lamps and lighting
home :: lamps and lighting

By: Richard Cazzo
Website: http://www.lamps-n-lighting.com

Lamps and lighting glow more exciting

Lamps and lighting have become a bigger decorative category over the past year and may represent a transition. If those pundits who hold that the home category is emerging from the cocooning phase are right, then lamps may be a big splash for the home accents segment, at least for a while, with lighting representative of a growing preference for more esoteric decoration.

Cocooning isn't quite dead. Cocooners are out there still, but they are fewer in number and represent a shrinking base of potential revenues, according to Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing. In studies the firm conducted, consumers, particularly affluent ones, had begun to shift away from a home-as-haven lifestyle to one that focuses more on embracing spiritual and forward-looking themes. So lamps may be an appropriate transitional segment.

They certainly were a significant segment during back-to-school. Take Target, for example. The retailer promoted several lamps, particularly its medusa lamp, with heavy emphasis on decorative design. Certainly, Target wasn't the only mass marketer to promote a multiheaded lamp, but it was among the most aggressive.

Lamps have decided advantages as home decor items. For one thing, they can be updated easily. "We have found that customers are opting to purchase decorative lamp shades to change and acquire a new, fresh look in a room," said Michelle Jasukaitis, a Kmart spokeswoman.

New products came from two separate directions. One was an overflow from the candle category. In developing oil and liquid wax candles, vendors have blurred the distinction between electric lamps with decorative elements and those with the Stone Age pedigree. Oil lamps aren't always attractive to candle consumers, who worry about smell and oily smoke. Clear wax candles that function like lamps, but without the oil-related problems, have transparent advantages for some consumers.

This past autumn, Lamplight, which has focused on odorless, smokeless lamps for 40 years, introduced Ultra-Pure clear liquid candle cartridges. Available in 1-, 3- and 8.75-ounce sizes, the products burn from 10 to 80 hours--with MSRPs ranging from $1.99 to $3.99--and feature a wick that extinguishes itself if turned over.

Lamplight has produced liquid wax for some time. The improvement with the new product is the cartridge, which is a no-mess solution for folks who don't want to fuss with pouring and wiping up when they charge their lamps. The product works with a variety of the company's products.

To back up its rationale of making liquid-wax lamps more generally appealing, the company conducted a survey that also gives support to the idea that a significant group of consumers is seeking out more esoteric experiences in the home. According the Lamplight study, nine-out-of-10 candle users say they strike a match to make a room feel cozier, with half say they use candles all year long. Women ages 25 to 34 are most likely to use candles and related products for relaxation. In fact, about 75% do so.

Perhaps more important for retailers, the study indicates that users of liquid lamps and scented candles are more likely than average to indulge in baths, massages and aromatherapy products, indicating that cross-merchandising opportunities between lighting and other relaxation products continue to exist.

Atmosphere and making light more natural is another consideration that is impacting the market for lamps and lighting. Ott-Lite Technology has introduced a Reading Room series of lamps using a source that reduces glare, which can cause eye strain. Formulated to generate illumination that mimics natural daylight, Ott-Lites also show many details better than conventional lamps, the company contends. Products in the Ott-Lite line range in retail price from $70 to $270.

Providing consumers with lighting options clearly has physiological and psychological effects. A wider range of lighting is becoming available to address that, but consumers have to be able to find what they want.

To that end, GE has developed new product lines, packaging and planograms to create a retail selection that takes a wide variety of concerns, from price to safety, into consideration.

The impetus for GE's efforts is the introduction of its new halogen light that is being launched under the brand name Edison. The Edison offers crisp, white light in a long-life format stretching to 6,000 hours and four years guaranteed.

The Edison product will be the top-of-the-line element in what GE terms its new "retail system." As part of the system, packaging will include enlarged, clean print, simple information that is more detailed as price increases from line to line and a consistent basic organization. Critically, higher-end light bulbs will include graphics designed to give consumers a better representation of the various products' qualities. The planogram, which can produce a 36-foot set, is designed to divide products into sections that reflect the way consumers look to buy light bulbs.

Overall, the GE effort is designed to make purchasing lighting products more consistent with consumer preferences. "We'll make it more relevant for them," said Bob Short, GE's gm of consumer marketing.

Osram Sylvania also has been thinking about how consumers look at lighting products in the store and decided to make packaging changes. The company has developed what it calls a "lifestyle packaging and merchandising program" that features color photography and product benefit icons. Marie Luce, corporate identity and design manager, said, "By making the application the focus, we have simplified the light bulb shopping process and made it easier for customers to discover alternatives."

So the ins and outs of lamps and lighting have grown more complicated. Lava has reacted by developing, among other things, an outdoor citronella lamp in two sizes--20 ounce for MSRP $8.99 and 8 ounce for $5.99--using its trademark shape and a rechargeable accent lamp to liven up both indoor and outdoor gatherings. Novelty lighting began to gain strength and retail space some time ago, but Lava is looking to take it to the next level--and size. It introduced the 27-inch Lava Grande this past Christmas season. But new product launches aren't the only outlets for Lava's creative energy. The company has developed a combination desk and novelty lamp using a glazed plastic shade that packs in two sections. Thus, the box saves retailers shelf space.

Tom Spain, vp of sales at Lava, said that providing more sizes, applications and even decorative elements is just part and parcel of keeping up with developments in the larger lighting world today. "We're getting more sophisticated," he said.


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About The Author:
Richard Cazzo is a successful author and publisher of http://www.lamps-n-lighting.com. Find all kinds of discount lamps, lamp shades, interior and exterior lighting online.



chandeliers
lamp shades
floor lamps
table lamps
desk lamps
children's lamps
ceiling lamps
wall lamps
outdoor lighting
tiffany style lamps
lava lamps
bedroom lighting
bathroom lighting
dining room lighting
kitchen lighting
exterior lighting