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Abercrombie Brand Protection Features
2009.09.01
Abercrombie & Fitch introduced abercrombie in 1997 with 9 stores. The purpose was to attract a younger audience to the American Abercrombie brand. The name of the concept took the same font of its parent, but with a navy color. The abbreviation from “Abercrombie & Fitch” to “abercrombie” with lowercase letters was intended to provide a children’s image. The store prototype was as the A&F one, but with variations also intended to appeal to the younger audience. Early abercrombie models include Ronnie Smith, Cassie Ventura, Christina Akatsuka, Christian Valentin, and Lindsay Lohan.
The company uses trademark Casual Luxury to promote the brand. The brand defines the slogan as using “the finest cashmere, pima cottons, and highest quality leather to create the ultimate in casual, body conscious clothing,” and “implementing and/or incorporating time honored machinery …to produce the most exclusive denim…”
The brand carries Men’s fragrances Fierce, Cologne 41, Proof, and Colden. Women’s fragrances include Perfume 8, Classic, Perfume 41, and Wakely. Released at the same time, Fierce and 8 and Cologne41 and Perfume 41 are marketed to compliment one another. High-end fragrances Ezra Fitch (cologne) and Ezra parfum were described as the embodiment of “the Abercrombie and Fitch heritage,” until they were discontinued. Cologne Proof was released in Christmas 2006 to be removed a year later (though some stores still carry Cologne Proof). Perfumes Ready is also among the retired fragrances. Fierce and 8 are the most heavily marketed fragrances as they are the signature scents of the brand overall.
As the popularity of Abercrombie & Fitch goods increased, so did the counterfeiting of them. In 2006, the company launched the Abercrombie & Fitch Brand Protection Program to combat the issue worldwide (focusing more in Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Japan and Korea) by working with legal forces globally.[28] Shane Berry, who joined the company in November 2005, was placed in charge of the program. Berry is a former Supervisory Special Agent from the FBI, and was a part of its Intellectual Property Rights Program. The news release from A&F announcing its initiative stated that the “program will improve current practices and strategies by focusing on eliminating the supply of illicit Abercrombie & Fitch products.”
The Brand Protection program covers all A&F brands; mainly A&F, Hollister and RUEHL {shuttered by end of January 2010). Assuring that its consumers are aware of the issue, the Abercrombie & Fitch Brand Protection and abercrombie brand protection features suggest customers to purchase from authentic stores and to report suspected A&F counterfeiting.
The company’s Abercrombie and Fitch brand gift cards have been recognized by Consumer Affairs as a “top pick” for not having deceptive features such as expiration dates, dormancy fees, and post-purchase fees.
Abercrombie kids stores are designed to give off a “classic cool” effect. They are designed as “canoe stores,” displaying the a similar floor layout as Abercrombie & Fitch’s (the retail space is divided into multiple rooms). However, the kids prototype does bear differences. It has no louvers to cover the windows, has brighter lighting, is smaller in retail space, blasts electronic dance music and pop music from young artists, and displays marketing pictures with young models resembling those at A&F. The signature fragrance, “Phelps”, is sprayed store-wide. However, in late 2008, most new stores have added wooden louvers.
As of 2008, abercrombie operates a total of 209 stores in the United States. abercrombie kids opened its first Canadian store on August 21, 2008 at Sherway Gardens in Toronto, Ontario. Another abercrombie kids store opened at Toronto Eaton Centre in Toronto, Ontario around the end of November.As of February 2008, there are stores in every state except for Alaska, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont (Closed in 2005), West Virginia, and Wyoming.
Abercrombie kids’ apparel is designed to mimic Abercrombie & Fitch clothing, and the brand carries most the styles that A&F does. Most abercrombie kids clothes that have the labeled moose on them are to resemble their parent company “Abercrombie & Fitch” but the kids signature moose is a smaller to symbolize that they are children. The trademarked term, “classic cool”, is used to promote the clothing on an in-store and website level from abercrombie and it acts as the more juvenile version of A&F’s slogan “Casual Luxury”. The “classic cool” trade mark was retired in 2007 along with Abercrombie and Fitch’s “Casual Luxury”. Jeans bear the same back-pocket-stitching pattern as A&F as well as the same fits respective to sex. The logo moose is prominently displayed on clothing as is the name “abercrombie” as well as the year of establishment, “1892″ (Abercrombie & Fitch was itself established in 1892, but in reality, the children’s’ line “abercrombie” was not started until 1997). Clothing is categorized within the “guys” and “girls” divisions. Price points are on par with those at sister brand Hollister Co.
The brand carries the following fragrance collections: “Phelps” cologne, “Chase” cologne and “Cologne 15,” as well as “Emerson,” “Spirit” perfume, and “Perfume 15″. The brand released the “abercrombie” cologne and perfume set previous to 2006; however, it was retired Christmas 2007. Chase and Spirit were released Christmas 2006 and were followed by Cologne 15 and Perfume 15 being released Christmas 2007. Chase is set to retire from stores after the Back to School 2009 season is over, however will be available on the abercrombie website until 2010. New fragrance Phelps and Emerson were released for Christmas 2008.