Archive for Consumer Behaviour

Luxury Mobile Phones in Japan

With everybody talking these days about Apples $600 iPhone, Samsung selling a Prada phone and Porsche Design preparing their $800 Porsche Mobile Handset the question arises where the upscale market for mobile phones is going. Especially for Japan -the home of brand luxury- this is an interesting topic to cover.

Different from other parts of the world Japanese are not used to pay more than 30,000 Yen (~$250) for a new handset no matter how fancy it might be.

The market
The Japanese are well known for their love of luxury goods. Not only wealthy people, but most of the middle class as well, expect that they can and should have luxurious items, even if they are minor ones like a Louis Vuitton wallet or a Prada keychain. For some global brand companies the revenue generated in Japan account for over 70% of their global revenue.

A “luxury guide” lists the top “luxury goods” in Japan:
For example a 6 liter bottle of wine for about 2.4 million yen, a Patek Phillippe watch for 200 million yen, a 15 million yen bonsai, and the like. Electronics are absent from the luxury offerings that do include jewelry, art, antiques, furniture, and hotel stays.

Luxury Electronics
There are high-end electronics available in Japan today. One of the most expensive televisions retail for about 4 Million Yen. Sonys “Qualia” brand stands as a symbol of luxury electronics

Characteristics of Luxury Goods
When observing the types of items that are prized as luxury goods, there are some broad characteristics that can be identified.

Price - Luxury goods must be priced higher than normal goods that serve the same purpose. Example: A mobile phone strap with a gold design that sells for 20,000 yen, an order of magnitude more than normal straps.

Materials and Workmanship – Luxury automobiles always stress the fine materials used for interiors, as well as exceptional fit and finish of their bodies. Luxury furniture, such as Japan’s exquisitely made storage chests and treasured ceramics, are also prized for these characteristics.

Scarcity - Rare items are highly valued. This holds true for antiques, samurai armor, limited runs of designer t-shirts, and services such as stays in exclusive hotels.

Elitism – Going hand in hand with scarcity is the Japanese worship of the elite. An item that associates its owner, correctly or not, with the cultural or financial elite can be a luxury item. So we see middle class teenagers carrying Louis Vuitton handbags to school.

Perceived status (rank) – Also related to elitism is Japan’s fixation on rankings. There are “best 10” lists for everything imaginable, and people pay attention to them. This is one reason Japanese companies have traditionally focused on market share rather than profits. In Japan, if you can become the biggest or most recognized, you have a real advantage.

Purchase Experience – When purchasing a luxury, the setting is extremely important for both products and services. A massage experienced in the privacy of an elegant hotel room is different from one taken at a public bath. The buying experience is an important part of the product. There are, of course, discount sellers for those for whom owning the item is sufficient. But even for them, the existence of extremely luxurious flagship stores for designer goods lends the impression that the consumer shops there.

After purchase care – Sellers of luxury goods are expected to provide exceptional service for the life of the product. The knowledge that if a handle breaks, or a seam comes apart, that the store will gladly fix or replace the item without any embarrassment to the client is very comforting. This implies that the seller has a long-term commitment to the buyer, something that is very highly valued in Japan.

Use Experience – the buyer must get some extra benefit from the experience of using the product. Whether it be the benefit of being seen carrying a Coach suitcase, the tactile joy of a perfect teacup, the touch of a fur coat, or the pampered experience of an exclusive spa, the consumer must feel that using the product is something special.

Mobile Phone Luxury?
Mobile phones can incorporate some luxury characteristics. The price, scarcity, materials, purchase experience and after-purchase service that signal luxury are within some level of control of the manufacturer and seller. Yet there are other aspects that are much more elusive, like elitism.
Talking with consumers about the idea of luxury mobile phones, often revealed a quizzical looks. While the idea seems appealing to them, the concept seems hard to grasp. It looks like they are much more open to the idea of “customizable” luxury than to “out-of-the-box” luxury.
This can also bee seen in the market today. While users spend around 20,000 Yen for a mobile phone they spend much more than that on having their phone designed by nail artists or on buying limited edition colours or straps.

Conclusion
Mobile phones can certainly be made to be expensive, high end, function-packed electronic wonders. But bein perceived as a luxury item is an extra challenge. The products and services that the Japanese view as luxurious tend to have a different, more classic slant than the ultra-modern multi-use image that a handset evokes.
The difficulty of establishing a mobile phone as a luxury item is made even more clear by the fact that no electronics have broken into the world of “luxury products” in Japan so far. There is still a fundamental disconnect between feature-based electronics that will soon be superseded by new, better models and the experience of use of a luxury item, which often has classic styling and may be used for many, many years. Where there seems to be a chance is the field of customizable or special edition phones.
This could either be a special edition, limited design version of a standard phone or a combination of design coves/straps/accessories bundled with the phone. In the last 2 years new design phones and limited edition covers had been introduced in the market but not to a level that can be regarded as “luxurious”.
Japan is the worlds leading luxury market so it will be interesting to see with what concepts companies will come up in the next months. In general the mentioned characteristics of luxury goods will be the rules everybody has to follow.

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Sayonara Vodafone Japan. Let’s start de-branding

Current ads for the new digital TV (One Seg) handset from Sharp

Just weeks after the news of Softbank taking over Vodafone Japan appeared in the media things start to get serious. Softbank seems to be pushing hard to de-brand the former J-phone and then Vodafone carrier.

Current ads for the new digital TV (One Seg) handset from Sharp for example no longer carry the big red Vodafone branding. All that is left is a red logo frame and a small logo on the ad itself.

Looks like the message is clear: “Sayonara Vodafone. Softbank is here to successfully change the business!” And sure they will.

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Goodbye PDA

Zaurus 3100

After a weekend of strolling through Tokyo’s biggest Electronic stores one point became eminent: more and more shops are saying “goodbye” to PDAs. Big chain stores like Biccamera or Sakuraya up until a few month ago had a wide range of PDA offerings from Palm, PocketPC to Zaurus models. Now they are only displaying the Zaurus line of PDAs. All other products have disappeared from the average showroom. A small discussion with shop staffs revealed the following: “We stopped selling those products. The Zaurus is still there because it is more like an ultra small Laptop than a PDA. If consumers need PDA functions they can find these in the mobile phones we sell here at the shop.”

Almost all Japanese phones already offer QVGA displays like normal PDAs as well as address book, calendar and note taking functions. Some can even display and edit office documents.

The assumption of the mobile phones being the PDA killer has been around for long. Now reality proves it right.

Motoroal A1000Nokia 6630Sharp Zero3

It will be interesting to see how smartphones will perform in the Japanese mobile market in the long run. As of now DoCoMo (Motorola using Symbian), Vodafone (Nokia using Symbian) and soon Willcom (Sharp using WM 5.0) offer smartphones. More are expected in 2006. Given the advanced state of normal mobile phones in Japan (they are already rather “smart”) finding the right way to market these “smarter smart phones” will be a big challenge.

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Single handed fun

PSP and mobile phone

While portable gaming devices like Gameboy and PSP are bestsellers in Japan, there is one device that outperforms these platforms: the mobile phone. The reason is not only because more people in Japan own a mobile phone than a Gameboy or PSP.

Talking with some gamers and colleagues I found another reason. And this one lies in the place where people in Japan use to play mobile games: on the train while commuting. Commuting times of one hour or are quite common in the Tokyo region.

This is a perfect time for recreation activities like reading a good book, the newspaper, sleeping, writing mobile mails or playing games. There is just one problem: space. Trains are usually packed during peak times and passengers have to stand while the train is driving.

Packed train in Tokyo

While holding on to the handle with one hand (to make sure not to stumble over others when the train stops) there is only one hand left for other activities. This already eliminates the possibility to use a Gameboy or a PSP.( Not even to mention the tricky usage of a Gameboy DS in a crowded train while standing.)

Streetfighter on mobile
Here the mobile phone is the perfect single-hand gaming machine. Games like Street Fighter for example have been modified for the mobile phone to enable special move combinations by just pressing a single button on the phone. The user can even select a right-hand control or left-hand control from the in-game menu depending on if he is holding the phone in his right or left hand.

An interesting example of how the usage of consumer electronic devices is shaped by its environment and also a small inspiration for future train savvy game machines.

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Social Network Services in Japan/Korea

I just read about this in the Nikkei Business Daily about Social Network Services in Japan

Saiworld Koreans biggest Social Network Service is plannig gto enter the Japanese market in this december. In Korea this service has already 16 million users! That’s 1/3 of the population using this service! I was quite amazed…

They also mentioned some stats about existing SNS in Japan:

Japanese SNS:

Open systems:
CafeStar (Taon) 1,7 million users
Kururu (NHN Japan) 210,000 users
Jonka (Image Factory) 180,000 users
Jokon (NeoWiz Japan) 100,00 users

Invitation based:
Mixi (e-mercury) 1,92 million users
Guri (Guri) 270,000 users

(Source Nikkei Business Daily Japanese Edition, November 30th 2005)

Quite interesting to see once again how strong Korea is when it comes to online communities..

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