Thursday, October 17, 2013

How the Other Half Saves

Roger Vivier showroom in New York City
Roger Vivier sales are especially fun if you and your friends are the only customers who know about them.

Photo by Andy Kropa/Getty Images for Roger Vivier








Excerpted from Bargain Fever: How to Shop in a Discounted World by Mark Ellwood, out now from Portfolio.














No shoe brand gets Mollie Fitzgerald more pumped than Roger Vivier. “It’s a classic look that’s not going out of style. I travel a lot and I like the fact the heels aren’t sky-high—they work just as well with a suit for a client dinner as with blue jeans,” says the Pittsburgh-based owner of a travel agency, a WASPish blonde with a weakness for pearls and an earthy laugh. “I must have 18 or 20 pairs.” French cobbler Vivier invented the stiletto in the 1950s, long before Louboutin and his ilk stepped up to start selling shoes. Today, the Roger Vivier brand is aimed squarely at the well-heeled, charging between $500 and $1,000 per exquisitely designed pair. Stateside, the brand’s distribution is exclusive, far from oversupplied—restricted to only half a dozen outlets, including its own jewel box-like store on New York’s Upper East Side.










Even Vivier, however, makes an occasional misstep, with a few pairs left unsold at the end of each season. Maybe one style was too outrĂ© for a practical American woman, or Fitzgerald and her fellow regulars just didn’t shop enough. With fresh styles looming, there’s pressure on Vivier to quickly liquidate whatever dawdling stock remains. It would never hold a clearance event, though; like many ultra-luxury brands, the cobbler is wary of reminding shoppers too blatantly that it’s blowing a discount dog whistle, one that only certain customers can hear. Rather, Vivier hosts an invisible sale, hidden in plain sight.












Fitzgerald is one of the elite few made privy to this retail speakeasy. “I get a gorgeous engraved card, an invitation to the private sale, about two days before it’s happening,” she explains. The invitation contains Mission: Impossible–style instructions. For a short time, it notes, small dotted stickers (blue for 30 percent off, red for 40 percent) will appear on the soles of certain shoes; otherwise, but for a tiny tented “SALE” card in the window (a legal mandate), there will be no mark of markdowns. It’s the silver lining for longtime loyalists like Fitzgerald. Walk-ins from the street who inspect a shoe and spot the same dot will be told it’s stocktaking (dismissive and deceptive, sure, but technically true). Calling the subterfuge “a huge pain in the ass,” one former sales assistant explains that he was asked to demur when casual passersby would dawdle or ask what the dots meant. It was easy, given the minimal evidence. “This tiny, tiny-ass little [sale sign] in the front window. You literally could walk by and never notice it.” Hopefully at least in some killer shoes.










Vivier isn’t alone. Luxury brands like this face a quandary: the new lure of mass-market appeal (and profits) versus the ease of operating the old-fashioned way, as a contained, almost cottage industry. Inevitably almost everyone, from Chanel to Dior via Prada and Armani, has opted for the former. The price for such expansion, for reaching women from Manhattan, Kan., to Manhattan, New York City, has been steep. Larger volumes carry bigger risks: Mistakes are magnified, overruns greater.










Imagine a pap snap of Paris Hilton toting a certain bag turns sales of it toxic overnight. Suddenly, no one wants to buy that purse. In such a case, where demand drops almost instantly, the increase in production volume is lethal. It means that dozens, perhaps hundreds, of the style are now doomed never to sell, or at least sell at full price. Opting to avoid the public humiliation of a mass-market markdown, such brands hold sales in secret, discreetly liquidating their upscale merchandise without damaging their PLU cachet. These events are positioned as a thank-you to existing customers rather than a desperate attempt to clear the warehouse shelves. “I suppose it makes me feel like it’s a loyalty thing. Any way to say thank you, we appreciate you,” Fitzgerald admits, glowing about the 45 percent off she nabbed during a recent Vivier blowout. “You have the feeling you’re being rewarded—the store is open to the public during those days, but you’re getting the first dibs. It’s just like elite frequent fliers are upgraded to first class all the time.”










The luxury world has even developed its own euphemism for that approach, of putting shoppers at the center of the sale: clienteling. Such glad-handed flattery is intended to prize banknotes from the notable, whether by remembering their birthdays or offering them VIP-only bargains. Many other brands have adopted a similar sale-on-the-down-low strategy to Vivier’s. For most, a simultaneous and invisible sale like that is too logistically complex, but there are other ways to limit the best deals to the best customers. Ralph Lauren, for example, hosts biannual events where markdowns begin long before the traditional, flashy signage appears. Regular customers are notified that it’s starting, so they can shop the inventory at a secret discount of up to 40 percent before the markdown becomes public—and the hoi polloi arrive to pick the inventory clean. Unlike chez Vivier, though, if an uninvited shopper wanders off the street and buys something, the sale still applies. The drop-in shopper doesn’t know he’ll get a discount, and will be surprised at the register to receive 40 percent off an item that he was already prepped to buy at full price. This makes the sale gratifyingly insiderish for regulars, and a pleasant bonus for walk-ins. After that 48-hour-or-so window, the shop launches a conventional, heavily promoted sale.










Ralph Lauren doesn’t stop there. In a touch that might be dubbed clienteling-plus, VIPs receive a card for an extra 15 percent discount. Those prices are 55 percent less than standard retail, or more than half off, before there’s even a nod to the sale to the casual passerby. Such cherry-picking is known as presale or pre-shop, and has become commonplace.


















Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/life/fashion/2013/10/roger_vivier_shoes_on_sale_if_you_know_the_right_person_discount_luxury.html
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