Login  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Better Ask Mrs. Jones

By Carole Sloan -- Home Textiles Today, 1/8/2007

Had an interesting chat recently with Mary Ella Gabler, the dynamic force behind Peacock Alley, and it ranged from product and trends, to what consumers really want and think about product. Her company, which focuses on luxury bed and bath products, now is moving up to super luxury, and in planning ahead, they did a lot of consumer research.

But the eye-opening piece of the conversation – and something that apparently too few retailers and suppliers dig into — is that the "gap-osis" between what the marketplace thinks and what consumers think is far bigger than most anyone realizes.

Those conversations and studies have led to a program that will be launched later this month, heeding the comments from consumers, rather than preconceived notions from industry players.

We talked particularly about home textiles stuff. But I'm sure that the lack of real understanding goes deeply into any consumer product area.

How often we hear the mantra, "So and so retailer can't sell a comforter like this for more than $XX." Our typical rejoinder is, "Did anyone ask Mrs. Jones?" — or is it merely that retailer X or retailer Y has broken price and so now the market price is newly established? Downwards, of course. No one has thought to ask Mrs. Jones if she would pay a buck or so more for added fashion, value, quality.

Now it seems this pre-guessing Mrs. Jones syndrome is happening even before the stuff gets into the store. Heard the other day about a soon-to-happen MAJOR LAUNCH by a MAJOR RETAILER that purports to foster "affordable luxury" in its mix. A particular product has been developed at significantly lesser than "affordable luxury" price points and with all of the "bennies" that this company has to build into pricing a product, its quality level would be that of a mass merchandiser, at best.

Market week is just around the corner — yes, they seem to happen quicker and quicker as time goes by. This might just be the time to step back and talk about quality, fashion, value — and what the consumer really wants and will pay for. Of course, to find this out it will cost a dollar or so. But the return on this investment could well be the long range health of the industry.

We didn't have folks knocking one another out at holiday to buy a $400 plus PlayStation 3 in this industry. As a matter of fact, few bed ensembles even hit that price point.

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

There are no other articles written by this author.

Sponsored Links



 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Photos

Blogs


Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

» VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

  • Fall Market Kick-Off Party - part I
    HTT’s Market Kick-Off Party on Sept. 15 at the 230 Fifth Penthouse & roof deck drew hundreds of industry execs looking to beat the heat and mingle with colleagues.
  • Fall 08 Market Kick-Off Party - part II
    HTT’s Market Kick-Off Party on Sept. 15 at the 230 Fifth Penthouse & roof deck drew hundreds of industry execs looking to beat the heat and mingle with colleagues.
Advertisements





NEWSLETTERS
Click on a title below to learn more.

Home Textiles Today Extra (Daily)
Home Textiles Today's Green (Occasional)
Furniture Today eDaily (Daily)
Furniture Today Bedding Today eWeekly (Weekly)
Furniture Today's Green (Occasional)
eDaily Classifieds (Weekly)
Home Accents Today eWeekly (Weekly)
Home Accents Today Product Line (Bi-Weekly)
Home Accents Today Green (Occasional)
Casual Living eWeekly (Weekly)
Casual Living Green (Occasional)
Kids Today eKids News (Weekly)
Gifts and Decorative Accessories Direct (Weekly)
Gifts and Decorative Accessories Product Wire (Twice A Month)
Gifts & Dec Double Take (Occasional)
Playthings eXtra (Weekly)
Playthings Product Watch (Twice A Month)

About Us    |    Advertising Info    |   Site Map    |   Contact Us    |    Subscription    |   Affiliate Links    |    RSS
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites