With the United States election over, President-elect Donald Trump and the Republican-led Congress are seen as a potential boon to the jewelry business.
Register now for the nation's premier conference focused on how the luxury business will rapidly evolve in 2017, calling for a reset to Luxury 2.0. Speaker list, agenda and registration link in article.
Department store chain Barneys New York is offering an antidote to the turbulent geopolitical climate around the world with a holiday campaign that aims to unite.
Richemont-owned French leather goods maker Lancel is safeguarding consumers’ belongings through RFID technology included in its Explorer luggage collection.
As a part of its Global Shopping Festival, Alibaba celebrated a massive boon of more than $7 billion gross merchandise volume (GMV), all settled through its Alipay payment platform.
Time, Inc. recently closed a multi-year deal with the inventor of outstream video to help monetize video advertising across all of its constituent publications.
Luxury Daily's live news from Nov. 14 - Johnnie Walker starts “whisky conversation” with Middle Eastern travelers; Guerlain spurs donations in Movember grooming effort; Chatsworth House’s fashionable history comes to life in Gucci-sponsored exhibition; Ferragamo’s net profit sees slight uptick in first 9 months of 2016.
Today in luxury marketing - Why luxury brands still aren’t embracing sustainable fashion; Tesla owners plagued by service delays; Richemont plans more than 200 Swiss job cuts amid watch woes; Donald Trump favors bespoke Brioni suits.
Inboxes are still plagued by spam, social media has turned into an ad platform, and even modern solutions such as live chat are often impersonal and difficult to use.
The digital presence of luxury brands has affected offline sales. Luxury shoppers tend to research online before taking the plunge and spending big. For the luxury retailers, there is a lot of potential riding on strong Web performance, particularly speed and availability.
The Trump victory and ascendancy to the highest office in the United States has thrown fashion and luxury brands into a tizzy – not surprising given that they had overwhelming thrown their weight behind Hillary Clinton.