignore at their own peril.

In the fashion sphere, one of the early signs that tides were turning was the sudden trend amongst catwalk brands to sacrifice front-row show seats typically reserved for fashion’s editorial elite in favour of a new breed of ambitious upstart.

Brands such as D&G and Dior helped make celebrities out of influential bloggers including Tavi, Bryan Boy and Scott Schuman.

Social networking shift
Another signal that fashion businesses had begun to take digital seriously was the influx of major labels onto the social networks.

Since 2009, a presence on Facebook and Twitter has become almost obligatory, with very few fashion companies failing to take ownership of their brands within these spaces.

Initially brands struggled with the concept of social platforms. Allowing customers to voice their opinions publicly and restrictive creative capabilities were not ideals that the fashion industry aspired to. But nowadays fashion brands are appearing much more comfortable with social media.

As understanding and acceptance of social media evolves, so brands are beginning to realise how they can make these platforms work for them. And as their confidence grows so we are witnessing, for the first time, fashion brands genuinely beginning to innovate in the field of digital marketing.

The recent launch of Levi’s social shopping experience is a good example. Less than two weeks had passed since Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg announced his company’s crusade to make a web where “the default is social” before Levi’s started taking advantage of it.

The new Levi’s store seamlessly incorporates a range of Facebook’s latest social functionality, allowing it to tap into its users’ social graphs. It’s a very well executed project and is very much a sign of things to come.

New breed of digital thinking
Another forward-thinking fashion brand is Burberry which, under the watch of Christopher Bailey, has pioneered a new breed of digital thinking for luxury fashion brands.

The company made headlines recently with the launch of Art of the Trench, a visual compilation of images submitted by its fans in tribute to the classic trench coat.

And it has just laid claim to another fashion first. During the live streamed broadcast of its spring/summer 2011 fashion show, as models walked down the runway, users could click on various outfits adding them to their ‘lookbook’ and discussing the collections live via Facebook and Twitter.

Uniqlo continues to deliver outstanding digital creative, but its most recent campaign was genius even by its standards. The Lucky Switch online advertising campaign involved a clever bit of technology that turned images on any website into instant win tickets, with losing tickets remaining as banner ads.

A widget was also provided to blog owners for their sites allowing them to share the winning opportunities and promote the activity to their users. The activity generated over 3m clicks and contributed to increased sales of 120%.

What makes brands like these stand out in the digital universe? Sadly there is no magic formula to a successful digital strategy.

But a common thread amongst these and other successful digital marketers is that they put digital at the heart of their marketing strategy. To these brands digital marketing is not a nice-to-have, it’s the single most important element to the marketing mix.

Chris Mair is strategy director at Airlock, a London based digital agency with specialist experience in the fashion and luxury sector. Airlock’s clients have included Diesel, Burberry,Wrangler, Levis and Swarovski. Chris Mair is also co-editor of State of Lux, a blog focused on digital marketing within the fashion and luxury sector.

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Pokeware & Video Hotspotting

Posted in E-commerce, Online marketing, Trends, Uncategorized by stateoflux on April 25, 2010

Following on from our last piece, there are some interesting developments around video hotspotting that could have major implications for fashion and luxury industries.  Essentially they ustilise the engagement of video and link it to ecom.  Pokeware is one of the players which is gunning specifically for fashion.  As this demo on Dazed illustrates, there is still some way to go (static links as opposed to dynamic real-time).  It’s a space that is going to hot up dramatically in the coming months.  BoF have done a nice piece on it here.

Burberry in 3D

Posted in Events, Trends by stateoflux on February 8, 2010


Burberry will create fashion history later this month (February) by globally streaming its fall/winter 2010/2011, womenswear catwalk show, live from London Fashion Week in 3D. It will, “enable people to experience the energy and atmosphere of this event from around the world,” said Burberry’s chief creative officer, Christopher Bailey. “3D technology will bring our global audience into the London show space allowing them to see the colours and fabrics, to hear the music and to be a part of that moment when it all finally comes together.’’

The catwalk show, to be held at The Chelsea College of Art, on the afternoon of February 23rd, will simultaneously be streamed directly to invitation-only, custom screening sites, designed by Bailey, and fully-equipped with 3D goggles, in New York, Paris, Dubai, Tokyo and Los Angeles.

Burberry is teaming up with SKY Television to utilise its 3D technology for the innovative project, which will include pre-show entertainment hosted from behind the scenes, backstage footage and red carpet arrivals.

Burberry will also live stream its show in 2D at http://live.burberry.com , where viewers can watch and comment on the show in real time using their Facebook and Twitter accounts.

(from telegraph.co.uk)

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Mobile luxury

Posted in Mobile, Online marketing, Trends by stateoflux on December 16, 2009

Luxury brands are finding themselves increasingly drawn towards mobile as an engagement platform, after all there are few technologies we have more intimate relationships with.  Dolce & Gabbana and Hugo Boss have both recently launched a number of mobile campaign strategies, including coupons(!) – not a marketing tool you would previously have associated with the luxury sector.  But now this type of retail promotion involves the shopper producing their iphone instead of a wad of crumpled paper from their pockets, which is a much more appealing route to discount.

Monocle x Blackberry 9700

Posted in Insight, News, Trends by stateoflux on December 3, 2009

A neat little collaboration between Blackberry and Monocle has produced 100 limited edition devices, which come preloaded with Monocle’s 25/25 travel guides.

We predict this is the tip of the iceberg for collaborations between ‘hardware’ (be it technology, luggage or apparel) and content providers because:

i) It offers luxury brands the opportunity to reinforce their positioning with like-minded brand

ii) They can sell more product with limited edition cache, and

iii) It offers real value to customers

(F)luxury

Posted in Insight, Trends by stateoflux on November 30, 2009

In 2010, luxury, and what it means to a bewildering number of ‘consumer segments’, will remain in flux.

So how will luxury brands fare in the next 12 months? What will define luxury over the next few years?

Check out the latest installment of Trendwatching for their views on the future of luxury.

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