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218 PART 3 CONNECTING WITH CUSTOMERS
of two. To enhance its upscale reputation and glamorous appeal, the brand is endorsed by high-profile
supermodels in ads and fashion shows.Through the years,Victoria’s Secret has often delivered 25 percent
or more annual sales growth, selling through its stores, catalogs, and company Web site, and posted
$5.1 billion in revenues in 2008. 15
INCOME Income segmentation is a long-standing practice in such categories as
automobiles, clothing, cosmetics, financial services, and travel. However, income does not
always predict the best customers for a given product. Blue-collar workers were among the first
purchasers of color television sets; it was cheaper for them to buy these sets than to go to
movies and restaurants.
Many marketers are deliberately going after lower-income groups, in some cases discovering
fewer competitive pressures or greater consumer loyalty. 16 Procter & Gamble launched two
discount-priced brand extensions in 2005—Bounty Basic and Charmin Basic—whose success led
to the introduction in 2009 of Tide Basic, although this extension was later withdrawn from the
market. At the same time other marketers are finding success with premium-priced products.
When Whirlpool launched a pricey Duet washer line, sales doubled their forecasts in a weak
economy, due primarily to middle-class shoppers who traded up.
Increasingly, companies are finding their markets are hourglass shaped as middle-market U.S.
consumers migrate toward both discount and premium products. 17 Companies that miss out on
this new market risk being “trapped in the middle” and seeing their market share steadily decline.
Recognizing that its channel strategy emphasized retailers like Sears selling primarily to the middle
class, Levi-Strauss introduced premium lines such as Levi’s Capital E to upscale retailers
Bloomingdales and Nordstrom, and the less-expensive Signature by Levi Strauss & Co. line to mass
market retailers Walmart and Target. “Marketing Insight: Trading Up, Down, and Over” describes
the factors creating this trend and what it means to marketers.
• Old Luxury brand extensions extend historically high-priced brands
down-market while retaining their cachet, such as the Mercedes-
Benz C-class and the American Express Blue card.
• Masstige goods, such as Kiehl’s skin care and Kendall-Jackson
Marketing InsightInsight
Marketin g wines, are priced between average middle-market brands and
superpremium Old Luxury brands. They are “always based on
emotions, and consumers have a much stronger emotional
engagement with them than with other goods.”
Trading Up, Down, and Over To trade up to brands that offer these emotional benefits, consumers
often “trade down” by shopping at discounters such as Walmart and
Michael Silverstein and Neil Fiske, the authors of Trading Up, observed Costco for staple items or goods that confer no emotional benefit but still
an increasing number of middle-market consumers periodically trading deliver quality and functionality.As one consumer explained in rationalizing
up to what they call “New Luxury” products and services “that possess why her kitchen boasted a Sub-Zero refrigerator,a state-of-the-art Fisher &
higher levels of quality, taste, and aspiration than other goods in the Paykel dishwasher, and a $900 warming drawer but a giant 12-pack of
category but are not so expensive as to be out of reach.” For example, Bounty paper towels from a warehouse discounter:“When it comes to this
consumers might trade up to such brands as Starbucks coffee, Aveda house, I didn’t give in on anything. But when it comes to food shopping or
shampoo, or Viking ranges, depending in part on the emotional benefits cleaning products, if it’s not on sale, I won’t buy it.”
they gain in the trade. In a subsequent book titled Treasure Hunt, Silverstein notes that
Thanks to the trading-up trend, New Luxury goods sell at higher 82 percent of U.S. consumers trade down in five or more categories
volumes than traditional luxury goods, although priced higher than con- (what he calls “treasure hunting”), whereas 62 percent focus on trading
ventional middle-market items. The authors identify three main types of up in the two categories that provide the most emotional benefits. This
New Luxury products: makes the new consumer “part martyr and part hedonist,” willingly
• Accessible superpremium products, such as Victoria’s Secret sacrificing on a number of purchases in order to experience enhanced
underwear and Kettle gourmet potato chips, carry a significant benefits from a handful of others.
premium over middle-market brands, yet consumers can readily Silverstein believes successful firms will offer one of two kinds of
trade up to them because they are relatively low-ticket items in value: New Luxury or Treasure Hunting. Brands that offer opportunities
affordable categories. to trade up, such as Coach, Victoria’s Secret, Grey Goose, and Bath &