Tiffany And Co Brand Powerpoint Template
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Tiffany & Co PowerPoint Presentation
Tiffany & Co
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Tiffany & Co
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Presentation Transcript
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Tiffany & Co By: Kelli Monk
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Company Snapshot • Founded in 1837 in New York City by Charles Lewis Tiffany • CEO Michael Kowalski • Headquarters in NYC • Makes over $2 billion in sales annually • 220 stores worldwide • 8,400 employees worldwide
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Snapshot Continued • Segments: Americas, Asia-Pacific and Europe • Target market: women with a higher household income and a taste for the finer things in life, and men who buy for those women • Products: jewelry, timepieces, sterling silverware, china, crystal, stationary, fragrances and accessories
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PEST Table
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Political Factors • Threat of conflict diamonds from diamond-producing countries in political unrest • Availability and price of these diamonds depends on political stability of country
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Economic Factors • International sales of luxury goods is on the rise • Emerging markets included, where Tiffany is already established • International economic recession • 2011 earthquake in Japan, reducing purchases of luxury goods in region
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Social Factors • There is a trend of rising female employment, allowing women their own income to purchase Tiffany products • Changing roles of women means changes in mindsets of working women • Because of the recession, consumers want to spend their money on products that will last, which includes Tiffany products
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Technological Factors • E-commerce makes purchasing of products easier for customers • E-commerce makes it easier for Tiffany to reach international customers
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Industry Analysis
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Intensity of Rivalry • Strong force • Louis Vuitton Moet Hennesy owns over 60 luxury brands • They compete directly with Tiffany & Co • LVMH has a good deal of power in the industry
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Buyer Power • Strong force • Market demand determines supply • Customers demand high quality from Tiffany, therefore they must produce it • Tiffany must find a way to keep buyers purchasing their products even during times of recession
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Supplier Power • Benign force – not a threat to Tiffany • Possibility of depletion of nonrenewable resources, such as diamonds, but not an immediate threat
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Threat of Substitute Products • Strong Force • Many possibilities for substitutes • Examples: Vacations, home renovations, car purchase, etc.
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Threat of New Entrants • Benign force • Not difficult to establish a jewelry store, but more difficult to establish a luxury goods store • Very difficult to establish a high quality luxury goods store on the level of Tiffany & Co • Takes years of recognition to be considered high quality
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Blue Ocean Strategy
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Blue Ocean Strategy • Tiffany does not need to offer discounts to keep making sales or fight to be noticed in the marketplace • Tiffany focuses on differentiation rather than cost cutting • Tiffany experiences high growth in a high growth market and does not rely on mergers or acquisitions • These shows Tiffany has a high possibility of a BOS
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Conclusions • Economic factors have the largest impact on Tiffany & Co • The growing markets offer a large opportunity for the company with possible further expansion into international markets • A blue ocean strategy could help Tiffany, but they already have an established place in the market with little threat of new entrants • Tiffany is a consistently growing company established worldwide in stable countries with growth potential
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Analysis of Competition Tiffany & Co By: Kelli Monk
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Key Competitors • High-end competition • Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy • Lower-end competition • Signet Group • Zale • Blue Nile
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Comparison in Revenues
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Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy • Made up of over 60 luxury brands • Recently acquired Bulgari • High international sales • Smallest division of company is watches and jewelry • Consistent customer base: wealthy individuals ($100,000/ year or more)
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Signet Group • World's largest specialty jewelry retailer • Kay Jewelers & Jared The Galleria of Jewelry • Has 4.4% of total jewelry market • Sells "affordable luxury" • Middle class customers • Sales only in US (75%) and UK (25%)
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Zale • Focuses on middle income and young adult customers • Extremely vulnerable to economic downturns • Operates abroad (Puerto Rico & Canada)
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Blue Nile • Largest online diamond retailer • Primary business in the US • Operates websites in UK and Canada • Ships products to over 25 countries • Positioned as a high-end jeweler, but majority of sales are below $5,000 • Vulnerable to economic downturns
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Geographic Scope
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Business Segments
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Tiffany & Co Signet Group Blue Nile LVMH Zale
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How Companies Compete
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Jewelry Market • $58.8 billion market • Customers less price sensitive – looking for quality rather than focused on price • Lower-end retailers more sensitive to economic downturns than the high-end jewelers • Experienced decline during 2008 recession, but has risen since then
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Target Market • Women & Men who buy jewelry for women • For the high-priced jewelry, target market is individuals with household incomes of $100,00+ • Wealthy customers lead to consistent sales even in tough economic times
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Social Media The social networking sites of these brands show pictures of new products, which can help customers to choose the products they wish to purchase. Social Networks are a good way to build brand awareness, but for higher quality luxury brands, they are not necessary.
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Conclusions • The jewelry market is very large, and not ruled by Tiffany or any of its competitors. • While these companies compete on different stances, they try to capture the same market • With continuing international growth, expanding further into international markets would be beneficial to each company
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Conclusions • Awareness of companies such as Tiffany and LVMH brands is not an issue, but for smaller companies such as Gordon's Jewelers (Zale), social networking sites are helpful • Each company is successful, residing in the 'star' category of the BCG matrix, but the percentage of the total market each company holds could increase by a large amount
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Internal Analysis Tiffany & Co By: Kelli Monk
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Business Model • Tiffany has made its name on product design, manufacturing and retailing • They thrive on differentiation and quality products • Focus on excellent customer service • Knowledgeable employees
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Company Performance • Sales were on the increase until 2008 when they dropped due to the economic • recession • Sales continued to drop in 2009, but increased again in 2010 with profit margins • rising in both years
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Distribution • Tiffany products are only sold in Tiffany stores
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Resources
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Key Assets • High quality commodities • Brand image • High revenues • Product expansion
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BCG Matrix Tiffany's
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Value Chain
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Value Chain Cont'd.
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Competitive Position
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Generic Strategy • Somewhat of a niche player • Targeted towards higher-income customers, but offers lower priced items for middle-income customers
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Grand Strategy
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Grand Strategy Continued
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SWOT Analysis
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Conclusions • Tiffany has been able to differentiate themselves based on high-low cost and high quality products • Tiffany sales continue to grow • Both domestic and international • Tiffany continues to expand into international markets • Future growth opportunities • Business model is based primarily upon differentiation
Tiffany And Co Brand Powerpoint Template
Source: https://www.slideserve.com/benson/tiffany-co
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