Alistair
AH fanatic
- Joined
- May 25, 2018
- Messages
- 807
- Reaction score
- 2,783
- Location
- Milwaukee, WI
- Media
- 2
- Articles
- 1
- Hunted
- Scotland, Ireland & England
I'd argue Rolex are going more the luxury route in terms of business strategy.Reminds me of the path Rolex took compared to say patek phillipe.
Among watch aficionados Rolex is seen as a mid market brand.
However, among the public as a whole (99.9%) of people, they are seen as a top end luxury product.
In doing so, Rolex has turned into a behemoth. They dwarf the premium makers by 100 fold.
It is a tight rope to walk, but it can be done.
They're not 'ultra premium' really, but they do a lot of marketing to people who aren't watch people, and will never buy a Rolex to convince the general public that they are.
Beyond that, they control production levels, limit availability, raise prices each year. They certainly don't offer an 'entry level' option, or at least, when they do it's under the Tudor brand.
I think that if they did do a model at say $1000-$2000, which anyone could buy and didn't have a waitlist, their brand equity would take a big hit.
We shall see if the entry level Rigby strategy does the same thing I guess.