VERTU |
What drives those looney-tunes prices? Materials and craftsmanship, mainly. Sapphire crystal faces instead of Gorilla Glass. Titanium bodies (or gold, or platinum) instead of plastic or aluminum.
It sounds like a recipe for failure, except for one thing: Vertu’s sales figures keep going up. “Either there are a lot of crazy people in the world or, I would suggest, there are a lot of different people in the world,” says Vertu’s chief executive officer, the fabulously named Massimiliano Pogliani. “There are people who appreciate certain things, and there are people who do not. And if you do appreciate this sort of thing, and you can afford it, then it’s your choice how you spend your money.”
Vertu won’t release specific numbers, but it does confirm that its sales have grown in nine out of the past 10 years. (The one year that disappointed the company was 2008, which was a year that disappointed a lot of people for a lot of reasons.) The company’s expecting a further uptick in sales now that it has a second, less-expensive (relatively speaking) smartphone in its lineup. The new phone, the Constellation, retails for $5,950 in the U.S. and joins its more-expensive brother, the Ti, which costs about $12,000.
Having two smartphones is a big deal for the British-based company, which used to be a part of Nokia but was spun off and picked up by Swedish private equity firm EQT VI in 2012. Until the Ti was introduced earlier this year, Vertu had no smartphone at all. You could spend as much for a platinum Vertu Signature phone as many people would on a house, but all you were getting was a feature phone that was little different in function than what you could buy from Motorola in 1999.
What they’re buying is a smartphone that doesn’t look like all the others. They’re buying it because it’s exclusive, special, and rare. As I wrote in an earlier post on this subject, you don’t need anything fancier than a Timex Easy Reader if you want something on your wrist to tell time. Indeed, you don’t need anything more than a Kia Rondo if you want a car to take you from point A to point B. And yet Patek Philippe exists. And so does Rolls-Royce. Obviously there’s always a segment of the population willing to pay more for something not necessarily because it performs a task better than the least-expensive option, but because it does so with added luxury.
Sometimes they pay more simply because they can—a classic Veblen good, for which demand increases along with price.
And in the world of smartphones, that may make more sense than ever. Think about it: In the past, Vertus were stupid because they were just dumb feature phones made out of precious metals. An iPhone or Android phone was functionally better in so many ways that you couldn’t justify buying an inferior product, no matter how many diamonds and rubies it had on it.
But now, with models like the Ti and the Constellation, you don’t have to make that sacrifice. You get all the benefits of an Android phone (Vertu is using the latest version of Android: 4.2) plus the luxurious touches that set you apart from the rest of the crowd.
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