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The Relativity Of Luxury

By: Kenrick Cleveland

"The saddest thing I can imagine is to get used to luxury." --Charlie Chaplin

I'm not sure that's the saddest thing I can imagine. I get the premise behind the thought but ultimately, there are so many things sadder. I'm a huge fan of luxury myself. Yet as a pragmatist and a realist, I can see the pitfalls that may lure the average person into believing they have a luxurious, rich life because of the outrageously priced goods they've racked up on their credit cards.

In a article on MSN, "Uncommon Sense: Luxuries you can live without -- and should", (http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Savinganddebt/Savemoney/P107710.asp) author MP Dunleavey points out the new frames that certain items which were once considered ordinary and mundane purchases, things that we need for daily life but which shouldn't set us back too far, have now become commodities.

Pots, sheets, tennis shoes, watches. . .all of these things have been reframed, making them appear far more valuable. . . cookware, linens, athletic footwear, time pieces.

The author admits the original product is necessary in daily life, but the "new, improved and reframed" product need not lure us to spend beyond our means.

While in this Wall Street Journal article by Christina Binkley, "The Psychology of the $14,000 Handbag: How Luxury Brands Alter Shoppers' Price Perceptions; Buying a Key Chain Instead." (http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB118662048221792463.html), she shows the strategy behind pushing the limits of reason with prices to get the consumers to take a step down to another product, still probably out of the reasonable price range for what the product is, but more within their ability to stretch to buy it. (Ex. Buying a keychain from Tiffany's instead of an actual piece of jewelry because that's the only thing they can afford.)

She explains that, "when shoppers are confronted with prices they can't afford, a smart retailer will 'move you right along to where you can salvage your pride,' says Dan Hill, president of Sensory Logic, a Minneapolis consulting company that helps companies explore their sensory and emotional connections with customers."

Working with an affluent clientle gives us the benefit of not having to put the screws to our prospects and clients. If someone can't afford our product or service, we know that our product or service isn't right for them. However, the psychology behind this price perception remains the same for the affluent as well.

When we frame ourselves properly, we show we're not the cheapest, but you get what you pay for. This alters perceptions. And with that said, I suggest that one of the saddest things I can think of is getting used to accepting less than what we're worth.

What are you worth?



Article Source: http://www.rightbiz.com

Kenrick Cleveland teaches techniques to earn the business of wealthy clients using persuasion. He runs public and private seminars and offers home study courses and coaching programs in persuasion techniques.

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