Fastwong
2579
Ugh, this smells really bad. Very distasteful imho.
Conceptually, I like the idea of pre-sale/made to order. I think there's nothing wrong with having to order and wait a few weeks/months for a watch. Having efficient allocation and production of watches should be a good thing for ADs who don't have to carry as much inventory and for customers to help reduce overstock and thereby supporting the secondary market. I also like that now a customer's history with Lange is centralized at the brand level instead of the AD level so your history follows you wherever or your AD/sales associates go.
If they went 100% pre-sale across the line I'd applaud that. What's total crap however is creating a distinction between stock and pre-sale within their lines essentially supporting some more expensive watches and devaluing others which also translates to how they look at customers - customers who buy stock items are not as valuable and basically invisible to the brand compared to those that purchase pre-sale items. Basically, if you buy this Lange you are part of the family but if you buy that one for $5k less I don't know you, who let you in here? If you buy 100 stock watches you are still a nobody to the brand because you aren't in the system because you aren't in the system. This is all wrong and half baked at best, but really just snooty. A good analogy might be airline programs, you earn status by segments (number of flights) and/or miles flown - so whether you fly first class international twice a year or coach regional every week, you are still acknowledged equally as a good customer. The Lange model basically is white gloving the first class flyers and telling everyone else to take a hike.
As for the application pieces, again, I'm on board with the idea that your best customers are rewarded with first shot at limited edition releases. I think that's the way things should be honestly. However, given the above definition of "best customers" and that they include the stainless odysseus as an application piece which is not limited (and clearly not production limited because the WG model is NOT application) again, Lange took a perfectly fine concept and it a construct to support differential status and further divide their customers in an artificial way.
Maybe that's what luxury is for some folks. Maybe that's what they think they need to do to sell watches and develop the types of customers they want. To me it stinks of elitism and amateurish attempts to manufacture brand exclusivity. Reach for those stars Richemont!