Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering - Why does a high-end fashion house or luxury watchmaker risk total bankruptcy the moment they decide to boost their quarterly revenue by putting their signature products on sale In the ruthless, counter-intuitive world of luxury economics, aggressively lowering the price actually destroys the demand-a phenomenon known as Veblen Brand Assassination.Luxury items are 'Veblen goods'; their entire consumer appeal is based on their exorbitant price and their ability to signal elite social status. The consumer is not paying for the leather or the stitching; they are paying for the exclusivity. When a brand attempts to chase mass-market profits by opening discount outlet stores, licensing their logo to cheap accessories, or offering holiday sales, they completely shatter this psychological illusion. The wealthy elite instantly abandon the brand because it has become accessible to the middle class, and the brand loses its prestige forever.This sharp marketing autopsy dissects the fragile architecture of exclusivity. It documents the catastrophic brand dilution of Pierre Cardin and Burberry in the 1990s, the ruthless strategy of destroying unsold inventory to maintain scarcity, and the ironclad rules of prestige pricing.Protect your premium positioning at all costs. Veblen Brand Assassination reveals that in the luxury market, accessibility is not a growth strategy; it is a corporate death sentence.