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Managing the challenge of luxury democratization: a multicountry analysis

Managing the challenge of luxury democratization: a multicountry analysis
Managing the challenge of luxury democratization: a multicountry analysis
Once the preserve of the elite, many luxury brands are now targeting the rapidly rising global middle classes. This “democratization of luxury,” understood as the perceived reduction in distinctiveness, exclusivity, and self-differentiation of luxury goods due to wider availability and access, has changed the luxury industry landscape substantially, and yet it remains an underexplored phenomenon in academic research. Building on the theory of network effects, this study focuses on how democratization influences the relationship between conspicuous signaling and luxury purchase intentions. Analysis of primary data (n = 1,156) from luxury consumers in developed (United States and Spain) and developing (China and India) markets with distinctly differing economic trajectories reveals the varying negative moderating influence of democratization. These negative effects of luxury democratization are more pronounced in developing markets (Study 1). Further, the findings highlight that consumer indulgence can help mitigate negative externalities associated with luxury democratization (Study 1) and identify its underlying mechanism through positive affect (Study 2). The multimethod approach demonstrated in this study sheds new light on consumer perceptions of luxury democratization and offers actionable implications for international luxury firms on managing this challenge in developed and developing markets.
Luxury, brand management, democratization, emerging markets, indulgence, network effects
0262-1703
44-59
Shukla, Paurav
d3acd968-350b-40cf-890b-12c2e7aaa49d
Rosendo-Rios, Veronica
f9a656c9-d07c-4500-8a0d-9f0578f359d5
Trott, Sangeeta
1ea7da27-1071-46d4-98a4-18ad008e84c4
Lyu, Daisy
5e87d21c-8fbe-4391-bffd-96eaae9a2a43
Khalifa, Dina
33885851-c8fc-4dfb-9c22-36752d7f2cab
Shukla, Paurav
d3acd968-350b-40cf-890b-12c2e7aaa49d
Rosendo-Rios, Veronica
f9a656c9-d07c-4500-8a0d-9f0578f359d5
Trott, Sangeeta
1ea7da27-1071-46d4-98a4-18ad008e84c4
Lyu, Daisy
5e87d21c-8fbe-4391-bffd-96eaae9a2a43
Khalifa, Dina
33885851-c8fc-4dfb-9c22-36752d7f2cab

Shukla, Paurav, Rosendo-Rios, Veronica, Trott, Sangeeta, Lyu, Daisy and Khalifa, Dina (2022) Managing the challenge of luxury democratization: a multicountry analysis. Journal of International Marketing, 30 (4), 44-59. (doi:10.1177/1069031X221126925).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Once the preserve of the elite, many luxury brands are now targeting the rapidly rising global middle classes. This “democratization of luxury,” understood as the perceived reduction in distinctiveness, exclusivity, and self-differentiation of luxury goods due to wider availability and access, has changed the luxury industry landscape substantially, and yet it remains an underexplored phenomenon in academic research. Building on the theory of network effects, this study focuses on how democratization influences the relationship between conspicuous signaling and luxury purchase intentions. Analysis of primary data (n = 1,156) from luxury consumers in developed (United States and Spain) and developing (China and India) markets with distinctly differing economic trajectories reveals the varying negative moderating influence of democratization. These negative effects of luxury democratization are more pronounced in developing markets (Study 1). Further, the findings highlight that consumer indulgence can help mitigate negative externalities associated with luxury democratization (Study 1) and identify its underlying mechanism through positive affect (Study 2). The multimethod approach demonstrated in this study sheds new light on consumer perceptions of luxury democratization and offers actionable implications for international luxury firms on managing this challenge in developed and developing markets.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 2 September 2022
Published date: December 2022
Keywords: Luxury, brand management, democratization, emerging markets, indulgence, network effects

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470894
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470894
ISSN: 0262-1703
PURE UUID: b2e6d454-6055-461e-93ba-ef11bffffe0e
ORCID for Paurav Shukla: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1957-8622
ORCID for Daisy Lyu: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9839-8891

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Oct 2022 16:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:04

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Contributors

Author: Paurav Shukla ORCID iD
Author: Veronica Rosendo-Rios
Author: Sangeeta Trott
Author: Daisy Lyu ORCID iD
Author: Dina Khalifa

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