Byravee Iyer
Sep 17, 2013

Experiences, social sharing, are key to luxury marketing in China

SPIKES ASIA 2013 - Without offering luxury experiences, brands are doing more harm than good in their attempts to woo luxury buyers, Dan Carter, vice-president and senior creative director, Jack Morton Worldwide (China), told a Spikes Asia Forum audience today.

Dan Carter
Dan Carter

Carter noted that consumption trends are shifting in China. Chinese consumers are beginning to seek luxury experiences versus luxury products. There has also been a dip in ostentatious wealth that China is known for. For example, sales of imported wines and Swiss watches have slipped.

“It’s part of a greater aspiration to align themselves with power players,” he said of luxury buyers, adding that it’s about moving from rich to noble—described as educated, sophisticated and self aware. “Consumers ask, 'What is this brand going to say about me', and this presents an enormous opportunity for luxury brands,” Carter added.

Many luxury brands have either underutilised or completely ignored the experience and social components. But a few luxury brands are doing it right. Carter’s talk focused on alcohol beverage brand Johnnie Walker and auto company Porsche’s efforts in social media.

Johnnie Walker

Diageo’s Johnnie Walker launched a hugely popular luxury campaign that included opening two experiential brand centers in China. The company wanted to bring its 200-year-old brand to life through the history of craftsmanship. The two Johnnie Walker Houses in Beijing and Shanghai feature bars, museums and even a members-only area.

Carter said the initiative stemmed from consumers’ desire for deeper knowledge of whiskey. “They could afford it but they couldn’t understand it,” Carter observed.

Johnnie Walker wanted to engage next-generation buyers too, without diluting the brand. So they took a tiered approach. “There is no one-size-fits-all strategy in luxury marketing,” Carter stressed. Johnnie Walker launched high-energy brand experiences targeted at young consumers. For example, brand experts were sent out to hip bars in cities to seek out whiskey drinkers and ultimately invite them to the Johnnie Walker Houses.  

At the same time, the brand reserved its personal one-on-one experiences for the ultra-premium market. It hosted dinners and facilitated networking events to educate the highest echelon.

The result: Since opening the houses, sales of ultra-premium whiskey in China have shot up 64 per cent year-on-year.

Porsche

Porsche took a targeted dip into mass marketing without diluting its brand. The auto company’s brand had high awareness in China, but no one understood what it was known for, apart from the fact that it was an expensive car. Carter said. 

Jack Morton Worldwide and Porsche thus decided to work together to bring the brand’s legacy to life in China. To turn people from casual motoring fans to hardcore Porsche enthusiasts without diluting the brand, Jack Morton Worldwide suggested a multicity road show to engage a larger audience.

The event was focused and had an enormous online component. The key was to ensure that Porsche owners and potential owners were given a higher level of service while the general public was also included, but at a lower tier. For those who couldn’t attend, Porsche linked the event to its social-media pages.

The multiday event focused on four things: Porsche’s racing history, DNA, lifestyle, and performance. To promote the event, the brand created a dynamic online experience center. Fliers were distributed across premium restaurants and venues.

At the event, visitors were provided with RFID gadgets that they could scan to update their social-media profiles. Porsche flew out models from its museum in Stuttgart, Germany. To help people understand its racing lineage, it included high-tech simulators in the experience. And it partnered with high-end brands in China.

Members of the top audience, consisting of Porsche owners and potential owners, were allowed to drive the cars on a race track. The general public was allowed to visit the race track. Where VIP guests were offered personal tours of the museum, the general public was treated to an audio tour. The event had 7000 attendees and garnered 100,000 unique posts across social media. 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

Creative Minds: Jereek Espiritu pushes his ideas to ...

An intervention by a computer repairman drove Jereek Espiritu away from a career flying helicopters to a world of creative leaps and flights of fancy.

2 hours ago

UM launches Full Colour Media with a focus on ...

Full Colour Media is underpinned by a body of custom research conducted with more than 10,000 brands and with 5 million data points, culminating in a ‘Brand Patterns’ proprietary model designed to grow and differentiate brands.

3 hours ago

Campaign Global Agency of the Year Awards 2024: ...

With the final entry deadline for Agency of the Year Global fast approaching on Tuesday 18 February, we speak to judges who share their views on the biggest opportunities and challenges for 2025, and what they hope to see in winning entries.

3 hours ago

The 'laziest influencer' makes cleaning effortless—l...

S.C. Johnson's new mold-cleaning campaign features their least energetic spokesperson ever—a sloth whose main qualification is mastering the art of minimal effort.