meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Business of Fashion Podcast

How Is Luxury Customer Service Evolving? | Transforming Luxury

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 27 September 2021

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In recent decades, the race to attract and retain customers saw dizzying amounts of money spent on clienteling — the industry term for building a 1 on 1 relationship with customers. Today, for major players of scale with the resources to invest in it, successfully digitising personalised in store service, which generates much high conversion rates through recommendations and experience, is being looked to as a key driver of future competitive advantage.

Indeed, the luxury service revolution is now rooted in creating a single customer view, enabling businesses to guide an individual consumer to the products and services it offers that match their specific needs. An opportunity that stems from significant shifts in generational attitudes towards data sharing and its use.

To discover what this means for the future of the luxury goods industry, BoF spoke with three global authorities to share their insights.

Sebastian Siemiatkowski is the CEO and co-founder of Klarna. In 15 years, Siemiatkowski has grown Klarna into one of Europe’s largest financial institutions, which provides alternative payment services to over 90 million shoppers, partnering with over 250,000 retailers globally and its own direct-to-consumer shopping app.

“The whole purpose of digitalisation is utilising data to create value. It’s the information that allows us to create richer experiences. If you sit down and have a [...] conversation with a consumer and you say, ‘yes, you are in control of what data is being shared and you have full transparency, and if you then would be willing to share some specific aspects of your data in order to get a better experience, a better price, a better whatever it might be,’ then the answer is always going to be yes.”

Holli Rogers is chair of renowned concept store Browns and chief brand officer of its parent company, Farfetch. Rogers quadrupled Browns’ business while CEO between 2015 and 2021. Previously, Rogers held roles at Chanel and Neiman Marcus before joining Net-a-Porter as a founding member in 2002.

“In the past as everything has been separate and disparate in terms of the different technologies. When you speak to different businesses everyone talks about, ‘yeah, I’ve got a client telling app. We use WhatsApp.’ But actually if you break it down, none of them are connected one to the other. So you don’t get a single customer view. It’s this idea of how do you pull all of these pieces together in one space, collecting all of these hundreds of data points that allow you to give the customer what they want when they want.”

Melissa Morris is the founder and designer of Métier, an independent leather maison best known for its logo-free handbags, travel bags and accessories. Prior to launching Métier in 2017, Morris studied sculpture and business at Emory University before working for Armani, Helmut Lang and Belstaff.

“The bespoke aspect of our business is such a great way for us to deepen our relationships with our clients and also get a really clear understanding of what’s missing in the assortment and gives me a clear direction on what to make next. What I’ve found is when I’ve gotten one bespoke request, what’s good for one is good for everyone. So a lot of our bespoke requests that I’ve been brought into the line have turned out to be big successes.”

Follow the series to ensure you never miss an episode and discover actionable insights into the opportunities and challenges a redefined industry will bring and how luxury’s transformation will impact your business.

Sign up for BoF’s Daily Digest newsletter.

For comments, questions, or speaker ideas, please e-mail: [email protected].

For all sponsorship enquiries, it’s: [email protected].



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I'm Robin Mery Pratt and this is Transforming Luxury, a new podcast series from the Business of Fashion

0:07.5

in which we're investigating how market disruption, new technology and growing consumer scrutiny

0:12.9

are driving transformative change in the $300 billion luxury goods market over a special six-episode series presented in partnership with Kana.

0:21.6

Today, we're talking about luxury service.

0:24.6

From the emergence of Paris's oak couture industry,

0:27.6

where names like Charles Worth and Madame Gresh were becoming the prototype luxury brands

0:32.6

among European and American elites, luxury service was defined by how well specialist businesses catered to the

0:39.0

unique demands of their uniquely demanding clientele.

0:43.5

As the personal luxury goods industry grew and globalized over the succeeding century, it

0:48.2

maintained much of the spirit of the Couturias and Savois-Faire Maisons that founded it, the

0:52.9

race to attract and retain the customers rich enough

0:55.5

to afford the ever more expensive items produced by competing luxury brands

0:59.5

has seen dizzying amounts of money spent on clientelling,

1:03.1

the industry term for building a one-on-one relationship with customers.

1:07.3

But today, market leaders' ambitions are even higher,

1:10.7

using technology to make the personalised

1:12.4

experiences once only available for the global elite, accessible to larger and larger groups

1:17.1

of consumers, while mapping those consumers' desires and interests in previously unimaginable

1:22.3

new ways, building luxurious service that is cohesive, connected and critically effective across the

1:29.5

multitude of touchpoints consumers can now access brands through.

1:35.4

But before we talk about Luxury's personalized service going digital, I want to kick off

1:39.3

rooted in the physical world.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Business of Fashion, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Business of Fashion and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.