Jones_JAliya_Fake it until you
Transcription
Jones_JAliya_Fake it until you
Fake it Until You Make it: The Impact of Counterfeits on the Luxury Market J’Aliya Jones Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Fine Arts in Luxury and Fashion Management at The Savannah College of Art and Design © August, 2013, J’Aliya Shantee Jones The author hereby grants SCAD permission to reproduce and to distribute publicly paper and electronic thesis copies of document in whole or in part in any medium now known or hereafter created. Signature of Author and Date_____________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ ______/_______/_______ Professor Sarah Collins Committee Chair _______________________________________________________ ______/_______/_______ Professor Pat Trautman Committee Member _______________________________________________________ ______/_______/_______ Professor Catherine Ramsdell Committee Member Fake it Until You Make it: The Impact of counterfeits on the Luxury Market A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the Luxury and Fashion Management Department in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Fine Arts in Luxury and Fashion Management Savannah College of Art and Design By J’Aliya S. Jones Atlanta, Georgia August 2013 Dedication This is dedicated to everyone who wouldn’t let me give up, no matter how hard I tried. THANK YOU! Acknowledgements I would like to thank my thesis committee— Sarah Collins, Pat Trautman, and Catherine Ramsdell—for swooping in at the last minute, when everything seemed to be going wrong, and getting me through this monster of a paper. To my family for giving me the swift kick I needed every time I wanted quit. Thank you for your love, support, and putting up with my insistence to read every last word of this thesis. I Love you and couldn’t have done it without you. To James, the longest hour of my life, thank you for supporting me through this process and dealing with the good, and bad writing days. To Tamara Joyner, who got me through my years at SCAD, and always had a smile for me no matter how crazy of a question, or crisis, I had for her To all the professors who have gotten me this far and never gave up on me. Table of Contents List of Images .....................................................................................1 Abstract ...............................................................................................2 Introduction ........................................................................................3 Image One ............................................................................................3 Image Two ...........................................................................................5 Evolution of Luxury fashion: From Ancient Egyptians to Modern Luxury ..........................................9 Before the Nineteenth Century .................................................................10 Table One .............................................................................................14 The Nineteenth Century and Beyond .........................................................18 American Fashion ...................................................................................21 Fashion and the Twentieth Century ...........................................................22 Intellectual Property Rights ................................................................24 Trademark and Copyright Laws: A History ...............................................................................................25 Table Three ...........................................................................................27 Image Three ..........................................................................................28 Image Four ............................................................................................28 Counterfeit Culture ..............................................................................31 Image Five ............................................................................................36 Counterfeit Crimes...............................................................................38 Counterfeit Grading System .....................................................................46 Grade B/AB............................................................................................47 Grade A.................................................................................................47 Grade Ultra A .........................................................................................48 Methodology and Fieldwork .................................................................53 Meaning of Counterfeits ......................................................................56 Theory of Distinction ...............................................................................58 Democratization .....................................................................................60 Omnivore ..............................................................................................61 Counterfeit Consumer .............................................................................62 Table Four .............................................................................................63 Counterfeit Social Network ..................................................................66 Counterfeit Consumption .....................................................................73 Image Six ..............................................................................................77 Scenario Plan: The Future of Louis Vuitton and Counterfeit Goods .............................80 Company Challenge ................................................................................81 Company Profile .....................................................................................81 Environmental Issues ..............................................................................82 Counterfeit Impact .................................................................................84 Table Five ..............................................................................................84 Impact/ Uncertainty Matrix ......................................................................85 Table Six ...............................................................................................85 Scenario Grid .........................................................................................86 Table Seven ...........................................................................................86 Visualization of the Future...................................................................87 Scenario: Obsession ...............................................................................88 Scenario: Back to Basics .........................................................................89 Scenario: Cheap Chic ..............................................................................90 Scenario: Designer Imposter....................................................................91 Implications for Louis Vuitton .............................................................92 Table Eight ............................................................................................92 Scenario Recommendations.................................................................93 Table Nine .............................................................................................93 Thoughts/Recommendations...............................................................94 Terms ..................................................................................................101 Work Cited ...........................................................................................106 Appendix A ..........................................................................................111 Illustrations.........................................................................................115 List of Figures - See citation page for full image source citations. Image No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Image Name Coach Signature Scribble Hamptons Weekend Hobo Handbag Global Counterfeit Market Value Coca-Cola Bottles Tiffany & Co. Blue Boxes Proenza Schouler PS1 bag Vs. Target Personalized Louis Vuitton bags Page No. 3 5 28 28 36 77 1 Fake it Until You Make it: The Impact of Counterfeits on the Luxury Market J’Aliya Jones August 2013 Abstract The Counterfeit industry continues to grow throughout the world. The manufacturing, distribution, and selling of fake luxury is showing no sign of stopping, as consumers hungry for the next “it” bag, and a high status, continue to purchase billions of dollars in counterfeit merchandise. Counterfeits have plagued the luxury market for centuries, providing lowerclass consumers with an opportunity to fake their way into high-society. Mostly and underground industry, counterfeits provide both positive a negative effects, to the luxury market. This thesis will explore the impact of counterfeits on the luxury market, and will attempt to answer the question: Are counterfeits damaging to luxury brands and can they provide positive benefits to the brands being copied? 2 Fake it Until You Make it: The Impact of Counterfeits on the Luxury Market “I would be worried if my product wasn’t copied” - Patrizio Bertelli, Prada CEO Someone once said that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but for many luxury brands their imitators have left them feeling less than flattered. My interest in counterfeits started when I was 16 and I visited New York for the first time. Naturally I paid a visit to Canal Street, where I purchased my first counterfeit item, a Kangol bucket hat, a la 1980s LL Cool J. My true descent into counterfeit consumption occurred when I was 19 years old, and COACH released their Signature Multi-color Canvas Scribble bag. I had to have this bag, but the near $400 price tag didn’t really work for my college student budget, so my mother purchased a “replica” of the bag for me. The counterfeit version Image one was nearly identical to the genuine product, but cost much less. I deflected questions about whether the bag was real or not, by saying “it was a gift, so I’m not sure” or just flat out lying and saying it was real. 3 I was hooked and slowly began purchasing more and more counterfeit handbags and as long as I purchased items that fell within the affordable luxury category I was happy. It was my attempt at owning a Louis Vuitton backpack that changed my outlook on counterfeits. I had my brother buy a counterfeit version, during a business trip to New York. When I received the bag I was disappointed in the quality of the bag, it looked and felt fake, I was heartbroken. From then on I looked at counterfeits in a different light, I noticed their flaws and the differences in materials, and I was officially turned off by counterfeits, no matter how good they were. Counterfeits are a worldwide occurrence that continues to find a place within developed and developing countries. According to the International Anticounterfeiting Coalition, counterfeits are estimated to account for 5 to 7 percent of worldwide trade, or an estimated $600 billion annually. Since 1982, global trade of illegitimate goods have increased a staggering 10,000 percent, fuelled by an increase in consumer demand ("About counterfeiting," 09). E-commerce sites like E-Bay have also aided in the “spike” of counterfeit goods sold, making it easier to not only distribute fake goods, but also for consumers to acquire them, without having to leave the comforts and safety of home ("The spread of," 2010). It’s estimated that the sales of counterfeit goods via Internet sites reached $135 billion in 2010 ("The spread of," 2010). 4 Image Two Counterfeits have been defined as the unauthorized, close copies of labels, logos, or other distinctive markings, as well as the deliberate attempt to deceive consumers by copying and marketing goods bearing well known trademarks, generally together with packaging and product configuration, so that they look like they are made by a reputable manufacturer, when in fact 5 they are inferior copies (Hoe, Hogg & Hart, 2003).Counterfeits are known by a variety of names including, knockoffs, imitations, fakes, and copies. Though each of these names has a slightly different meaning, they all create a similar problem for businesses. Luxury fashion is one of the top victims of counterfeits. Other product categories plagued by counterfeits include: pharmaceuticals, cigarettes, automobile parts, cell phone parts, DVDs, alcohol, computer chips, video games, computer software, and even baby formula. The products being counterfeited are vast, if you can think it; it’s probably being reproduced. Some of these counterfeits threaten the safety of consumers, for example in Eastern China dozens of infants died from malnutrition due to consuming counterfeit formula that contained virtually no nutritional value ("Fake milk kills," 2004). According to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (via USA Today Finance), agents have seized 24 percent more shipments of counterfeits in the last fiscal year (ended September 30, 2011) than in its previous year. Three Hundred and twenty-five percent more goods have been counterfeited from 2002 to 2012, than in the previous decade. Counterfeit pharmaceuticals were up 200 percent in the 2011 fiscal year (O'Donnell, 2012). China, one of the worst offenders of counterfeiting, produced fakes that are estimated to have cost the U.S., Europe, and Japan more than $60 billion in retail sales in 2004 ("Handsbags at dawn," 2006). 6 Counterfeits have earned themselves a negative reputation, and in the past two decades, have come to be viewed as a threat to businesses, affecting a brand’s reputation, revenues, and profits. As the manufacturing and distribution of counterfeits continues to grow and be perceived as a greater threat, companies and government agencies are spending millions on legal teams and private investigators, who work with international custom officials to bust rings of organized counterfeiters. Louis Vuitton, one of the world’s most copied brands, is one of the most aggressive manufacturers. Vuitton employs forty in house lawyers and 250 outside private investigators. Along with aggressively policing counterfeits, companies are also employing various labeling techniques, including Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID (Betts, 2004). Some brands are using counterfeits to their advantage. Spanish brandy maker, Fundador used the counterfeiting of their product as a way to convert consumers of the fake brandy into legitimate consumers. Fundador developed generous advertising promotions on their bottle’s labels. Counterfeiters were unable to compete with, or copy, the advertisements because the offers changed every six weeks. Hoping to benefit from these promotional offers, consumers of the counterfeit brandy stopped purchasing the counterfeit product. The introduction of the promotion offers also led to easy brand recognition (Whitwell, 2012). Counterfeiting forced Fundador to think of ways to innovate their brand and increase brand loyalty. 7 Companies, especially luxury fashion brands, continue to struggle with counterfeits, but are they wasting millions trying to eradicate something they could be benefiting from? Counterfeits possibly provide cheap promotional opportunities that could assist in building and maintaining brand loyalty. This paper will seek to answer the question, Are counterfeits really bad for luxury businesses? I will argue that, illegal activity aside; counterfeits do not cannibalize a brand. In fact counterfeits help build brand awareness, allow brands access to new markets, provides a benchmark of a brand’s health, and increases sales of legitimate goods. Research has shown that counterfeits increase brand awareness in such a way, that as the economic climate of a country or an individual improves, sales migrate from counterfeits to the original, as well as force the authentic brand owner to protect, innovate, and expand its product services and markets to keep ahead of their imitators and squeeze out the competition. Through secondary and primary research, I will seek to prove that counterfeits hold more benefits, then cons, when associated with luxury fashion brands. 8 The Evolution of Luxury Fashion From Ancient Egyptians to Modern Luxury 9 Before someone can truly understand the allure of counterfeit luxury products, one must understand what luxury is, and how it has evolved into coveted part of societies all over the world. This section will explore how luxury fashion has morphed into the multi-billion dollar sector it is today. Before the Nineteenth Century Luxury is defined as an inessential, desirable item that is expensive or difficult to obtain, or the state of great comfort and extravagant living. The desire to live in comfort and have unique and expensive items is not a new concept, but in terms of fashion, the concept of luxury and its association with appearance, beauty, and fashion didn’t gain prominence until the ancient Egyptians (Okonkwo, 2007, p.15). In ancient Egyptian society, tradition and religion were deep-seated and clothing and appearance played a major role during religious and social ceremonies. The Egyptian belief in life after death and the elaborate rituals that were performed during burial ceremonies of dead nobles reinforced the role of luxury in clothing and beautifying corpses (Okonkwo, 2007, p.15). Regardless of social class, clothing for both men and women were primarily made for comfort and to keep the wearer cool, thus they were usually made from linen, the higher the status of the wearer, the thinner the linen ("Ancient egypt fashion," 2008). The wearing of jewelry, by both men and women became common during this time, and personal hygiene rises in 10 importance; as seen through a highly developed cosmetic sector (Okonkwo, 2007, p.16). Body cleansers, deodorants, and makeup were popular, as well as the use of razors and other hair removers since both men and women were to be clean-shaven from head to toe. Cosmetics such as Lipsticks, lip gloss, blush, and eyeliner also were popular among Egyptian society (Ead). The Cretan era led to the early Greek civilization of the 4th and 5th centuries BC, whose society showed more attachment to luxury fashions (Okonkwo, 2007, p.17). During this time period, fashion began to reflect an individual’s level of upbringing and education. Men and women’s fashion began to show distinct differences. Women’s fashion became more feminine and elegant, through style and fabric choice, while men’s fashion became more masculine and structured. Luxury was also revealed through the use of heavy jewelry that was used to indicate the wealth of the wearer (Okonkwo, 2007, p.17). Also during this period society appreciated luxury living and beauty. A well-developed beauty sector was established, with products ranging from eye shadows, lipsticks, and foundations. These products were widely used by women, as well as moisturizers and perfumes (Okonkwo, 2007, p.17). The Etruscan Empire was rich in gold and its society portrayed luxury and beauty through the use of gold. Etruscan aristocratic women flaunted their status by wearing heavy jewelry (Okonkwo, 2007, p.17). As the Etruscan Empire became the Roman Empire, it is believed that this is when 11 Italian fashion style was born. Fashion was a huge part of Italian society, so much so that the ruling government decreed the models and color of shoes of each social class, because shoe’s represented a mark of distinction. This factor contributed to the influence of talented designers and shoe craftsmen who were sought after by rich aristocrats and royal family members (Okonkwo, 2007, p.18). Since its development during the Roman Empire, Italy has remained one of the more superior countries for the manufacturing of shoes. According to Uche Okonkwo (2007, p.18) roman society also paved the way for several innovations in luxury fashion, notable among them are: 1.) The concept of elevated fashion was introduced by members of the royal family through elaborate dressing made with rare materials. 2.) Seasonal fashion was invented to cater to both the changing weather conditions and the changing taste of the fashion conscious society. 3.) Women’s fashion was prominently separated from men’s fashion, through the materials and colors used in the design and manufacture of clothes. 4.) The legendary private thermal baths and saunas were invented as well as the rich ingredients that were used to nourish the 12 body and improve the mind this concept was also exported to the town of Bath in England. 5.) Exercise and balloon balls were invented to enhance appearance. Moving into the era of the Byzantine Empire, the capital of Byzantine, Constantinople, was considered the richest and largest center of commerce and fashion of the period, which contributed to its influential role in the development of culture, fashion, and history. The Byzantine Empire also witnessed an even higher level of a taste and demand for luxury goods than the Romans (Okonkwo, 2007, p.19). During this time period, Emperor Justin I and his wife, Theodora were the equivalent of celebrity style high fashion. They emphasized the important role of clothes and appearance as a mark of distinction. Theodora was the first woman to exploit fashion as a source of power, wearing clothing made from expensive silks and brocades that were adorned with embroideries of gold and pearls (Okonkwo, 2007, p.19). Unlike the Italians of the Roman Empire, Emperor Justin I and Empress Theodora granted individuals the freedom to choose what they wanted to wear. This lead to an early form of fashion knock-offs, as women began imitating the dress patterns of the Empress, using cheaper materials. Like other eras before them, how one dressed and their appearance remained an indicator of wealth and status (Okonkwo, 2007, p.19). 13 As the Middle Ages started to emerge, between the 5th and 7th century, fashion came to a standstill. While the early period of the middle Ages was somewhat influenced by the style of Byzantine Empire, for the most part styles of the time were drab and ugly (Okonkwo, 2007, p.19). Notable Developments of the Middle Ages 1. England became known for its growing textile industry. 2. The influence of professional tailoring in France soared to such an extent that by the year 1300, there were 700 active tailors in Paris. 3. Luxury materials such as silk were heavily imported from Asia, whose textile industry was considered to be more advanced than Europe’s. 4. The rise of Italian influence in international fashion became visible. Table One The Renaissance era ushered in change in the way fashion was, and is, viewed. The Renaissance was a progressive period, with an explosion of cultural development and travel between the East and West. This period saw a rise in great Italian artists, and the birth of literature in Italy, France, Spain, and England (Okonkwo, 2007, p.20). Society’s outlook on art and fashion changed, fashion became an integral part of the Renaissance and clothing and accessories were, once again given the role of indicator of social class, as well as knowledge. Clothing became an investment, and even in 14 England tombstones bore descriptions of how the deceased dressed (Okonkwo, 2007, p.20). Other countries like Germany and Spain emerged as important fashion influencers, and Italy re-emerged as a strong fashion force, particularly in Rome, Florence, and Venice. Florence became a major center of jewelry production and Italy’s textile industry, which produced the best silk in Europe, grew significantly and contributed to Italy’s development into the authority of fashion and lifestyle (Okonkwo, 2007, p.21). It also during this time that women become obsessed with the concept of beauty, as luxury and art began to be fused together. “Women were ready to do anything to be beautiful and their influence in both fashion and society began to develop. The demand for beauty was so high that as early as 1582, a beauty book was written by Jean Liebaut, a Parisian doctor, titled L’Embellissment et Ornement de Corps Humaine (The Improvement and beautification of the Human Body). Also high-society women attended exclusive clubs where new fashion and beauty products were previewed.” (Okonkwo, 2007, p.21) It wasn’t until the Baroque era that France came into their own, within fashion and lifestyle, in Europe and the rest of the world. The King of France, Louis XIV, made this influence possible, his reign marked the return of 15 opulence and exuberance and his tastes in luxury influenced the royal families and aristocrats of the entire continent (Okonkwo, 2007, p.21). Louis XIV was a lover of fashion and thus supported the fashion industry through government reforms that provided incentives and financial aid to designers, artisans, and craftsmen. He also introduced policies that increased the export of French fashion goods and reduced the importing of foreign fashion goods. Due to these policies and incentives France emerged as the biggest supplier of luxury fashion goods in the world (Okonkwo, 2007, p.22). French magazines and newspapers were distributed throughout Europe and helped grow Frances fashion influence, and the social structure of the Baroque period led to the detachment of clothing from social class. Apparel production was no longer restricted to made-to-measure, which led to members of the middle class adopting similar styles of the upper-class (Okonkwo, 2007, p.22). Pearls also became heavily used all over the body as a way to advertise taste and status, the handbag also emerges has an important accessory (Okonkwo, 2007, p.23). While France was rising to become the center of fashion and lifestyle, Italy’s influence on fashion was fading. The Palace of Versailles was now the center of fashion and dictated fashion and lifestyle to the world. Known for their splendor and opulence, the Palace of Versailles’ taste for luxury was seen through the dress styles and fabrics made from very expensive 16 materials. Anyone that wanted to be recognized adopted the style that emerged from the Palace. Palace fashion led to the creation of haute mode high society fashion (Okonkwo, 2007, p.23). During the 1770s fashion magazines began to emerge from France, Germany, and England which aided in the emergence of English tailors, who would go on to develop a highly stylish and original English men’s fashion sector. Also around this time “fashionistas”, or fashion icons gained a prominent role in fashion. The style of notable French women would be copied throughout the world. These women included Madam Pompadour and Marie Antoinette, and they changed clothes frequently causing several women to go bankrupt attempting to imitate their style, much like women of today of traded food and rent money for shoes coveted by fictional character Carrie Bradshaw (Okonkwo, 2007, p.24). 17 The Nineteenth Century and Beyond The nineteenth century marked the beginning of modern luxury and was the launch of many of the luxury fashion houses that consumers covet today, brands like Cartier (1847), Louis Vuitton (1854), and Burberry (1856) (Okonkwo, 2007, p.25). Like periods before it, consumers of the nineteenth century used a person outward appearance as an indicator of one’s wealth and social status. Fashion was also being recognized as an important contributor to economic growth (Okonkwo, 2007, p.25). In France the government showed their support for the fashion and textile industry through the creation of incentives and favorable policies. It is also during this time that Paris rose as a world leader in textiles and fashion, which was mostly segmented into two parts: dressmaking, which was mostly controlled by highly influential women, and textile merchandizing and professional tailoring, which was mostly controlled by men (Okonkwo, 2007, p.25). As mentioned before, the nineteenth century marked the opening of some of the most coveted fashion houses of today, but it was in an Englishmen by the name of Charles Fredrick Worth (1825-1895), that changed the face of luxury and its marketing and merchandising style. The inventor of haute couture in 1858, Worth was the first prominent male couturier, and was the private designer of Napoleon’s wife, Empress Eugenie and other high society women (Okonkwo, 2007, p.25). 18 Worth also influenced the way luxury fashion was marketed, introducing models and private shows. He also utilized celebrities and influential women of the time to publicize his creations. Along with new marketing practices, Worth is credited with cutting the production time for dressmaking in half, taking only one fitting to make a dress, instead of the usual six (Okonkwo, 2007, p.26). As European countries continued to make a name for themselves within luxury fashion, America was becoming both an economic and cultural influence. Although American’s widely adopted European fashion, during this period, their own tastes began to emerge, especially during and after the French Revolution. This lead to less imports of French fashion and a rise in mass fashion, with Americans embracing Jeans, introduced by Levi Strauss, and the casual fashion of native American women (Okonkwo, 2007, p.26). 19 Important Fashion Changes of the 19th Century 1. Fashion, both men and women became simple, understated, unadorned and classic as a result of the mind progressiveness of the people. 2. The simple and functional English fashion style for women emerged as a complement to the French elaborate and elegant style. Men also were influenced by the English country style. 3. French Revolution acted as a catalyst for the move towards the adoption of simplicity and more democracy in fashion as a sign of modernity, especially in the 1780s. 4. The rise of the Victorian era from the 1820s to the middle of the century also heralded the commencement of ready-to-wear as sewing machines were introduced to everyday women. Table Two 20 American Fashion While the century before it marked the rise of European countries within the world of fashion, the nineteenth century is where Americas influence on global fashion begins. Opportunities within different sectors of the industry become available, especially within New York. Due to extensive travel Americans had developed sophisticated taste, and the introduction of fashion magazines further feed their taste for European fashions. America’s growing middle class and their increased wealth, continued to influence fashion growth within the states, and the invention of the sewing machine and paper dress patterns established a means of copying the styles of Parisian and London women. Additional technology also leads to the rise of a ready-to-wear market (Okonkwo, 2007, p.27). As mentioned above, American’s still had a preference for French fashion, and many imported their goods from France. The rest of society relied on New York to produce “knock offs” or “copies” of French style. The nineteenth century also ushered in high-end department store, like Macy’s, and new ways to market fashion, such as decorative window displays and trunk shows (Okonkwo, 2007, P.27). 21 Fashion and the Twentieth Century The twentieth century ushered in the opening of such well known fashion houses, like Chanel (1910), Vionnet (1912), Gucci, and Prada (1913). We also see an expansion in product categories to include accessories and cosmetics, with cosmetic giants Elizabeth Arden (1910) and Coty, Inc. (1900) launching their businesses. During the first World War, society’s view of luxury fashion shifted. Due to the hardships endured during the war, consumers sought out simplistic luxury goods over prewar extravagance. The post war era also introduced us to popular youth culture that replaced the sorrows of the war years. Movies gained popularity as an established, a valid, form of entertainment. It’s during this time that movie stars begin to replace aristocrats as fashion icons and influencers (Okonkwo, 2007, p.29). The popularity of Hollywood celebrities greatly influenced the development of fashion in the 1920s and 1930s. As new designers Coco Chanel, Jeanna Lanvin, and Madam Vionett rose to prominence, the fashion houses of Charles Worth and Paul Poiret slowly died out. It’s also during this time that American fashion developed within retailing and distribution through department stores versus Parisian style boutiques. This made fashion more visible and accessible to the growing American middle class (Okonkwo, 2007, p.30). 22 The Twentieth century also saw society’s wealthy dominate and influence luxury fashion In a similar manner to the royalties of other eras. The strict social structure provided major designers with a clientele comprising royal family members in Europe, and the world’s wealthy. Like todays luxury consumer, the leather goods and luggage of accessories designers were in high demand by the aristocrats in Europe and beyond (Okonkwo, 2007, p.30). 23 Intellectual Property Rights “A great trademark is appropriate, dynamic, distinctive, Memorable, and unique.” - Primo Angeli 24 Trademark and Copyright laws: A History Although counterfeits have only recently gained the attention of the masses, in the past twenty years, they are nothing new. Modern luxury has been copied since the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. In 1896 to combat cheap counterfeits of striped and checked canvas Louis Vuitton trunks, Georges Vuitton created their iconic logo print of interlocking LVs and Japanese floral symbols (Thomas, 2009, p.273). During the Roman republic (100 b.c) the way a person gained acceptance from the upper class, was to possess the thing that the upper class possessed, that meant objects. The way luxury consumers of today covet the Hermes Birkin bag; Romans felt the same about popular statues, tables, and other home décor. Reproductions of well-known statues entered the market, and provided those who couldn’t afford the real thing, a small piece of luxury (Thomas, 2009, p.273). During the middle ages the production of counterfeits increased, and may have accounted for at least a large share of the market, as they do today. Due to a lack of legal protection for intellectual property, the market became oversaturated with low-quality counterfeits that were knowingly being passed off as the real thing (Richardson, 2008). To distinguish themselves from the counterfeiters, and to protect their product, medieval craftsmen formed professional guilds that sold marked goods with seals of quality approval, in addition to the craftsman’s personal stamps or 25 signatures. Guilds provided manufacturers and consumers with early form of trademarking (Richardson, 2008, Thomas, 2009, p.272). Trademarks are a symbol, word, or words legally registered or established by use representing a company or product (“Trademarks”, 2005). Trademarks are used to distinguish and protect a company’s product from competition ("Overview of trademark"). Companies trademark their work and logos, to provide consumers with a guarantee of consistent quality. The use of marks has been around as early as 500 b.c.e. Man has used marks to designate ownership, sometimes as a property, sometimes as manufacturers. It wasn’t until the rise of the Roman Empire that documented economic use of trademarks is seen. Around the fourteenth century, Baker’s Law, one of the earliest known trademark laws is passed in England and around 1353, a statue is passed enabling merchants whose goods had been counterfeited to provide evidence of ownership using marks appearing on goods (U.S. trademark history). As time passed, trademark laws became increasingly strict and manufacturers started involving the courts in counterfeit disputes. One of the earliest cases, referring to the improper use of trademarks, took place in England. Southern Vs. How, involved a clothier making inferior cloth using the marks of a superior clothier (U.S. trademark history). 26 Patents and trademarks initially rose during the fourteenth century in Italy. Their use spread to industrial centers in the Low Countries during the fifteenth century and England during the sixteenth century. The United States didn’t adopt trademark laws until the 19th century, under the recommendation of Thomas Jefferson, in the consideration of the request of sailcloth manufacturers. In 1870 the United States passed federal trade legislation, Averill Paints received a trademark under this law, becoming the first modern trademark issued in the United States (U.S. trademark history). Trademark Laws timeline 1876: Bass Brewery registers first trademark in the U.K. 1887: Coca-Cola first used as trademark for tonic beverage 1895: Quaker Registered as a trademark for oats 1957: Trademark laws enacted in France 1962: Trademark laws enacted in the U.K. Table Three 27 Originally state common law provided the source for trademark protection. Today trademarks are governed by both state and federal law, Image Three & Image Four and can extend beyond words, symbols, and phrases to include other aspects of a product, such as color or packaging. The shape of a Coca-Cola bottle or the color blue used by the Jeweler, Tiffany and Co., would fall under the term “trade dress” and may be protected if consumers associate the feature with a particular manufacturer rather than the product in general. However the design features are not protected if they convey any sort of functional or competitive advantage (“Overview of trademark”). For a trademark to be protected it must contain the following: 1.) The company claiming the rights to the mark must be the first to have used the mark in commerce; or 2.) The company must be the first to register the mark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark office. The use of marks in commerce is only protected within a geographical area in which Its used, in 28 order to gain right to a mark; one must register with the Patent and Trademark office, even if actual sales are limited to a certain area (U.S. trademark history). As the manufacturing and distribution of counterfeits rises, luxury fashion brands depend on trademark laws to protect themselves from infringement. Trademarks also carry an added advantage of advertising, as trademarks also carry the reputation of the brand (Gosline, 2009). In today’s market consumers use logo to brand themselves and define their status within society, and companies use their logos and signatures to convey a message about their brands. Like societies before ours, marks are used as a status symbol and brand signatures like Louis Vuitton’s interlocking LVs and Japanese floral symbols have come to represent wealth and upper class status, creating a demand from lower classes looking to be a part of the upper crust. While Luxury brands are able to protect their logos and signs, their designs are not protected under copyright or trademark law, in the United States. Clothing is considered foremost as a Utilitarian item, not an artistic expression or scientific invention (Wilson, 2006). Yet Designers argue that the legal reason for excluding fashion from copyright protection – a 200 year old idea that useful objects should be unregulated to encourage the growth of industry- is outdated in an era of mass copying (Wilson. 2006). Designers do not see a reason to be innovated, if their designs are just going to be 29 copied a matter of days after being introduced to the public. Others have argued that there is no such thing as original designs, that designers are influenced by designs of the past and have no claim to particular silhouettes or styles. Designers go on “Shopping Trips” scouring vintage shops and little known boutiques for inspiration, modifying designs of yesteryear, and in a way participating in the practice they hope to make illegal. 30 Counterfeit Culture “Ten years ago we said it wasn’t a problem that it was Proof of our success.” - Marc-Antoine Jamet 31 Within the world of fashion copying is nothing new; designs trickle down from the runways of high-end fashion houses to the mass market (Betts, 2004).Designers once took pride in their work being copied, and some designers of today are still flattered by their “imitators”, but counterfeiting has grown up and is no longer viewed as “small time”, but as a threat to luxury fashion. Counterfeiting has morphed from a cottage industry to a multibilliondollar industry, and luxury fashion has started to put fourth efforts to stop, or at least hinder, the spread of counterfeits. Today brands employ extensive legal teams and private investigators, whose sole purpose is to focus on intellectual property theft and to chase down leads on illegal factories and checking out known counterfeit markets (Thomas,2009, p.277 ,Balfour, Matlack, Barrett, Capell, Roberts, Wheatly, Symonds & Magnusson, 2006). What caused such a boom in counterfeits? According to Dana Thomas, author of Deluxe: How Luxury Lost its Luster (2009, p.274), two things changed the counterfeit game: 1.) The democratization of luxury 2.) The rise of China 32 When luxury brands went democratic they believed that by introducing lower-priced items, like handbags and perfume, it would satisfy the middleclass craving for higher end goods. However companies didn’t expect the middle-market consumer to turn to counterfeits, to satisfy their desire for luxury goods. As middle-market consumers were snapping up fake versions of popular luxury items, China was going through the process of globalization, establishing a capitalist market economy and becoming the world’s manufacturing center(Balfour, Matlack, Barrett, Capell, Roberts, Wheatly, Symonds & Magnusson, 2006,Thomas, 2009, p.280-286). The convergence of the two created a huge supply to meet the developing demand for counterfeit goods. As mentioned before, the growth of counterfeits over the past two decades has been exponential and shows no sign of slowing down. As counterfeits get more entrenched and more global, they will be increasingly hard to eradicate (Betts, 2004). Coincidently, the same marks that have made counterfeit luxury in such high demand are the same marks that help luxury fashion brands get counterfeits off the market. Designers are able to go after counterfeiters for trademark infringement, most commonly on the basis of, “likelihood of confusion”, or if the use of the trademark is connected with the sale of goods that are likely to cause consumer confusion as the source of the goods or as the sponsorship or approval of such goods (“Overview of trademark” ). 33 Unfortunately the enforcement of these trademark laws do not always rule in favor of the luxury brands being copied. According to Harvard Law School (“Overview of trademark”), when deciding whether consumers are likely to be confused the courts will typically look to a number of factors including: 1.) The strength of the mark 2.) The proximity of the goods 3.) The similarity of the marks 4.) Evidence of actual confusion 5.) The degree of caution exercised by the typical purchaser; 6.) Defendant’s intent Although these standards are in place, there is little respect for trademark laws, especially from Chinese counterfeiters. Trade restrictions have loosened since Beijing joined the World Trade Organization, in 2001, making it easier for Chinese manufacturers to escape government scrutiny. Once goods hit U.S. soil, there are few penalties to those caught selling counterfeits. More profitable than trafficking narcotics, with much less risk, those convicted of counterfeiting get off practically scott free, with a fine of a few thousand dollars and very little jail time (Balfour, Matlack, Barrett, Capell, Roberts, Wheatly, Symonds & Magnusson, 2006). It should be noted that although many counterfeiters are beating the system, some luxury brands are getting justice, as some counterfeiters are 34 having to pay out major damages. According to Forbes, Federal Court of Canada awarded a total of $2.5 million (CAD) to Louis Vuitton and coplaintiffs Burberry Limited and Burberry Canada LTD. The fashion houses filed suit against Singga Enterprise, Inc. and Carnation Fashion Company, both located in Burnaby B.C., Altec Productions located in Markham, Ontario, and all respective owners, operators, importers, distributors, and online sellers of each company. These companies were charged with the highest punitive damages allowed for a counterfeit case, in Canada. Although the Canadian courts chose such a severe punishment, in regards to counterfeiting, the defendants still seemed to laugh in the faces of the courts and plaintiffs. Even after the counterfeiters were charged, they continued the importation and distribution of counterfeit goods through a newly formed website (Elliot, 2011). Cases like the one stated above are rare, especially within the United States. In New York State, where counterfeits handbags and sunglasses can be bought on almost every street corner, ninety-nine percent of those caught selling counterfeits do not go to jail, as judges don’t have the laws to sentence (Thomas, 2009, p. 292). With very little overhead the fines that counterfeiters are ordered to pay, amount to very little of the profits made. While luxury fashion attempts to make counterfeiting harder to manufacture and distribute, they still must deal with distribution and manufacturing of knockoffs and imitations. Many people use these terms when talking about 35 counterfeit goods, but in some countries like the United States, knockoffs/imitations are different type of copying, one that is legally protected (Gyben, 2011) Knockoffs are considered copies that don’t include the label or other types of designer signatures (Gyben, 2011). In today’s market luxury brands are plagued by fast fashion, and privately owned boutiques, selling legally protected knockoffs of high-end handbags, clothing, and other accessories. Proenza Schouler designers, Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez learned first-hand how vulnerable their designs are. Image five Retail giant, Target, is accused of copying the designer duos “it” bag The PS1. Target denies knocking off the messenger style bag, yet the two bags host a variety of similarities (Gyben, 2011). This “loop hole” in the legal system is often exploited to the advantage of counterfeiter; with many altering the labels of their faked goods to get pass customs. The Signature 36 interlocking C’s of Chanel become O’s, with the help of a sticker rr Coaches signature C becomes a signature G (Thomas, 2009, p.279). Within other countries, including all of Europe and Japan, brands are legally protected from knockoffs. The United States is one of the few countries where knockoffs are legal. Here in America we are no strangers to knock-offs or copying. In the 1930s, up until the 1960s, American department stores attended Paris Couture shows and purchased original patterns, which they would bring home and mass produce (Wilson, 2006). Even first lady, and fashion icon, Jacqueline Kennedy had designers make copies of French designs in order to maintain her loyalty to America’s garment industry (Menkes, 2002). 37 Counterfeit Crimes “There are hundreds of millions of hungry customers and hundreds of thousands of very sophisticated entrepreneurs.” - Moises Naim, editor of Foreign Policy magazine 38 Consumers see counterfeits as a victimless crime, because many are unaware of whom they’re purchasing from. Authorities believe that much of the money made from counterfeits, helps fund organized crime and terroristic groups. Groups like Al Qaeda and Hezbollah are making money trafficking consumer goods like, counterfeit Nikes, Sony products, and Calvin Klein jeans. It is speculated that Al Qaeda used funds, from the sales of counterfeits, to finance their organization and carry out terroristic attacks ("Officials: Counterfeits fund," 2003). Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly believes that the group accused of the Madrid train bombing, in 2004, which killed 191 people, used proceeds from the sale of counterfeit CDs to fund their activities. It is also believed that counterfeit t-shirt sales financed the bombing of the 1993 World Trade Center (2012). A rise in the manufacturing and distribution, by terrorist groups and organized crime rings, can be attributed to the attacks on New York, on September 11, 2001. After the attacks, the United States responded by forcefully shutting down terror financing sources ("Officials: Counterfeits fund," 2003). This forced terrorist groups to look for other methods of funding, turning to both legal and illegal entrepreneurial endeavors. Counterfeits provide these groups with high profits, low overhead and minimal punishment. Before the recession began in 2007, the sales of counterfeits was already high, but as the job and real estate market started to decline, 39 Counterfeiters saw an increase in sales of fake luxury handbags. In the United Kingdom, British law firm Davenport Lyons found that two-thirds of British consumers are proud to tell their friends and family that they purchased fake luxury items (Thomas, 2007). In the United States, consumers delight in the idea of purchasing fakes of high-end handbags and accessories. Little do these consumers know that counterfeiting rackets are run by crime syndicates that deal in, not only terrorism, but narcotics, weapons, child prostitution, and human trafficking (Thomas, 2007) Produced mainly in China, consumers also chose to turn a blind eye to the fact that many counterfeits are made by children, many of who have been sold or sent off by their families to work in clandestine factories that produce counterfeit luxury goods. Dana Thomas has a first and account of children being put to work in these factories (Thomas, 2007). “On a warm winter afternoon in Guangzhou, I accompanied Chinese police officers on a factory raid in a decrepit tenement. Inside we found two dozen children, ages 8 to 13, gluing and sewing together fake luxury-brand handbags. The police confiscated everything, arrested the owner and sent the children out. Some punched their timecards, hoping to still get paid. (The average Chinese factory worker earns about $120 a month; the counterfeit factory worker earns half that or less) As we made our way back to the police vans, 40 the children threw bottles and cans at us. They were now jobless and, because the factory owner housed them, homeless. It was “Oliver Twist” in the 21st century” (Thomas, 2007). Profits from counterfeits have also funded the Shiite terrorist group, Paramilitary organizations in Northern Ireland and FARC, and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia ("Officials: Counterfeits fund," 2003, Thomas, 2007, 2012). Although much of the counterfeit goods are manufactured and distributed from factories in China, many terrorist and paramilitary organizations have gotten into the counterfeit game, through organized retail crime, or ORC. ORC is often equated with petty theft, like shoplifting, and is attractive to as it is classified as “property theft” and not a federal crime (Prabhakar, 2012, p.11, 12). Organized retail crime carries a lesser charge than an offense that would fall within the jurisdiction of major crimes division. ORC can cost retailers an estimated $30 billion a year and states lose billions more in sales taxes (Prabhakar, 2012, p.3) Communicating via the internet, disposable cell phones, and social media, members of these organized retail crime rings are able move stolen merchandise from store, to website, to seemingly legit retailers within hours (Prabhakar, 2012, p.4). As mentioned above, after 9/11 terrorist groups were faced with a shortage of funds. These groups quickly became decentralized, creating 41 opportunity for subgroups to setup in unsuspecting areas like, Latin America, Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and the United States. These subgroups collect funds that support the main organization, but are left to make money on their own, with little to no advisement. Many of these groups raised money by increasing the trade of cocaine, kidnappings, and conducting scams that duped donors out of money meant for charitable organizations (Prabhakar, 2012, p.10). After the economy started declining, and consumers began seeking out deals that were even better than those offered by discount stores like WalMart and Target. With money being tight, consumers abandoned trusted retailers, and buying fake or stolen goods started to sound like a good idea. The least detectable way for these groups to make money, ORC funds weapons, fake visas and passports, and paramilitary equipment (Prabhakar, 2012, p.12). Counterfeiting is a difficult trade to control, as long as there is a consumer demand for high-end goods, there will always be a market for counterfeits. In a perfect world brands would have full control of their distribution and pricing, they would also be in a position to maintain their brand equity. But this is not a perfect world and luxury brands must contend with their products migrating into undesirable distribution channels that are both illegal and legit. 42 “In Italy, you can find the quality leather that you need and the quality workmanship. In Milan, taking the product, taking it to pieces, laying it out, copying it piece by piece, makes the copies. It’s quality that allows them to sell for a higher price. Today a good quality knockoff sells for $1,000” (Phillip, 2005). With increasing demand for higher margins and lower prices, many brands have outsourced the manufacturing of goods to developing countries, where labor and production costs are much lower. Asia has become the top location for low cost manufacturing and is where 80% of all seized counterfeits come from (Whitwell, 2012). The global trail of fake goods generally begins in workshops located in the Chinese provinces of Guangdong, near Hong Kong, and Zhejiang, south of Shanghai. Both regions are centers for the legitimate manufacturing of leather goods, making obtaining raw materials and other supplies relatively easy. With China’s Dramatic expansion, comes an already established supply chain that stretches all the way to U.S. design schools (Betts, 2004). “They read Women’s Wear Daily; their kids go to FIT (The Fashion Institute of Technology). When someone comes out with a new range, it’s already being copied” says anti-counterfeiting investigator Andrew Oberfeldt (Phillip, 2005). 43 A quarter of China’s non-farming workforce, around 35 million people, are engaged in the production of counterfeits, many working “ghost” shifts in which factories produce two shifts of legitimate items but stay overnight to produce counterfeits goods, that ultimately find their way into the grey market (Fox, 2008). The production of legitimate goods, like Coach handbags, in countries like China and India, has exposed luxury brands to the grey market. Grey good are authentic products that find their way into non-authorized retail distribution outlets, which are beyond the control of the brand owner (Whitwell, 2012). These outlets range from street vendors to mainstream retailers, like Marshall’s and T.J. Maxx. Grey goods are usually produced by legitimate manufacturers who run extra, unauthorized shifts, and sell out the back door, usually sold at a steep discount, compared to that of the authentic manufacturer (Balfour, Matlack, Barrett, Capell, Roberts, Wheatly, Symonds & Magnusson, 2006). The most disastrous of distribution channels, is the black market. Here is where we find unauthentic goods, sold in unauthorized channels (Whitwell, 2012). With such easy access to raw materials, and experienced manufacturers, China has become skilled at producing nearly perfect fakes. Discount retailer like Sam’s Club and Daffy’s, have been duped into purchasing high-quality fakes (Betts, 2004) China’s counterfeiters have developed a classification system for their counterfeits. Bags that are 44 virtually indistinguishable, sometimes better, than the real thing are classified as grade AA. These counterfeits are exclusively exported in the west, though lower quality grade A or B counterfeits do make their way into sidewalk stalls within the United States (Betts, 2004). Chinese manufacturer of counterfeits are often some of the same producers of brand name goods. Calloway Golf Co. has found that many counterfeiters use the same machines as legitimate manufacturers, as well as utilize three-dimensional printers and design software to produce high quality counterfeits quickly and cheaply. The use of new technologies has also made reverse engineering, or the working backward from the completed product to discover what elements went into making the product, a piece of cake. Counterfeiters have also mastered duplicating holograms, “smart” chips, and other security devices intended to distinguish fakes from the originals (Balfour, Matlack, Barrett, Capell, Roberts, Wheatly, Symonds & Magnusson, 2006). 45 Counterfeit Grading System As mentioned above, not all counterfeits are created equal, and the difference in price points provides evidence of their differences. Counterfeit, or replicas as they are often referred as by counterfeit dealers, are available in a variety of Grades that are representative of their overall quality and craftsmanship. On average most counterfeit consumers purchase grades A, AA, or AAA counterfeit goods. Generally grade A counterfeits feature common craftsmanship and various flaws, they are also priced low. Manufacturers of grade A goods are focused on the quantity of product produced, versus the quality. Quick profit and high turnaround is the biggest concern of manufacturers who produce grade A counterfeits. In contrast, grade AAA counterfeits feature top quality material interiors and exteriors. Manufacturers pay close attention to hardware, using metal, not plastic. Counterfeits of this grade also have protective features, like metal feet. This section will continue to outline the different counterfeit grades, as well as explain their differences. Information in this section was sourced from blog site dedicated to “replica” handbags, specifically Louis Vuitton, called www.ithandbag.blogspot.com. 46 Grade B/AB Counterfeits of this grade are of the poorest quality. These counterfeits lack similarities to the genuine product, except for the logo. Counterfeits of this grade are usually of a generic design, not found within the copied designers collections. They feature an extremely low price tag and can mostly be found at street markets. At casual glance it is easy to identify these low grade counterfeits, as they are manufactured quickly and made of the lowest quality fabrics and hardware. Grade A As stated before, counterfeits of this grade are what counterfeit consumers generally purchase. Counterfeits within this grade are of medium quality, elegant in texture, and soft to the touch, when compared to grades B/AB. Craftsmanship for this grade is mediocre at best, but the packaging is slightly better than that of B/AB counterfeits. The overall quality is Mediocre, though this grade will hold up over time. However, it will not age the way the genuine product does (i.e. A Louis Vuitton counterfeit will not tan the same as the genuine.) Leather goods of this grade, are usually made of fake leather, common fabrics, and fair quality hardware. Also referred to as grade AA, good boosting this grade is made of better than average quality. Their texture is fairly nice, as well as the handcrafts and details. In terms of handbags, they feel up market, and are generally created using solid fabrics. Handbags and other leather accessories 47 are made using top layer leather, whose color won’t change overtime. Hardware is generally made of common quality materials. Grade Ultra A Counterfeits that fall under this grade may also be referred to as grade AAA. This classification is most often used to classify counterfeit Louis Vuitton goods. AAA counterfeits are made from imported cow leather, whose color will tan after some use, or when wet. They are sophisticatedly made and are almost identical to the genuine product. Grade AAA counterfeits are generally made up of top quality solid fabrics and imported leather. They also feature YKK zippers and quality hardware. Generally counterfeit dealers to classify handbags and other counterfeit accessories using these grades. Sometimes these grades are used to classify electronics like, headphones and cell phones. Counterfeit designer watches are similarly classified, using four different levels. The four levels are as follows (Lin, 2011, p.33): 1. B-Level: The most common and visibly distinguishable from a genuine high-end watch 2. A-Level: Not easily distinguishable from the genuine product. The interior materials are of poor quality, with easily torn interior fibers, as well as easily broken clasps. 48 3. AA-Level: Similar to an A-level product, but of better quality 4. Super A-Level: An exact detailed copy of the genuine item. The manufacturing of designer watchers, like Rolexes, is a surprising one. Counterfeiters purchase lower priced Rolex models, and disassemble them. The exterior is then affixed with faked diamonds and the watch is passed off as a higher priced model. The leftover genuine Rolex case is then used to house a counterfeit Rolex (Lin, 2011, p.33). As counterfeits are being made from better quality fabrics and have craftsmanship that rival that of genuine luxury goods, can you truly distinguish between quality counterfeits and real luxury products. According Yi-Chieh Jessica Lin, author of Fake Stuff: China and the Rise of Counterfeit Goods, there is no difference between high quality counterfeits imitations and real Coach product, and to identify a real vs. counterfeit Fendi bag a difference in stitching, hardware, and leather accents should be observed. There should be no loose or missing stiches, that are evenly spaced, and the thread color will match the main color of the bag. The Fendi logo should also be engraved not printed (Lin, 2011, p.33). Gucci also has similar identifiers, front curves of a real Gucci bag should be exactly the same as the picture on the Gucci official website. 49 Differences in dust covers, colors, and stitching should also be observed when identifying genuine Gucci vs. counterfeits (Lin, 2011, p.33). Some brands like COACH and Fendi use authenticity cards to assist in the identification of counterfeit goods. These cards mark authentic products and usually feature the manufacturer’s logo, embossed on the front, and have no grammatical or spelling errors. The card also host information about the product and will sometimes have a magnetic strip or barcode (Lin, 2011, p.34). According to a customer service representative from Louis Vuitton, the often counterfeited brand identifies genuine products by the outlet in which it was purchased and receipts. According to the representative, no RFID tags or authenticity cards are used. However many bloggers and vintage luxury dealers dispute this claim. Owner of Vintage heirloom, a dealer in vintage luxury goods, explains, via youtube, that there are many ways to identify real Louis Vuitton from the many fakes that are flooding the market. Louis Vuitton’s Speedy bag is one of the most popular and often counterfeited bags on the market. Created during the 1960s, the speedy comes in four different sizes: Speedy 25, Speedy 35, Speedy 40, and Speedy 45, so named for the width of each bag. To identify a genuine speedy versus a counterfeit, one can start with patented monogram. The monogram should start asymmetrically and the L, in the LV logo, should sit at the bottom of the logo with the V slightly above. After the LV logo, there 50 should be a pattern of fleur-di-lis style flower, circle, and fleur-di-lis style flower. Going across the bag should be a pattern of inverse fleur-di-lis, circle, and inverse fleur-di-lis. The pattern should also be symmetrical, for example if one corner starts with half a fleur-di-lis the pattern should end with half a fleur-di-lis. This should occur at any point of the bag including across. The top of the pattern at the top of the bag should be a mirror image (Heirloom, 2012). Another way to identify a genuine Louis Vuitton Speedy bag is to look for the upside down LV symbols. The Speedy is made from one continuous piece of coated canvas, thus the back side of the bag will feature upside down LVs. The bag will also be free of bottom seams. The handles are also a good way to distinguish real from the fake. The stitching will be mustard yellow and, not the bright gold found on most counterfeits. The handles also start out a pale beige color and will darken over time. The edges of the handle will be a Burgundy red that will also darken over time. A counterfeit will feature a more lipstick red edge that never fades. The hardware will also be brass plated and will slightly oxidize over time, causing a slight green tint to form along the edge of the rivets (Heirloom, 2012). Although I was told that the only way to identify a real Louis Vuitton bag is by where it was bought, Louis Vuitton does employ a date coding system. Located behind the pocket on the backside of the handle, the stamp features a combination of letters and numbers. The letters represent the 51 product’s country of origin, France, USA, Spain, Germany, or Italy, and the numbers represent the date and year in which the item was made. The 1st and 3rd numbers, represent the month, the 2nd and 4th number represent the year (Heirloom, 2012). 52 Methodology and Fieldwork 53 Studying counterfeits and their effect on the luxury market possess some methodological challenges. Because counterfeiting is a relatively “underground” industry, it’s difficult to find concrete statistical evidence, that truly measure consumer perception on counterfeits and how that perception affects the luxury market. Most luxury brands are secretive about their dealings with the counterfeit market, and release very little information on how to identify genuine product from counterfeit, or how they track counterfeit. Also the values placed on both counterfeit and luxury goods, are subjective and vary from consumer to consumer. This makes it difficult to capture quantitative data with a focus on consumer perspective. In order to obtain meaningful data, qualitative research is needed. Due to the lack of time and finances, traveling to New York’s Canal street or China’s Shanghai market, and other counterfeit markets was out of the question. Not being able to travel hindered my ability to obtain first-hand observations and knowledge of counterfeit vendors and manufacturers. Archival research from news articles, professional thesis, internet sources, and books were used to gain insight within the counterfeit industry, as well as a glimpse into consumer perception of these markets. To get a more rounded judgment of consumer perceptions interviews were conducted, with the both luxury and counterfeit consumers. Each consumer was asked to participate in a short survey and was also asked a series of 54 interview questions to better understand the value put on counterfeits and luxury goods, but each consumer. An attempt was made to speak with employees of some of the top, and most counterfeited, luxury brands. While some information was given, most employees were not allowed to provide much information, for legal reasons. 55 Meaning of Counterfeits How Social Distinction Shaped the Counterfeit Consumer 56 Taste is defined as an individual’s personal and cultural pattern of choice and preference (Taste (sociology), 2013). How one presents themself to the public, from the car you drive, the books and magazines you read, and the clothes you wear, others can interpret all as information about your status (Gosline, 2009). The social theory of taste draws distinctions between social groups, marking both high and low social classes, by examining how taste reflects and affects the symbolic boundaries that categorize competing social groups (Gosline, 2009). According to MIT Professor Renee Richardson Gosline (2009), the taste of dominate groups are legitimized as superior, and become symbolic of the advantages of good taste, and the barriers towards groups with lower cultural capital, or the non-financial social assets that promote social mobility beyond economic means (Taste (sociology), 2013). The concept helps explain societies fascination with high status brands, as they assist consumers in presenting a positive image to the public. The desire for positive self-presentation leads consumers to adopt counterfeit goods in the hopes of being perceived as having good taste and acceptance into higher status society, all while avoiding the high price tag. But how effective is the adoption of counterfeits, as a means of crossing social barriers? Is carrying the “It” bag of the season all it takes to be perceived as a member of high society? 57 Gosline (2009) argues that there are three pertinent theories of taste, Distinction, Democratization, and Omnivorism. The theory of distinction rejects the notion that taste is the result of innate, individualistic choices of human intellect (Allen & Anderson, 1994). Instead the theory of distinction argues that taste is socially conditioned, internalized at early age, and is used as a “Social Weapon” that defines and marks social hierarchy (Allen & Anderson, 1994). The theory of democratization argues that social boundaries are easily crossed and are starting to disappear, allowing for different classes to have access to symbols that were once only available to the social elite (Gosline, 2009, Elliot, 2012). Lastly omnivorism argues that only high status groups are able to partake in an array of taste across the status hierarchy, allowing them to strategically coordinate with an ultimately dominate lower status groups (Gosline, 2009). The Theory of Distinction French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu argues that the elite are trained to have certain taste that guide them towards their appropriate social positions, and distinguishes them from lower status groups, The elite are trained at an early age to adopt particular social and consumer behaviors (Allen & Anderson, 1994). Gosline (2009) believes that status-based exclusion is a hallmark of distinction. Man has an innate instinct to emulate others and the exclusion that distinguishes the high from the low, leads to the consumption 58 of counterfeit. Counterfeit consumers hope that by purchasing fake version of the high status goods, they’ll be able to cross social barriers. However, while the counterfeit consumer is attempting to fake their way into a higher social class, they’re actually solidifying the social barriers, by validating the taste of the elite (Gosline, 2009). Although lower status consumers may have the means to obtain symbols of high status, under the theory of distinction it’s unlikely that they’ll ever be fully accepted as a member of high society. To be a member of the socially elite you must be born from socially elite parents, the taste and behaviors of high society must be something you’re born with. So while you may mirror the taste of the elite, you cannot buy your way into their favor. Railroad magnet William Vanderbilt is a good example of distinction at work. In 1880 he attempted to purchase one of 18 coveted boxes at the New York Academy of Music, offering $30,000. Vanderbilt represented new money and to the old families who controlled the academy, his attempt to buy his way into a place reserved for them was considered a crass affront to their dignity (Elliot, 2012). The high status consumers use of symbols as a means of distinction, may also lead them to turn away from brands that are being appropriated by lower status consumers, regardless of if they are real or counterfeit, as they may believe that brand value maybe tarnished. If this is true, then as high 59 status consumers turn away from certain brands, the allure of the brand also diminishes with lower status groups (Gosline, 2009). Democratization The fashion world is all a buzz when it comes to democratization. The theory of democratization separates taste and class, while arguing that taste is not ingrained with superior taste, but prefer high status goods for the same reason that their lower status counterparts do, because they’re well made, have high value, and well…. are pretty (Gosline, 2009). In a democratized society, social barriers are easily crossed, and though social classes still exist, objects do not define them. Fashion itself is democratized, now high status brands have been made available to all, through diffusion lines sold at fast fashion retailers, such as Forever 21 and H&M, and the advent of social media everyone, regardless of class, has access to some form of high status goods. With these goods readily available across all classes, consumers no longer purchase high status goods as a means to validate status, but instead for their value. Within this theory, counterfeits would serve as a substitute for the brand, but not as a means to extend one’s status. This would also mean that the meaning behind the authentic brand would be would be undermined, making the counterfeits virtually the same thing as the genuine product (Gosline, 2009, Thomas, 2007). 60 Omnivore A new kind of elite is emerging one that is classified as culturally omnivore. The omnivore perspective retains the notion of dominate status groups, as seen with the theory of distinction, but rejects the idea that high status consumers only consume high status goods (Gosline, 2009). This theory argues that social capital is more important and that the uppermiddle class have ties with lower status groups, these ties make fitting in, or coordinating, an important goal (Gosline, 2009). Cultural omnivores embrace diversity and cultivate tastes that provide common ground with other status groups (Elliot, 2012). High status consumers are not distinguished by their consumption of high status goods alone, but instead by their social background, which is expansive, unlike lower status groups that are likely to have singular or limited taste. It could be said that to have exclusive taste is sign of lower social status. The elite are defined by the diversity of their cultural and social networks. This would cause upper middle class consumers to shun counterfeit goods, as they are not interested in using brands to prove their social dominance. Under the omnivore theory, the elite consumer’s goal is to achieve the same results as distinction, but through more down to earth means. The new elite is wants to be perceived as open minded and seek to capture the prestige of luxury brands, but without the flash of logos. This is very different from lower 61 status consumers who will purchase counterfeits featuring popular logos, as a means to show off and be perceived as high status (Gosline, 2009). These three theories work simultaneously within the counterfeit market. Each come into play depending on the market in which counterfeits are being purchased. If purchased from a street vendor or through the social comforts of home, the counterfeit consumer will have different buying behaviors, as well as the affect their perception of counterfeits vs. genuine luxury brands (Gosline, 2009). Counterfeit Consumer As the world tries to pull itself out of a recession, the economic decline may have fueled the rise in counterfeit buyers. While the “super” rich continue to spend money on luxury goods, “aspirational” middle-class buyers are feeling the squeeze. Consumers on a budget are now trading down, from authentic luxury to counterfeits. While many would view this as bad thing, there may be a silver lining. Luxuries, or status goods, are goods for which the mere display of a particular branded product brings prestige on the owner, apart from any functional utility. The global luxury fashion sector is estimated to be worth $130 billion and is the fourth largest revenue generator in France. Within Italy, Spain, the United States, as well as in emerging markets like China 62 and India, luxury fashion is one of the prominent economic sectors (Okonkwo, 2007, p. 1) Types of Counterfeit Activity Deceptive Counterfeiting: The production of copies that are identically packaged, including trademarks and labeling, copied so as to seem to a consumer the genuine article. Piracy or Non-deceptive Counterfeits: Counterfeit product’s intention is not to deceive the consumer. The consumer is aware that the product she is buying is counterfeit. Imitation: Are similar in substance, name, shape, and color to look like the original. Designed to look like and make you think of the original brand. Grey Market: The unauthorized sale of garment production overruns by legitimately contracted manufacturers. Custom-made Copies: Replicas of trademark designs of branded products made by legitimate craftsmen. Raw materials are usually if good quality. Table four With a heavy emphasis on design and creativity, Uche Okonkwo (2007, p. 11). describes luxury brands possess the following core characteristics: 1. Brand Strength 2. Innovation 3. Differentiation 4. Exclusivity 5. Premium Pricing 6. High Quality 63 7. Product craftsmanship and precision Along with rarity, these characteristics are what keep luxury goods in high demand, among all income levels. Consumers use luxury goods as a way to communicate meaning about themselves, to convey worth, status, and sophistication. Frequently the status label or image associated with a luxury product is valued more than the product itself. The functionality of the product becomes secondary, as long as the item provides the consumer with a sense of self-worth and importance (Gosline, 2009). Today’s luxury consumer is harder to describe than luxury consumers of the past, as they no longer exclusively wear a brand from head to toe. Instead they now mix and match brands that are both high and low end. However Uche Okonkwo, author of Luxury Fashion Branding (2007, p. 65), states that current luxury consumers are highly sophisticated and brand literate. They are fashionable and aware of their taste and preferences. Their choices of luxury products are based more on understanding of their own style needs and less on the “brand-name” factor. The average counterfeit consumer is the polar opposite of true luxury consumers. They are more focused on labels and logos, versus purchasing items that fit their style needs and are of good quality. Most companies believe that counterfeits cannibalize their brand, stealing customers from them. The fact is, generally consumers of 64 counterfeit luxury are not in the position to buy the authentic product, thus the luxury brand is not losing a customer, but they do gain an “aspirational” buyer. Research has found that most counterfeit consumers would prefer to own the real thing, and as their economic conditions change, they will purchase the original (Whitwell, 2012). Counterfeits provide consumers, who cannot afford to purchase the authentic brand, with a way to fulfill the dream that luxury brands portray in their advertising and promotion. Consumers of counterfeits, find them to be fun and harmless (Nia & Zaichkowsky, 2000), and some high-end retailer, like Bergdorf-Goodman, the vendors who sell them to be a nuisance but not a threat. Robert Burke, a vice president at Bergdorf-Goodman says about counterfeit street vendors (Rozhon & Thorner, 2005): “It’s hardly going to impact our Manolo business….No; the biggest problem is navigating around them” Although Luxury retailers may not be affected by the sale of counterfeits, discount and novelty retailers are possibly feeling the effects of counterfeit consumption. The quality of these retailers products are on par with the majority of luxury counterfeits, sold by street vendors and in back alleys. 65 The Counterfeit Social Network 66 In the past decade a new network of counterfeit distribution has risen in popularity. A clear contrast from seedy back alley shops and street vendors, in-home purse parties provide consumers with a more comfortable, and social atmosphere, in which to browse and purchase fake luxury handbags and accessories. Hosted by a friends and family, guest are introduced to an on-site vendor and encouraged to enjoy refreshments. These vendors are usually local middle-class women who order products from Chinatown. In professors Gosline’s research (2009), she found that attendees of these parties are almost all white middle and upper class women ranging in age from 24 to 72 (but mostly in their late 30’s and early 40’s). The merchandise sold during these parties are sold at a higher percent, than counterfeits sold from street vendors, yet it is unspoken rule that haggling is not permitted. Like many parties similar to these, attendees usually feel obligated to purchase at least one item, as not to appear rude or ungrateful for the invitation and hospitality. Yet Gosline (2009) found that unlike the counterfeit consumers who visit street vendors, there is no strong demand for the brands sold at these parties, prior to attending the party. 67 The consumers first purchase has little to do with the brand, but with the sense of obligation and social norms, within their circle of friends. Many attendees held a negative view of counterfeits, but felt that they were not shallow enough or had better uses for their money, than to purchase authentic brands. While they knew about luxury items, and for the most part could afford them, they had no real desire for luxury brands. However, after purchasing the counterfeit version of a luxury brand, attendee’s interest in luxury brands increased, and they grew attached to the brand (Gosline, 2009). Through the consumption of counterfeits attendees of purse parties, became aspirational customers. Forming relationships with brands they initially had no interest in. Yet these new aspirational consumers still feel tension about whom they believed themselves to be, someone above the consumption of luxury items, versus how they feel about their counterfeit luxury purchase. They enjoy the compliments and praise received because of their fake bag’s branding, but feel the urge to tell people that their luxury purchase is fake. Self-presentation concerns causes consumers to feel compelled to admit that their possessions where counterfeit (Gosline, 2009). Because these consumers feel compelled to admit that their luxury items are counterfeits, they are constantly reminded that they’re carrying fake versions of brands, which they are forming relationships with. They are cultivating a desire for luxury brands and the counterfeit Louis Vuitton on 68 their arm is no longer satisfying. As their fake purchase begins to fray and show it’s true inferior quality, the desire for the authentic product increases further, especially since consumers view their possessions as an extension of themselves. In fact Gosline (2009) found that 40% of the purse party consumers she interviewed, upgrade to the authentic product within 2 years. These purse parties, while still illegal, actually aids in creating aspirational buyers for higher end brands. Placed in a comfortable setting, men and women, with the means to purchase high-end goods but not the interest, will most likely purchase at least one counterfeit item. Over time these users will grow attached to and at some point upgrade to the more socially acceptable authentic luxury item, leaving counterfeits behind. These parties allow consumers to sample and experience luxury brands. Generally these women know that they are purchasing fake goods, whose quality is inferior to that of the real thing, thus they do not expect to receive the same results as the authentic item. This helps safeguard a luxury brand’s equity and preserves their status in the mind of true authentic consumers. Amid weak economic growth, consumer spending in the U.S. continues to be down. Yet handbag companies, like mass luxury retailers Coach and Michael Kors, continue to beat estimates quarter after quarter. This is in part due to the fact that handbags are one luxury women are still willing to buy (Timberlake, 2012). 69 According to Accessories Magazine (Via Bloomberg), in recent years, women have switched their spending from clothes to handbags, which last longer, can be worn more often, and doesn’t have to fit. In 2011, Americans spent $8.5 billion on handbags (Timberlake, 2012). While handbag sales continue to grow, so does the sale of counterfeits. While mass luxury brands are more obtainable to the middle-class consumer, brands like Louis Vuitton, Fendi, Hermes, and Prada are just out of reach. As unemployment rates remain around 8 percent, the same since 2009 (“Labor Force Statistics”, 2013), consumer confidence is on the decline, and consumers are watching what they spend. While many consumers have turned to counterfeits to get their luxury fix, many are turning too more legitimized ways of obtaining a piece of luxury. Companies like Bag, Borrow, or Steal and Rent the Runway have been popping up over the past decade. These companies give consumers the opportunity to rent luxury fashions by the likes of Chanel, Gucci, Prada, and Louis Vuitton. These companies guarantee that the luxury items available for rent are 100 percent authentic and posse the superior quality and craftsmanship one would expect from luxury manufacturers ("Bag, borrow, steal," "Rent the runway,") Depending on the company, consumers can rent handbags, clothing, jewelry and other accessories for around $29 a month, for small jewelry pieces, and $500 a month for large leather goods and designer gowns. This 70 new business model allows consumers to rent designer fashions, as if they were renting a DVD. Once done with their item(s) of choice, the item is mailed back to the rental company and most likely exchanged for another ("Bag, borrow, steal,"). Today’s consumer not only values a deal, but also convenience. The Luxury rental business model provides consumers with both of these benefits. Rental companies also give the aspirational consumer a chance to possess a piece of luxury, even if for a short period of time. Yet it can be argued that unlike purchasing counterfeits, renting luxury items may provide very little benefits to luxury businesses, but also are not worth the cost to consumers. As previously mentioned, nearly half of all consumers of counterfeit luxury grow attached to their purchases and soon seek out and purchase the real thing. While it’s true that renting luxury is a way to deter counterfeit consumption, the life cycle of renting a bag may prove to be a problem. People who purchase counterfeits find themselves accustom to have the faux products in their lives. They become familiar with, and identify with, the brand their counterfeit item is imitating. Renting runs the risk of not providing customers with this feeling. While renting luxury goods would provide consumers with a feeling of joy, excitement, and exclusivity, it’s only for a short period of time. Renting does not provide consumers with the adequate amount of time to grow attached to, and identify with the brands 71 they’ve chosen to rent. This may hinder the consumers desire to “trade up” and eventually purchase genuine luxury goods. While renting is a legitimate avenue for consumers to possess luxury goods, compared to counterfeits, renting is not a strong entry point for consumers, thus have little benefit to the designers and manufacturers. Renting may also not be as cost effective as one would like to believe. Assuming a consumer chooses an accessory that rents for $125 a month, and she decides to keep the accessory for a full year, she’s spending $1,500, not including shipping and handling fees. At that price our consumer could have purchased multiple high grade counterfeits or even the real thing. 72 Counterfeit Consumption “ If you shop on the street, you know it’s not real, you know it’s going to fall apart, that it’s disposable. You’re buying it for the fun of it.” - Marshal Cohen, Chief Retail analyst for the NPD Group 73 It’s believed that counterfeits dilute the product value and brand equity, but in the case of counterfeit luxury goods, the majority of consumers know that their products are fakes. It is very rare for luxury counterfeits to be sold deceptively. Deceptive counterfeiting is mainly observed in markets for automotive parts, consumer electronics, pharmaceuticals, and medical devices (Nia & Zaichkowsky, 2000). Counterfeit vendors of luxury goods believe that their business is not unlawful or wrong because the people purchasing from them, are fully aware that are buying counterfeit products. This practice of non-deceptive counterfeits helps to not dilute the copied brand because consumers are not expecting to receive high quality fakes that can stand the test of time. Most expect their counterfeit purchases to last the cycle of a season and don’t feel ripped off or look down on the authentic brand because their fake items are no longer functions as new. However, if someone were to receive a counterfeit luxury product as a gift without their knowledge, than there may be a shift in how the consumer values that luxury brand and its products. Renee Richardson Gosline’s research (2009) on how authentic luxury consumers view counterfeit luxury, and its consumers, found that authentic consumers were not detoured by counterfeits. She found that a consumer’s willingness to pay for a brand varied with their confidence in their ability to identify legitimate consumer of luxury, versus their imitators. She also found 74 that when faced with the adoption of luxury brands, by non-authentic consumers, authentic consumers redefined the symbolic boundaries such that legitimate consumption is based on arcane knowledge and style usage, regardless of whether the item is real or not. This research proves that luxury brands are able to preserve their brand equity as long as its consumers believe that they can distinguish the real thing, from the fakes, and if they can be distinguished from counterfeit consumers, by their consumption practices (Gosline, 2009). Brands are working to maintain their status, as true authentic consumers, will develop new ways to determine authenticity and not recognize the legitimacy of consumers that do not fit the brand image. In other words, if a counterfeit consumer were to find the means to purchase authentic brands, they would be considered outcast, or wannabes, to “true” authentic consumers and not accepted socially as part of the luxury consumer tribe (Gosline, 2009). So as they try to seek inclusion to a higher social class, they are excluded, and sometimes pitied, based on how they consume the product. As long as “real” luxury consumers believe they can tell the difference between fakes and authentic products, based on social cues, luxury brands should not experience brand contamination or see a drop in how their product is valued (Gosline, 2009). Counterfeits play a part in forcing luxury brands to provide innovative product to their existing customer base. Much of counterfeit merchandise is 75 heavily branded, featuring the logos and signatures of popular luxury brands. To combat this trend and maintain their authentic consumers, luxury brands have been forced to produce innovate product lines, which include products that lack popular logos, signatures, or trademarks. Brands like Gucci have moved away from showcasing their heavily logoed bags, which are highly favored by counterfeiters, instead putting greater emphasis on handbags and accessories that boast high design and little branding. Luxury brands have also had to find creative ways to provide their consumer with new luxury experiences. This includes personalization, personal shoppers, and special events. By doing this brands are giving authentic consumers ways to form deeper relationships with their brand, and increasing brand loyalty. Luxury brands are also able to retain their core consumers, due to the fact that counterfeits usually hit the streets a season behind the brands that they imitate. This allows for authentic consumer to maintain their fashion forward position, and does not compromise the sales of luxury brands (Gosline, 2009). Authentic luxury consumers desire to be recognized, respected, and appreciated by the luxury brands that they purchase. They also desire to stand out from the consumers of fake luxury brands, customized and personalized goods would allow luxury brands to fulfill this need of their consumer. Customization is the adaption of goods and services according to individual customer needs (Okonkwo, 2007, p.249). Personalization is 76 different from customization, as it involves the adaption of either existing or yet-to-be produced goods to particular individual demands (Okonkwo, 2007, p.249). Customization currently exists within the luxury market, but is provided at a narrow level, to select group of consumer. Many brands have yet to adopt customization on a broad level. Brands like Louis Vuitton do offer a small selection of personalized items that can be monogramed. Their Mon Monogram program allows consumers to 77 select their preferred bag, select two colors for the stripe, and their initials, (see above image) (“Louis Vuitton”). Brands are missing out on the opportunity to really learn who their customers are and design products that, not only meets, but also exceeds the expectations of consumers. By establishing a broad level of customization or personalization, luxury brands would be able to gain a competitive edge on their competition, including counterfeits. Consumers would have an outlet to help them stand out amongst the “wannabes” who consume counterfeit luxury goods. Counterfeiters would not be able to keep up with the production of customized goods, nor would they truly be able to provide counterfeit consumers with the same services. Customization would cater to the individual taste of authentic consumers and allow them to flex their style, the way no counterfeit vendor ever could. Customization would make all authentic consumers feel like VIPs, ushering in a sense of exclusivity. All these factors would increase customer satisfaction and create a deeper customer relationship with a brand, thus increasing brand loyalty. If authentic luxury consumers remain satisfied and are made to feel like they are still part of an elite group, luxury brands will not be faced with a decrease in brand equity or brand dilution, due to the manufacturing and distribution of counterfeit luxury goods. In fact, by opening up customized products, consumers of counterfeits will aspire to 78 obtain true luxury, in order to gain the recognition and experience owning an item created to their specifications and needs. Consumers view personal items as an extension of themselves and luxury consumers purchase high-end items, in order to feel special, elite, and part of an exclusive fashionable group. Customized products would help authentic consumers maintain this perception of themselves, as they wade through a sea of knock-off, or counterfeit luxury goods. 79 Scenario Plan The Future of Louis Vuitton and Counterfiet Goods 80 Company Challenge Louis Vuitton is interested to learn what impact internally legitimizing counterfeit goods would have on its brand, especially facing shifts in consumer behavior toward counterfeit goods, the downturn in the economy, and the competition from fast fashion retailers and the growing counterfeit market. This Scenario will seek to predict the probable future of the fashion house, in the face of a growing counterfeit culture. Company Profile Founded in 1854, Louis Vuitton is the world's most valuable luxury brand and is a division of LVMH, which boasts more than 60 luxury brands including Clicquot, Dom Pérignon, Moët & Chandon, Christian Dior, Givenchy, Donna Karan (DKI), Sephora, and TAG Heuer ("Louis vuitton north,") Under the artistic direction of Marc Jacobs, the new collections are met with immediate success and renown Its products include leather goods, handbags, trunks, shoes, watches, jewelry and accessories. Most of which are adorned with the LV monogram. Continually expanding, Louis Vuitton today boasts 17 production workshops, an international logistics center, and exclusive shops worldwide. Louis Vuitton sells its products through its own Stores Network in more than 460 Locations, and through the e-commerce section of its website. Recent product endorsers of the brand include Angelina Jolie, Muhammad Ali and Michael Phelps ("Louis vuitton linkedin,"). 81 Environmental Issues According to the International Anti-counterfeiting Coalition, counterfeits are estimated to account for 5 to 7 percent of worldwide trade, or an estimated $600 billion annually. Since 1982, global trade of illegitimate goods has increased a staggering 10,000 percent, fuelled by an increase in consumer demand. E-commerce sites like E-Bay have also aided in the “spike” of counterfeit goods sold, making it easier to not only distribute fake goods, but also for consumers to acquire them, without having to leave the comforts and safety of home ("The spread of," 2010). It’s estimated that the sales of counterfeit goods via Internet sites reached $135 billion in 2010 ("The spread of," 2010). One of the fastest growing, and profitable markets, luxury brands fear that counterfeits will have a large impact on their brand image and how they are perceived by consumers. However consumers of counterfeit fall into two categories; the deceived and the non-deceived. Non-deceived consumers are conscious that they are buying a fake product, as a Louis Vuitton handbag buying from black market for example, contrary to deceived consumers that are not aware that they are buying a counterfeit product. In most cases, counterfeit consumers fall into the non-deceived category. These consumers are well aware of what they’re buying and thus their purchase does not affect their overall perception of the brand. In the case of the deceived consumer, perception would be altered has they would be under the 82 assumption that they have ownership of poor quality, genuine, products in terms of design details and durability. Also the counterfeit market is often the first place where consumers develop aspirational taste for genuine luxury objects, increasing brand awareness and public consciousness. The fight to eradicate counterfeits is neither cheap nor easy. Online sales have boosted the counterfeit market and are becoming a more significant problem, and with much of the counterfeits coming from china, there is no way to truly identify how many counterfeit goods are actually flooding the market. The battle against counterfeits is a never ending fight that financially may not be worth trying to win. 83 Counterfeit Impact The following section will seek to identify the forces and drivers that influence the growth in counterfeit sales, as well as Louis Vuitton’s decision to fight or collaborate. The below chart outlines the top ten drivers that impact Louis Vuitton and its current business practices. Table Five 84 Impact/Uncertainty Matrix The Impact/Uncertainty Matrix pinpoints how the forces and drivers impact Louis Vuitton’s business and counterfeit consumption their decision to internally legitimize counterfeits, on a high to low scale. As you can see, of the ten drivers, economic conditions, consumer behavior, and aspirational buyer have the highest impact on Louis Vuitton and their issues with counterfeit consumption. Table Six 85 Scenario Grid I have pinpointed that consumer behavior has the highest impact and uncertainty, thus will have a greater effect on the growth of counterfeit culture. I have determined economic conditions will affect behaviors in two ways, consumers will put importance on values and priorities or lifestyle and status, depending on whether or not the world is still in a recession, recovering from the recession, or economically stable. The following grid breaks down four different scenarios based on consumer behavior and Louis Vuitton’s attitude towards counterfeits. Each Scenario tells a different story of how the market changes and the prominence of counterfeits in society. Table Seven 86 Visualization of the Future 87 In this section you will find the full story of each possible scenario that will paint a picture of how consumer behavior is affected, depending on economic conditions and the legitimization or legalization of counterfeit goods, by Louis Vuitton. Scenario: Obsession This is a world in which… The economy has experienced little to no growth, there remains uncertainty about what the future may hold in terms of jobs and income. A clear division of classes will develop, with the wealthy holding much of the buying power, and the lower class becoming the majority. Rather than curb spending and conserving resources, a “Keeping up with the Jones” movement occurs. Society will become status driven and as a means to maintain a certain status within the community, consumers will turn to gift giving. People will actively seek out luxury goods in a variety of ways, including in store, online, and through third parties. Outside appearances will gain importance, with designer logos becoming the epitome of style, while living spaces will be minimal and contain only necessities, such as a bed, kitchen, and bathroom. With consumer focus being on obtaining luxury goods, the counterfeit market will grow significantly, as the lower class seeks to obtain pieces of luxury. A “by any means” attitude will develop and the purchasing of counterfeit goods will become the norm among the lower and middle class consumer. Little enforcement of counterfeit laws will take 88 place, as the sale of counterfeit goods is found to aid in global economic growth. Enforcement will also be a problem as distributors of counterfeit goods will be far to numerous. Scenario: Back to Basics This is a world in which… Facing economic downturn and social strife, consumers are focused on keeping their homes and maintaining what they already have. People are more socially aware, as economic uncertainty increases. An “All for one, One for all” mentality has emerged and many begin to see outsourcing as aiding in economic instability, due to poor labor laws/ conditions and possible association with organized crime. Due to economic hardship, consumers are more careful with how, and where, they spend their money, preferring to purchase locally and within their communities. Budgeting and cautious spending becomes the norm. For those who can afford to purchase luxury items, non-branded items and home accessories have gained popularity, fast fashion has also risen in popularity as consumers seek fashionable trends, within their budget. Theft via e-commerce is on the rise, so many steer clear of online shopping. 89 Scenario: Cheap Chic This is a world in which… Economic growth is on the rise, but consumers continue to spend frugally, preparing for another economic downturn. People are slowly beginning to spend on luxury items again, but most are putting an emphasis on maintaining their households and valuing the things they already have. As an alternative, consumers are being introduced to higher quality counterfeit goods that give them a taste of luxury, without the high price. Socially, purchasing of counterfeit goods become the norm, thus introducing luxury to consumers who had no previous interest in luxury brands. Due to the previous years of economic hardship, people not only value their belongings, but also value quality. Counterfeit consumers will grow attached to their purchases, but will value the quality found within true luxury. 90 Scenario: Designer Imposter This is a world in which… Technological advancements have opened up the market and an economic boom is occurring. Consumer spending is on the rise, and consumers are actively seeking out both higher end and fast fashion items, as technology has made quick manufacturing more efficient and able to produce higher quality goods. Counterfeit goods remain popular among those who cannot afford to purchase the real thing. Most counterfeits possess a higher quality than in the past and are flooding the market. Luxury and counterfeit items are being mixed and matched, and many luxury brands are finding that their brands have become over saturated. Counterfeiters are inserting new styles into the market, faster than luxury brands. 91 Implications for Louis Vuitton This table breaks down the political, social, and economic implications that each scenario sets for the “world”, luxury brands, and counterfeits. Table Eight 92 Scenario Recommendation Table Nine 93 Thoughts/ Recommendations 94 If Counterfeits are such a threat and damaging to a brand, why is it commonly counterfeited brands like Coach, Louis Vuitton, and Nike aren’t suffering? As retail stock of lower priced brands like Wal-Mart and Target continue fall, dropping 1.9 percent as of August 15, 2013, heavily copied brands like Louis Vuitton have seen the price of their stock increase by 0.6% (Clark, 2013). LVMH, The parent conglomerate that Louis Vuitton is under, reports that although the company has been affected by economic volatility in Europe and a slow-down in China, their cash-cow Louis Vuitton is reporting “exceptional” profitability, opening two new stores this year (Conti & Diderich, 2013). Coach has seen dips in their North American sales, but that’s being attributed to growing competition from affordable luxury brands like Michael Kors, Kate Spade, and Tory Burch. The brand saw a 12% dip in their fourth quarter income to $221.3 Million or 78 cents a diluted share for the period, this compared to 2012 income of $251.4 million, or 86 cents a. However sales for the brands increased 5.8 percent to $1.22 billion from $1.12 billion, in 2012, sales expanded 9 percent when adjusted for currency fluctuation. In North America, sales rose 6 percent to 825 Million, but store sales fell 1.7 percent, this was offset by a 7 percent increase in international sales (Steigrad, 2013). Coach’s executive officer, Lew Frankfort states the Coach’s disappointing performance with the handbags and accessories category was, 95 is due to the substantial decline in their logo based business (Steigrad, 2013). Counterfeits maybe to blame for the declines in demand for coach’s signature C collections, as the signature C is what is most often copied. Yet consumers haven’t stopped purchasing the Coach brand. What’s hurting the Coach brand is that they’re slow to innovate their product offering, allowing competitors to enter the market. Coach has found that their consumer’s taste has moved away from logos and is now focused on leather and leather based products. Coach’s move to be considered a lifestyle brand, raising their prices, and establishing multiple categories like. Ready-to-wear, outerwear, shoes, jewelry, watches, handbags, and small leather goods, may also play a role in their slow growth (Steigrad, 2013). Coach should have paid attention to the products that were getting counterfeited and anticipated a shift in consumer taste. Coach’s C logo was everywhere, and instead of innovating their product offering, introducing a line of products not featuring the infamous logo, they decided to capitalize on the trend and put the signature C print on everything from handbags, to shoes, to umbrellas. Another highly counterfeited brand is NIKE. The premium athletic brand also isn’t truly feeling the effects of counterfeits. The brand reported fourth-quarter revenues of $6.7 billion, up 7 percent ("Nike, inc. reports," 2013). My research has also led me to conclude that consumer perception is also not affected by counterfeits. I surveyed a variety of consumer on their 96 feeling about counterfeits, counterfeit consumers, and fast fashion (one of the biggest offenders of knocking off designer looks). Many seemed to have a hypocritical view of counterfeit luxury. One respondent only found them irresponsible if the consumer was deceived into believing their item was real. “I find it somewhat irresponsible if it is not noted upon to a consumer that the item is counterfeit. Otherwise, people who are really wanting a real handbag, for instance, will buy the real thing in my opinion. However, I am not the creator of a luxury product, so It does not affect me. On the other hand, I can see how the producer of luxury products would be outraged at knockoffs. It's a double sided sword to say the least.” - Respondent #6 This person also stated that counterfeit did not affect her view of luxury because she knows that their fake. Another respondent stated that she felt counterfeits tarnished the exclusivity of luxury brands, yet went on to state: “Some look really real and it is ok to have a few counterfeit items as long as you have the real things too. you can’t just buy all fake stuff it looks tacky and cheap! “ - Respondent #10 97 But most of my respondents just flat out didn’t care or were indifferent about counterfeits, stating that those who consumed counterfeits were wannabes or pretending. There’s no getting around the fact that there are negatives to counterfeiting, but I can’t say that they’re totally bad. When distinguishable from the real thing and not sold deceptively, counterfeits hold a host of benefits to the genuine brand owner. One of those is access to new markets, Counterfeits are a cheap way for brands to analyze if there are opportunities in new market, by analyzing the prevalence of counterfeit products bearing there name. Counterfeits also increase brand awareness, by keeping their name on the lips of their target market, as well as their aspirational consumers, and finally affirms brand equity in the market. You could say that it’s better to be copied, as it’s a sign of a brands popularity and perception within the market. Only brands with recognizable logos and high brand value get the counterfeit treatment, so in away brands should be flatter, because the public likes them, they really like them. If luxury brands embrace these benefits and use counterfeits to their advantage, then they’re likely to expand quickly and easily, as well as become a more innovative brand that creates product that’s exclusively for their target audience, while still enticing the aspirational buyer, and blocking out lower-price point brands from entering the market. When it comes down to it, luxury brands aren’t hurt by counterfeits, their real issue with 98 counterfeits and copies is that they feel like they’re not getting the credit they deserve for a certain silhouette or design element. Designers want to be able to walk in a store and say that bucket bag, I’m the only one who has a bag that looks like that, that’s my design. But the fact is most designer pull from the past for inspiration and simply modifies existing silhouettes; you could say that they participate in form of copying themselves. Recommendations Brands should focus on shutting down counterfeit manufacture that violate child labor laws, treat their workers poorly, and fund terroristic acts. There are many counterfeit manufacturers that pay working wages and provide housing for their employees. Targeting street vendors and purse parties is a waste of money and time. Luxury brands should also continue collaborating with lower-priced companies, like target and H&M, these diffusion lines satisfies counterfeit consumers taste for luxury in a legitimized environment. For more established brands like Louis Vuitton and Goyard, creating small, exclusive collections, more often will assist in keeping your target consumer engaged and interested in the brand. It will also keep the brand a step ahead of their counterfeiter; by time counterfeiter get the fake versions of these collections out, a new one would be introduced. 99 Luxury brands should also invest in RFID tagging. Counterfeiters have started to produce pretty good copies of authenticity card, RFID would make it much harder to pass a fake off as real, as well as allow the brand to keep track of their product, making sure none of their product ends up on the grey or black markets. While I can’t say for sure of collaborating with counterfeits is a good idea, I can say that counterfeits are as bad as they’re made out to be. In the end consumers will always value the quality and craftsmanship of luxury brands, and when they can afford them, will buy them. However as long as we define ourselves by the objects we own, counterfeits will always be a natural part of society. 100 Terms 101 Counterfeits: The Unauthorized, close copies of labels, logos, or other distinctive markings, as well as the deliberate attempt to deceive consumers by copying and marketing goods bearing well known trademarks, generally together with packaging and product configuration, so that they look like they are made by a reputable manufacturer. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID): is a generic term that is used to describe a system that transmits the identity (in the form of a unique serial number) of an object or person wirelessly, using radio waves. Trademarks: A symbol, word, or words legally registered or established by use representing a company or product. Used to distinguished and protect a company’s product from competition. Baker’s Marking Law: Earliest English law on trademarks, which governed the use of stamps or pinpricks on loaves of bread, passed in 1266. Southern Vs. How: One of the earliest trademark infringement cases involved a clothier making inferior cloth using the marks of a superior clothier. 102 Common Law: The system of laws originated and developed in England and based on court decisions, on the doctrines implicit in those decisions, and on customs and usages rather than on codified written laws. Trade Dress: The appearance of a product or its packaging, when that appearance indicates the source of a product. Patent: Set of rights given to an invention. There are no common law patents and inventions must be new, nonobvious, useful, or industrially applicable. Trademark Infringement: an appropriation or imitation that is likely to deceive ordinary or unwary buyers into accepting the goods of one trader as those of another Intellectual Property: refers to creations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, and symbols, names, images, and designs used in commerce. World Trade Organization (WTO): Is the only global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations. 103 Knockoffs: Copies that don’t include the label or other types of designer signatures. Deceptive Counterfeiting: The production of copies that are identically packaged, including trademarks and labeling, copied so as to seem to a consumer the genuine article. Non-deceptive Counterfeits: Counterfeit product’s intention is not to deceive the consumer. The consumer is aware that the product she is buying is fake. Imitation: Similar in substance, name, shape, and color to look like the original. Designed to look like and make you think of the original brand. Grey Market: The unauthorized sale of garment production overruns by legitimately contracted manufacturer. Custom-made copies: Replicas of trademark designs of branded products made by legitimate craftsmen. Raw materials are usually of good quality. Aspirational Buyer: Someone who purchases luxury items, but often can’t afford them. 104 Customization: The adaption of goods and services according to individual customer needs. Personalization: The adaption of either existing or yet-to-be produced goods to particular individual demands. Organized Retail Crime (ORC): Organized retail crime refers to professional shoplifting, cargo theft, retail crime rings and other organized crime occurring in retail. 105 Work Cited Gosline, R. (2009). The real value of fakes: Dynamic symbolic boundaries in socially embedded consumption. (Unpublished master's thesis). The spread of counterfeits: Knock-offs catch on. (2010, MARCH 04). 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Retrieved from http://www.shefinds.com/2011/target-copies-proenza-schoulers-ps1-bagmore-designer-lookalikes-from-your-favorite-stores/ Image Six Mahoney, M. (2010, FEBRUARY 22). [Web log message]. Retrieved from http://www.purseblog.com/louis-vuitton/personalize-your-louis-vuitton-withmon-monogram.html Tables Table One: Notable moments in the Middle Age Table Two: Important Fashion Changes of the 19th Century Table Three: Trademark Laws Timeline Table Four: Types of Counterfeit Activity Table Five: Counterfeit Impact: Forces and Drivers Table Six: Impact/Uncertainty Matrix Table Seven: Scenario Grid Table Eight: Implications Table Nine: Scenario Recommendations 110 Appendix A Question Consumer Survey Conducted by: J’Aliya Jones Response Percent What characteristics of luxury fashion are most important to you? a. Status b. Exclusivity c. Quality d. Craftsmanship e. Other a. b. c. d. e. a. 0% a. 0 b. 0% b. 0 c. 41.67% c. 5 d. 50% d. 6 e. 8.33% e. 1 How old are you? a. 0% a. 0 15-18 19-25 26-35 36-40 Over 40 b. 0% b. 0 c. 81.82% c. 9 d. 0% d. 0 e. 18.18% e. 2 a. 41.67% a. 5 b. 33.33% b. 4 c. 25% c. 3 d. 0% d. 0 a. 16.67% a. 1 b. 0% b. 0 c. 0% c. 0 d. 16.67% d. 1 e. 16.67% e. 1 f. 50% f. 3 How many luxury products do you own? a. b. c. d. Response Count None 1-5 10-20 More Than 20 What brand do you own the most of? a. Louis Vuitton b. Fendi c. Prada d. Chanel e. Burberry f. Other (See Comment table) a. 41.67% a. 5 b. 58.33% b. 7 111 Do counterfeit luxury items effect your view of true luxury? a. No, I know it's fake, so they don't bother me. b. No, People who carry counterfeit goods are just wannabes c. Yes, Counterfeit luxury can be confused with the real thing d. Yes, Tarnishes the exclusivity of the brand Would you rent luxury Items? a. 41.67% a. 5 b. 8.33% b. 1 c. 0% c. 0 d. 50% d. 6 a. 58.33% a. 7 a. No, I prefer to own b. 25% b. 3 b. Yes, More affordable c. 16.67% c. 2 c. No, Cheapens the luxury brand and the experience d. 0% d. 0 d. Yes, Looks like I own the item Do you shop at stores like Forever21, H&M, or Zara? a. 50% a. 6 a. Yes (See comment table) b. 50% b. 6 b. No a. 41.67% a. 5 How often do you shop at these stores? a. Never b. 58.33% b. 7 b. 1-3 times a month c. 0% c. 0 c. 4-8 times a month d. 0% d. 0 d. 10 or more times a month 112 Question How do counterfeits and counterfeit consumers make you feel? Response Makes me laugh especially when I was in PI. 8/13/2013 12:47 AM I don't really care. 8/12/2013 11:39 PM Some look really real and it is ok to have a few counterfeit items as long as you have the real things too. you can’t just buy all fake stuff it looks tacky and cheap! 8/7/2013 11:29 AM I pay them no mind 8/7/2013 10:42 AM They’re are pretending 8/6/2013 1:48 PM I find it somewhat irresponsible if it is not noted upon to a consumer that the item is counterfeit. Otherwise, people who are really wanting a real handbag, for instance, will buy the real thing in my opinion. However, I am not the creator of a luxury product, so It does not affect me. On the other hand, I can see how te producer of luxury products would be outraged at knockoffs. It's a double sided sword to say the least. 8/6/2013 12:54 PM Indifferent 8/6/2013 9:53 AM Disgusted. Counterfeit good makers do not employ good factory conditions and try to profit from name brands others have established. 8/6/2013 9:48 AM Question Question 4: What brand do you own the most of? In response to the answer of other Comments not a big brand person 8/13/2013 12:47 AM gucci 8/12/2013 11:39 PM Michael Kors 8/7/2013 11:29 AM Marc Jacobs 8/7/2013 10:42 AM Marc Jacobs 8/6/2013 12:54 PM Question 5: Have you ever purchased counterfeit products? In response to the answer of yes LV 8/6/2013 12:54 PM LV 8/6/2013 12:49 PM 113 Purse 8/6/2013 Question 8: Do you shop at stores like Forever21, H&M, or Zara? In response to the answer yes forever21, H&M, and Zara 8/12/2013 11:39 PM Zara 8/7/2013 10:42 AM H&m and Zara 8/6/2013 12:54 PM H&M 8/6/2013 9:53 AM All three. Trendy items at an affordable price. Zara also carries some items of lasting quality. 8/6/2013 9:48 AM 114 Illustrations Image One Image Two 115 Image Three Image Four 116 Image Five Image Six 117