The Brand Age
5 hours ago
- #Quartz Crisis
- #Luxury Brands
- #Swiss Watches
- The Swiss watch industry faced a 'quartz crisis' in the 1970s, a combination of competition from Japan, the collapse of the Bretton Woods agreement, and the rise of quartz movements.
- Swiss watchmakers adapted by transforming from precision instrument makers into luxury brands, shifting focus from accuracy and thinness to branding and status symbols.
- Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet pioneered the use of distinctive case designs to emphasize brand, leading to iconic models like the Golden Ellipse and Royal Oak.
- The transition to luxury branding was successful, with Swiss watch sales by revenue rebounding in the late 1980s, despite a decline in unit sales.
- The modern era of watchmaking, termed the 'brand age,' is characterized by large, conspicuous watches designed to display wealth and status, often at the expense of traditional design principles.
- Rolex, already focused on branding during the golden age, became a model for other watchmakers, with its recognizable and bulky designs.
- Artificial scarcity and secondary market manipulation are now key strategies for luxury watch brands, particularly for high-demand models like the Patek Philippe Nautilus.
- The brand age has led to a divergence from the functional design principles of the golden age, with watches now serving primarily as status symbols rather than timekeeping devices.