The distribution trap
Every luxury brand that grew aggressively in the 1990s and 2000s made the same decision: more doors. More counters. More markets. More SKUs at lower price points to capture aspirational buyers who couldn’t reach the top of the range. The logic was sound by conventional business metrics. Revenue grew. The brands became global names.
What also grew, invisibly, was the contradiction at the heart of the model. Luxury derives its pricing power from scarcity — real or perceived. The moment a brand is available in forty-seven countries, in airport duty-free halls, on three competing e-commerce platforms, and in a department store two floors below a mid-market competitor, the scarcity is gone. What remains is expensive. Expensive is not the same as luxury.
The brands that took this path are now trapped. They cannot pull back distribution without triggering a revenue collapse that their publicly listed structures cannot absorb. They cannot raise prices without losing the aspirational buyer who now constitutes the majority of their volume. They cannot reposition without admitting that the positioning was compromised.
The Hermès anomaly everyone ignores
Hermès has been held up as the exception so many times that the industry has stopped actually examining what makes it exceptional. It is not the product, although the product is extraordinary. It is the refusal — maintained across generations of ownership, across every economic cycle, across the most aggressive period of luxury market expansion in history — to distribute beyond the point where distribution creates dilution.
Hermès has fewer stores than almost any brand of comparable revenue. It has no entry-level category designed to recruit aspirational buyers. It does not apologise for its waiting lists. It does not explain its prices. It does not run sales. It does not have a diffusion line. Every one of these decisions cost money in the short term. Every one of them compounded into the brand equity that allows Hermès to trade at valuation multiples that make its competitors look like retail businesses with good PR.
The lesson has been available for decades. The industry has chosen not to learn it because the lesson requires restraint, and restraint is incompatible with the growth mandates of publicly listed luxury conglomerates.
What 2040 will clarify
The next fifteen years will separate the luxury brands from the premium brands with luxury positioning. The distinction sounds semantic. It is existential.
The brands that survive as genuine luxury will be those that made painful distribution decisions before they were forced to, that rebuilt exclusivity by removing access rather than adding it, and that accepted lower revenue growth in exchange for the pricing integrity that makes the model sustainable across generations.
The brands that do not make these decisions will find themselves in an increasingly competitive premium segment, fighting on product and marketing against challengers who have lower cost bases and no legacy infrastructure to maintain. The hotel is already on fire. The question is who is still in the lobby pretending the smoke is atmosphere.





