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Luxury Roundtable: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z conference New York May 3

March 28, 2017

Luxury Daily hosts its conferences at the Time Warner Center across from Central Park and Columbus Circle in New York Luxury Daily hosts its conferences at the Time Warner Center across from Central Park and Columbus Circle in New York

 

Please click here to register for the 2nd annual Luxury Roundtable 2017: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z conference in New York on Wednesday, May 3

Join senior executives and decision-makers at the 2nd annual Luxury Roundtable 2017: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z, a conference organized by Luxury Daily discussing a serious issue facing luxury marketers: how to drive and sustain demand from Generations X, Y and Z whose shopping habits are strikingly different from the silent generation and baby boomers.

While we will announce the complete roster of speakers in the next few days, attendees can expect to hear from brands, retailers, agencies, market researchers and publishers on how luxury marketers should address younger affluent generations who emphasize experience over acquisition, digital over physical, and choice versus loyalty.

Focus: How luxury marketers should target the different affluent generations, recognizing their varying attitudes to product consumption and experiences that may shape the future of the luxury business. The content centers on mindsets and psychographics more than simply demographics. Agenda will evolve.

Why you should attend: Several reasons. First, luxury is undergoing a rapid shift in consumption behavior as the older silent (1933-45) and baby boomer (1946-64) generations begin transferring wealth to the younger Generations X, Y and Z. Next, self-made Gens X and Y do not share the same attitudes to luxury product acquisition and retail stores as their parents or the preceding generations, setting up a challenge in the next decade for the vast majority of luxury marketers who sell products and not experiences. Finally, that oft-abused word: experiences – Gens X, Y and Z, at least for now, show a propensity for creating memories versus buying more product. It is time for luxury marketers to tackle these bulls by the horn. This event is a deep-dive into the looming mindset change that will shake the very foundations of the luxury business.

Venue: 10 on the Park at Time Warner Center, 60 Columbus Circle, 10th floor, New York, NY 10019 (entrance is on 60th Street across from Columbus Circle, between Equinox gym and the Mandarin Oriental Hotel)

Price: Only $695, which includes breakfast, lunch and cocktails

Sponsorship: For lunch roundtables and keynotes, tables, breakfast, cocktails and other sponsorships, please email ads@napean.com

Please click here to register for the 2nd annual Luxury Roundtable 2017: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z conference in New York on Wednesday, May 3

AGENDA

Luxury Roundtable 2017: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z

New York

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

7:30 a.m. – 8:15 a.m.

Breakfast and Registration

8:15 a.m.

Welcome Remarks
Mickey Alam Khan, editor in chief, Luxury Daily

Module 1: 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.

Keynote

Crystal: How to Tailor Travel Experiences to Gens X, Y & Z

Speaker:

Edie Rodriguez, CEO, Crystal

Research

Brand Challenge: Connecting with Different Generations Across Traditional and Digital Channels
Generations X, Y and Z have their own attitudes, behavior and response to advertising and marketing, media consumption, design and creative. A cookie-cutter approach will not do it anymore. So how should luxury brands and retailers target their outreach efforts to stoke demand with distinct triggers?

Panel

How to Manage Generational Differences In Building a Luxury Brand
In these competitive and evolving times, what must luxury brands do better to craft impactful messages to the different generations in their desired audiences? In addressing this challenge, are brand communications able to do more than just speak to their audiences, but rather actually engage with each of those generations in ways that can effectively communicate the brand experience from the first point of contact? Furthermore, how do brand leaders keep a tight grip on current best practices and simultaneously anticipate the uncertainty of those consumers’ future needs as they age?

Panelists:

Andy Georgescu, marketing communications leader, Lincoln Motor Co.

Alberto Milani, head of the luxury division of the Berkshire Hathaway’s Richline Group, and president, Italy America Chamber of Commerce

Orit, Founder/CEO, The O Group

Moderator:

Bob Shullman, founder/CEO, Shullman Research Center

10 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.

Break

Module 2: 10:30 a.m. – Noon

Panels

Defining Luxury and Authenticity
What it means to each post-boomer generation and how they interpret luxury even among a wealthy base. Adapting to new mores and technology-driven shifts, luxury marketers have to grapple with a fundamental issue: what does their brand stand for as the current customer base ages and the younger, affluent cohorts define luxury in less material terms? How far should they go from their roots to woo Gens X, Y and Z – or should they stand their ground? How green should their credentials be – sustainability as a selling point?

Panelists:

Jasmine Bina, founder/CEO, Concept Bureau

Response to Advertising, Marketing and Social Overtures – Or Indifference
What resonates with consumers in each generation, addressing issues such as marketing and information overload, ad blindness, spray and pray, inadequate branding, future of print, digital migration, social media, cynicism and loyalty building. Is social the new mail? When does familiarity breed contempt for these audiences? Which channels work best for which generation?

Content and Media Strategy
How to plan and buy media as well as generate content and native advertising for new digital formats as print loses luster with readers and advertisers. Why high-end leisure magazines are here to stay.

Noon to 1 p.m.

Lunch

Sponsored Keynote

Module 3: 1 p.m. – 3 p.m.

Panels

Experiences over Acquisition, Memories Over Stuff
Is this a new trend or simply a function of youth and reluctance to accumulate material goods until family life and roots set as part of the life stage? Indications are that this non-materialistic pattern is here to stay, so what it will mean for luxury brands and retailers peddling high-end product for which the young rich or wealthy heirs have no resonance or use? How to turning retail purchases and digital into an experience?

Panelists:

Christine Villanueva, head of strategy at Walton Isaacson

No-Show to Showroom: Emerging Role of the Retail Store
Emporium or showroom? Place to browse, but not buy? Gens X, Y and Z are equally comfortable shopping online and on mobile, so how to convince them to walk into a store and savor the experience and products. How to turn retail into an experience to remember. Even as department stores ebb away? And how to train store staff to deal with jeans and sneakers – the new dress code for the younger affluents?

Ecommerce and Mobile
Consumers across all cohorts post-boomer live on their smartphone. How to deploy online and mobile to generate new business while retaining existing customers? Delivering customer service via digital: how to make that happen? And how to set up for ecommerce and mcommerce fulfillment and delivery across borders?

Panelists:

Mike Griffin, vice president – consumer experience at Pitney Bowes

Keynote

Gen Z And The Paradox Of Luxury: A New Generation Challenges Old Definitions

When it comes to Luxury, Gen Z consumers—those born between 1998 and 2016 —are displaying attitudes and behaviors that are going to challenge the core assumptions and values upon which the industry operated for years.

This a generation of consumers who insist on being seen as unique, reject the idea of universality, and demand to take an active role in defining the brands they chose to use or wear. Being the first majority minority generation, they expect brands to practice diversity in their communications and avoid those who don’t.

They expect personalization, appreciate quality but above all value experience.

Luxury brands must prepare now for what is to be the largest consumer generation of our time - a 2.5 billion age cohort globally. This session will address how luxury brands can engage with a generation of shoppers that seems opposed to much of what luxury brands appear to stand for.

Speaker:

Hana Ben-Shabat, partner – retail and consumer goods practice, A. T. Kearney

3 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Break

Module 4: 3:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.

Panels

Trends Across Sectors: How Luxury is Adapting to Gens X, Y & Z
A look at key luxury verticals which have had to adapt to new shopping and consumption patterns and lessons that can be applied across sectors.

Panelists:

Stuart Siegel, president and CEO, Engel & Völkers New York City

Adam Karp, CMO, 1stdibs

The Real Money: Silent Generation and the Baby Boomers
How not to neglect them. How the transfer of wealth will transform luxury consumption.

Speaker:

Stacy Derby, family biography, Bind These Words 

Let the Consumer Speak: 5 Members of Their Generation Share
Hear it from the horse’s mouth: Silent generation, baby boomer, Gen X, Gen Y and Gen Z. What makes them tick and what tickles their luxury fancy? These representatives of their generation will offer insights into how they view luxury shopping and experiences, with their likes and dislikes.

Keynote

Closing Remarks
Mickey Alam Khan, editor in chief, Luxury Daily

5:30 p.m.

Sponsored Networking Cocktails

Please click here to register for the 2nd annual Luxury Roundtable 2017: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z conference in New York on Wednesday, May 3

Hotels in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood (from nearest to farthest):

Mandarin Oriental New York

80 Columbus Park at 60th Street, New York, NY 10023; tel: 212-805-8800

Please click here for the Web site

Trump Hotel Central Park

One Central Park West, New York, NY, 10023; tel: 212-299-1000

Please click here for the Web site

Hudson New York

356 W 58th Street, New York, NY 10019; tel: 212-554-6000

Please click here for the Web site

JW Marriott Essex House New York

160 Central Park South, New York, NY 10019; tel: 212-247-0300

Please click here for the Web site

The Hilton New York 

1335 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10019; tel: 212-586-7000

Please click here for the Web site

The Palace Hotel

455 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10022; tel: 212-888-7000

Please click here for the Web site

The Bryant Park Hotel

40 West 40th Street, New York, NY 10018; tel: 212-869-4446

Please click here for the Web site

New York Marriott Marquis

1535 Broadway, New York, NY 10036; tel: 212-398-1900

Please click here for the Web site

Sheraton Times Square

811 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10019; tel: 212-581-1000

Please click here for the Web site

Please click here to register for the 2nd annual Luxury Roundtable 2017: Engaging Gens X, Y & Z conference in New York on Wednesday, May 3

Agenda subject to change. Refunds will not be given after 12:01 a.m. on Monday, May 1, 2017