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The Business of Fashion Podcast

How Dupe Culture is Challenging Traditional Luxury

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 22 October 2024

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A growing number of direct-to-consumer brands are disrupting the luxury market by offering high-quality alternatives at more affordable prices. As traditional luxury brands focus on the ultra-wealthy and fast fashion dominates the budget market, these “dupe” brands cater to middle-class consumers who feel priced out of luxury but still want value for their money. Through transparent pricing and savvy use of social media, they are reshaping how consumers think about value and quality.


“The term dupe stems from duplication, but it also does speak to consumer sentiment around pricing today - they do feel duped,” says e-commerce correspondent Malique Morris. “Luxury brands have exponentially raised their prices for hip products in a way that is locking out middle class shoppers who typically could splurge on a few nice bags or a few nice sweaters a year.” 


Key insights:


  • As luxury brands continue to hike prices for their most popular products, middle-class consumers are feeling increasingly excluded from the luxury market. This sentiment is fueling the rise of brands like Quince and Italic. “Luxury brands have exponentially raised their prices for hip products in a way that is locking out middle class shoppers who typically could splurge on a few nice bags or a few nice sweaters a year,” says Morris. “The check is going to come due for luxury brands to explain why their prices are so high.”


  • Dupe brands take advantage of this dynamic by being open about their costs, breaking down exactly how much it takes to produce their items and what they’re selling them for. “Dupe brands are almost annoyingly transparent about pricing in terms of breaking down,” Morris explains. “That’s refreshing for middle-class shoppers who are seeing the prices of things like milk and eggs rise inexplicably. Outside of this vague bogeyman of inflation, their dreams of owning a Chanel bag is moving further away with no real explanation on that front either.” 


  • Platforms like TikTok and Instagram have been instrumental in the rise of dupe brands, where influencers showcase cheaper alternatives to high-end products. However, the sustainability of this trend is uncertain. “If consumers stop caring about dupes and engagement goes down, then social media leverage on this front will die out for these brands, but right now, it really is a boon for them,” says Morris.
  • While price is the main draw for dupe brands now, they will need to evolve beyond being simply the cheaper alternative. “What is our differentiator beyond offering good prices now? What is our storytelling? What are our products that are unique to us? If dupe brands can answer those questions, they’ll stop being seen as just cheaper versions,” says Morris. 


Additional Resources:



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion where each week we delve

0:12.1

into our most popular BOF professional stories with the correspondence who created them. I'm

0:17.5

senior correspondent Sheena Butler Young. And I'm executive editor Brian Baskin.

0:22.1

Today we're talking about dupe culture.

0:24.8

Dupes are everywhere these days, from Lulu Lemon's leggings on Amazon to the ever-copied

0:29.4

Botega Veneta tear drop earrings.

0:31.5

And of course, Trader Joe's Brazilian nut buttercream bears a striking resemblance to

0:36.2

Seoul Day Gennaro's boom boom cream.

0:38.5

We're looking at brands like quince and Italic that have gained traction by offering high

0:42.7

quality alternatives to luxury items at lower price points. Their success tells us a lot about

0:48.0

how today's shoppers are navigating a market where traditional luxury brands are focused on the

0:52.4

1% and fast fashion dominates the budget conscious end.

0:56.4

With us today is B-O-F correspondent Malik Moris, who has recently written on the topic.

1:01.0

Hi, Malik, welcome to the Deep Brief podcast.

1:03.4

Hi, thank you so much for having me.

1:05.0

I always love coming on here.

1:06.8

So I want to start with asking both of you, have you shopped a dupe website before and what did you buy? Brian?

1:13.3

I sure have. I have used both quince and italic, although not for fashion. I bought a pasta press off of italic and I bought linen sheets off of quince. I was very happy with the quality of both. The pasta was delicious, and I'm sleeping very well.

1:29.6

Some interesting quirks, I would say the shipping time is quite lengthy. It's not what you're

1:34.3

used to with e-commerce. It actually took two weeks for both these items to arrive. But quality-wise,

1:39.6

it's just like something you would buy in any store. And I guess, like, Malik, my, my question for you is,

1:46.1

what is the difference between a dupe and a counterfeit? I mean, when I bought that pasta

...

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