Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century

This case describes the journey of Gucci, a hundred-year-old luxury fashion brand, and how over the years it has reinvented its designs and marketing strategy to grow its market dominance world-wide. In 2015, Gucci’s dismal performance over two successive years led the fashion house to rejig its top...

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Main Authors: KUMAR, Nirmalya, MITTAL, Sheetal
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2021
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cases_coll_all/350
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spelling sg-smu-ink.cases_coll_all-13472022-08-18T09:18:59Z Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century KUMAR, Nirmalya MITTAL, Sheetal This case describes the journey of Gucci, a hundred-year-old luxury fashion brand, and how over the years it has reinvented its designs and marketing strategy to grow its market dominance world-wide. In 2015, Gucci’s dismal performance over two successive years led the fashion house to rejig its top management, and bring in Marco Bizzarri, as the new President and CEO, and Alessandro Michele as the new creative director. By end-2019, the duo had achieved a remarkable turnaround, having tripled Gucci’s sales and quadrupled its profits over 2015. In the process, they had redefined ‘luxury’, transformed the high-end fashion industry and contemporised the Gucci brand by being avant-garde and embracing new paradigms such as purpose-driven, gender-neutral, cross-generational and digital-oriented strategies. However, despite regaining its position as the world's fastest growing luxury brand, Gucci had clocked a much lower annual growth in 2019 than 2018 and 2017. Did this indicate that the brand was losing its relevance and needed to reinvent itself again? Could Gucci’s recent foray into beauty products, making it more accessible and affordable, be diluting its brand equity? Additionally, the outbreak of the global pandemic Covid-19 in 2020 had plunged the luxury industry and the fashion house to new lows. The only silver lining was Gucci’ strong digital capability, which helped the brand recover some of its lost ground through an increase in online sales. With the pandemic relenting in China, the luxury market in the country had begun to revive since March 2020. However, it was difficult to predict how other markets would behave post-pandemic. Would consumers be driven by the need to compensate for the lost opportunity to consume, or would the pandemic induce in them values that encouraged cutbacks in discretionary spending? Moreover, if the other markets did not pick up, what would be the effect of an increased dependence of the luxury brands on Chinese consumers? The case is a springboard for enriching discussion on various topics ranging from industry analysis to emergence of new consumer groups, democratisation of luxury, digitisation, innovation-led branding, adoption of higher purpose values, and the impact of external events. The students will learn how a shift in the core consumer profile necessitates brands to overcome their inertia and embrace change across multiple facets. They will also get to examine the impact of the pandemic and overreliance on one nationality on the luxury industry. 2021-06-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cases_coll_all/350 https://smu.sharepoint.com/sites/admin/CMP/cases/SMU-21-BATCH%20%5BPDF-Pic%5D/SMU-21-0005%20%5BGucci%5D/SMU-21-0005%20%5BGucci%5D.pdf?CT=1623115554385&OR=ItemsView Case Collection eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Luxury brands Brand positioning Marketing strategy Digital marketing Consumer motivations Social networks Marketing
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Luxury brands
Brand positioning
Marketing strategy
Digital marketing
Consumer motivations
Social networks
Marketing
spellingShingle Luxury brands
Brand positioning
Marketing strategy
Digital marketing
Consumer motivations
Social networks
Marketing
KUMAR, Nirmalya
MITTAL, Sheetal
Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century
description This case describes the journey of Gucci, a hundred-year-old luxury fashion brand, and how over the years it has reinvented its designs and marketing strategy to grow its market dominance world-wide. In 2015, Gucci’s dismal performance over two successive years led the fashion house to rejig its top management, and bring in Marco Bizzarri, as the new President and CEO, and Alessandro Michele as the new creative director. By end-2019, the duo had achieved a remarkable turnaround, having tripled Gucci’s sales and quadrupled its profits over 2015. In the process, they had redefined ‘luxury’, transformed the high-end fashion industry and contemporised the Gucci brand by being avant-garde and embracing new paradigms such as purpose-driven, gender-neutral, cross-generational and digital-oriented strategies. However, despite regaining its position as the world's fastest growing luxury brand, Gucci had clocked a much lower annual growth in 2019 than 2018 and 2017. Did this indicate that the brand was losing its relevance and needed to reinvent itself again? Could Gucci’s recent foray into beauty products, making it more accessible and affordable, be diluting its brand equity? Additionally, the outbreak of the global pandemic Covid-19 in 2020 had plunged the luxury industry and the fashion house to new lows. The only silver lining was Gucci’ strong digital capability, which helped the brand recover some of its lost ground through an increase in online sales. With the pandemic relenting in China, the luxury market in the country had begun to revive since March 2020. However, it was difficult to predict how other markets would behave post-pandemic. Would consumers be driven by the need to compensate for the lost opportunity to consume, or would the pandemic induce in them values that encouraged cutbacks in discretionary spending? Moreover, if the other markets did not pick up, what would be the effect of an increased dependence of the luxury brands on Chinese consumers? The case is a springboard for enriching discussion on various topics ranging from industry analysis to emergence of new consumer groups, democratisation of luxury, digitisation, innovation-led branding, adoption of higher purpose values, and the impact of external events. The students will learn how a shift in the core consumer profile necessitates brands to overcome their inertia and embrace change across multiple facets. They will also get to examine the impact of the pandemic and overreliance on one nationality on the luxury industry.
format text
author KUMAR, Nirmalya
MITTAL, Sheetal
author_facet KUMAR, Nirmalya
MITTAL, Sheetal
author_sort KUMAR, Nirmalya
title Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century
title_short Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century
title_full Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century
title_fullStr Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century
title_full_unstemmed Gucci: Staying relevant in luxury over a century
title_sort gucci: staying relevant in luxury over a century
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2021
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cases_coll_all/350
https://smu.sharepoint.com/sites/admin/CMP/cases/SMU-21-BATCH%20%5BPDF-Pic%5D/SMU-21-0005%20%5BGucci%5D/SMU-21-0005%20%5BGucci%5D.pdf?CT=1623115554385&OR=ItemsView
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