SELLING
DREAMS
By John Munch
…………………………………………………………………………………….
Ferrari, Italy’s
maker sports and racing cars, is among the three most recognizable brands in
the world. The company got its high profile among the world’s corporate giants
without the help, for most of its existence, of an advertising department. Only
as recently as 1993 did Ferrari create a marketing department. “Just parking
our exciting automobiles is enough to draw the crowds” writes Gian
Luigi Longinotti-Buitoni the author of a book
called Selling
Dreams.
Customers are now spending more money on products they
desire rather than on products they simply need. All companies must therefore
produce goods of very high quality more importantly, they must establish a
brand for years to come by giving it emotional qualities that match customers’
strongest desires. Like Ferrari, all companies must
create and sell dreams’.
Longinotti-Buitoni gives some
interesting statistics about markets for luxury goods worldwide: Switzerland
with 220 Ferraris sold in 1997 is the largest market per capita for the car
maker’s products; the company, on the other hand, sells only 2,7% of its cars
to women. Rolex and the highest number of luxury watches are sold in
Italy, while Japan has been consistently the leading market in the world for
leather goods from Gucci, Ferragamo, Hermes and Louis Vuitton. China, amazingly,
appears to be dringking a lot of Hennessy
cognac.
From the Financial
Times
FINANCIAL TIMES
World business
newspaper
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