Right About Now - Legendary Business Advice
How Premium Brands Create Demand Without Cutting Their Prices | Tom La Vecchia
02 Jun 2026
Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.
Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Exclusivity nowadays is emotional. It's not just financial. And then what happens is recognition actually increases that desire. Swatch, it's a win. It elevates their brand. AP gets them out there inexpensively and people want it even more. A family member of mine has a Royal Oak. I asked him right away, joking around. I said, great, I'm going to get mine for 400 bucks.
And he laughed and he goes, hey, absolutely. It's going to be a beautiful watch, but there's still only one Royal Oak.
You don't win by following the playbook. You win by rewriting it. 700 episodes deep with the people who actually built something real. No theory, no fluff, no shortcuts. This is Right About Now with Ryan Alford.
What's up, guys? Welcome to Right About Now. On today's episode of Right About Now, we're using the rumored AP and Swatch collaboration as a live case study into how modern brands strategize and use borrowed attention.
Tom Lavecki is the founder of X Factor Media and New Theory Magazine, and he spent years working at the intersection of marketing, media sales, customer behavior, and brand positioning. In this conversation, it's not just about watches. It's It's about attention, exclusivity, and cultural relevance. Tom, welcome to Right About Now. What's up, Tom? How you doing? Great, Ryan. Pleasure to be here.
Hey, man. Good to have you. Hey, the X Factor. You had me at X Factor. Good name. I like it. Got my attention. And more importantly, so has all the headlines that have been happening lately. I know you've got a lot of opinions on them. We'll get at it. Where's home today? I live in Scotch Plains, New Jersey. That's Union County, New Jersey. Anybody from that area? Westfield, Elizabeth area.
Not too far from Newark Airport. Yeah. What is X-Factor? What are we doing? X-Factor Media is a full-service digital marketing company. We've been around for 12 years. We do media, marketing, et cetera.
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Chapter 2: What is the significance of the AP x Swatch collaboration?
We own some media properties, New Jersey Digest, Social Life, Lifestyle Magazine, and then take certain by invite only retainer clients, plastic surgery space, some other spaces. So we do a lot of branding, marketing, et cetera, but we also do stuff for ourselves as well. A lot of guys are marketing companies and it's like, well, what have you done?
Well, we do it for ourselves every day and then we try to do it for our clients as well. Yeah. Yeah, that's the key. And that's the difference. A lot of times the cobbler's, is it the cobbler's children have no shoes? Something like that. Like that plumber with a leaky pipe. Yeah, exactly. And I always found it interesting, the social media agency that has three posts.
We do social media marketing. We, our largest account on Instagram has about 162,000 followers at NJ Digest. If anybody wants to check it out. We do all on TikTok, my YouTube, separate podcast, separate property, about 104,000 subs. So yeah, we walk the walk. Because again, at the end of the day, if you can't do it, how do you do it for other people? Yeah, exactly.
One thing that may not have been directly what I was talking about with some of the things, we're going to talk about a specific story. I think it's interesting with crossover brands and things like that. You bring up the fact that you started publications. You're an agency, but you started your own distribution for attention. I heard local and sort of national concepts.
It almost sounded like, I'd love to talk about that a little bit, because that's pretty fascinating to me. And I've experienced that, you know, doing podcasting, which is, you know, the form of media. Talk to me about what you've done there. I'd love to say it started out as some great MBA strategy driven type activity.
It's just, we were doing local media buying for our clients and I was terribly under impressed, small email list, not a lot of engagement, bought engagement, et cetera. So I said, well, wait a second. Why can't we do this ourselves? New Jersey Digest actually was an acquisition. I acquired it in 2019. It's been around in the New Jersey area, super hyper-local in Hoboken.
Not a good story, but a funny story, if you will. Now it's funny, is bought the publication late 19, three months later, COVID hit. All the advertisers dried up, but the loan didn't. It was literally a local, small publication. After the Reader's Digest, you put in your release or your jacket. We We had a publication, which we had abandoned. We said, you know what? We're digital guys and gals.
Let's go digital. Let's go Jersey wide. And we just struck the right chord. Somebody was home. We got a huge amount of leadership and we just got to never look back. We didn't maybe want to do print since, but we stuck it digitally since.
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Chapter 3: How has the perception of exclusivity in luxury brands changed?
And now we reach about a million and a half people a month. But the idea really was to have an agency owned asset. that we own. Don't get me wrong. I love our agency clients and we're there to increase the revenue and we're there to trade time for money and we do it and maximize their return the best we can. But it's about equity and ownership.
And when you own the bricks, it makes it a little easier to function as an agency because you have more resources, frankly, as well. Yeah, it's interesting. Playing both sides of the fence, selling the ads, coming up with the ads and then owning the distribution point. But if you've got the eyeball, I mean, it doesn't really matter.
If you're like me, you probably spend a lot of time paying attention to what's happening in the world. Markets, business, crypto, interest rates, sports, politics, all of it. I'm always looking at headlines thinking, okay, what happens next? That's honestly why I've been spending time on Gemini predictions.
What makes it interesting is instead of just watching stories move the market in real time, you can actually trade on the outcomes of real world events. Maybe it's oil prices, what happens with the Fed, crypto movements, major sports events, or broader world headlines. There are live contracts across all kinds of categories. And what I like is it feels built for people who already think this way.
If you naturally pay attention to trends, follow business news, or spend your day analyzing what's happening in the economy and markets, this gives you a completely different way to engage with it. The platform itself is also really straightforward. Everything runs directly through the Gemini app. The interface is clean, and there are new markets opening every day.
I've been on there browsing different contracts, and it's honestly just fun seeing how quickly things shift based on real-world news and momentum. And again, it's not about just passively watching headlines anymore. You can actually participate in what you think happens next. To start trading right now, head to Gemini.com slash predictions and browse through all available contracts.
Starting something new isn't just exciting. It's honestly a little terrifying. I remember right before I launched my podcast, all those what-if thoughts creeping in. But looking back, taking that leap was one of the best decisions I've made. And I'll tell you, if your systems are clunky, everything slows down. If things are smooth, you actually keep moving.
That's why having the right platform behind you makes such a big difference. For a lot of founders and entrepreneurs, that platform is Shopify. From massive brands to people just getting started, they make it easier to go from idea to real business. You get hundreds of ready-to-use templates, design a store that actually looks like your brand.
You get AI tools that help write product descriptions, page headlines, even clean up product photos, which saves founders a ton of time. And once you're live, Shopify handles the hard stuff. Inventory, payments, shipping, returns, all one dashboard. Instead of bouncing between different platforms, everything's just in one place, which honestly saves us a ton of time.
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Chapter 4: What role does cultural participation play in modern brand strategy?
But local and hyperlocal is still it's an interesting and underserved media. Some markets do it better than others, but you've had national media sort of eating all this stuff up. But then suddenly the local market's not covered well. Correct. The truth is, we're not competing with the other rag down the street. We're competing with meta ads and Google ads for the most part.
That's where the big money is going. At first, it was hard to compete. But now, it's on your media kit as well. Own distribution is really important. We have a really robust email list, almost about 500,000 people. When you control kind of the channel, it's less dependent on meta and Google. The rented land...
Yeah, look at like BuzzFeed, a $7 billion valuation or $5 billion, whatever it was, maybe higher. And then now sold $20 million to $230 million. But pennies on a dollar. Yeah. Byron Allen, because they relied on meta heavily, where we're the opposite. We create our own channel. Don't get me wrong. We are a little bit of a hove into Google discovery. I don't want to lie about that.
That probably will never change. But we do our best, our own destiny. And the truth of the matter is, you can do a great meta ad, you can do a great Google ad. Very expensive. Click fraud is high. And the truth of the matter is, although it is local and you have their intent, it doesn't mean you're going to get their actual sale. Versus for us, we curate the content.
So by curating the content, you're almost curating the Arnie Museum. And more than likely, if you know what people like, then you find the right advertiser for that. You do that without paying big bucks to Meta and Google and wasting a lot of money. Yep, it's a good point. It's very smart. That's in the playbook for sure. All right, switching gears a little bit.
I had to ask you a little bit about that, Tom. Just a marketing dork in me. Luxury watches. Watch collector myself. This one caught my attention. With AP and Swatch. This is going to age me too, Tom. I grew up wearing a Swatch watch as a kid. It was like cool, and then it wasn't. And then now it's cool again, like everything else. I'm waiting for members only.
I think I'm still the last member, but that's got to come back. If that comes back, I think I got some stuff in the closet somewhere. Well, I had a little bit of a bump, I think, around the Sopranos time.
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Chapter 5: How has sneaker culture influenced the luxury watch market?
Yeah. Swatch and AP. What's AP thinking? Are they giving up a luxury position or are they just smarter than all of us? That's a great lead-in. Nowadays, you mentioned this, luxury today isn't about ownership. It's about participation, having signal versus noise, and getting to those younger consumers who want access to these brands before they can afford them is really critical.
It's a seeding activity, as we call it in marketing, as you know. The collaboration at this point allows millions of young people to get involved in the AP culture without dropping 50, 60K on the Royal Oak, right? The idea is luxury brands, they have to create the aspiration and create their ecosystem before they convert.
What they're doing is the AP buyer 10, 15 years from now is going to look at the Royal Oak in a nostalgic fashion when they can afford the 50, 60K Royal Oak. So this is a tremendous marketing activity and I see it no any other way. Yeah, I'm torn on this one.
I understand the tactic and I agree with fundamentally everything you just said, but I sort of toil a little bit with Rolex didn't have to do this 20 years ago, 30 years ago. And I know the times changed. That's probably what we're going to talk about. And social media has changed.
There weren't the avenues, but sort of that aspiration was driven by how available or can you actually get a hold of it? And so if everybody can get a hold of it, does it have the same exclusivity? Does it carry that cachet forward the way that other brands and luxury brands have? Because it just wasn't attainable to get those.
But you still had athletes and pop culture and musicians and artists and rappers and everyone else that created sort of that bling and demand, desire. And that's one level for, I'm talking about more the youth. And then now if you kind of make it... We'll let it go. You got the Swats version. Are we diluting the luxury? Yeah, so that's a great point.
And again, in traditional kind of marketing, if you will, that would resonate. And you and I would be correct if that's our assertion. It couldn't be more wrong in the current environment. I'll tell you why. In terms of segmentation, and I'll give you a little bit of a hot take, and you're a watch collector, so get ready to throw your shoe at me.
In my opinion, at this point, Rolex is a premium watch. I don't think anybody would disagree. However, AP is a luxury watch. The difference between a Maybach and an S-Class, a Ferrari and a Maserati. So in terms of positioning, as you know, this Rolex is a beautiful watch. I have a yacht master. I love it. They kind of got it to the game.
A little bit of respect, a little bit of the Panerai, a little bit of Breitling. But Rolex 25 years ago was, I'm not saying APs didn't exist then, but that was more the proxy. I agree with where you're going with where Rolex sits today. I want to go one step further real quick as to my opinion that why the hype proved the strategy worked. So in today's market, we just talked about this.
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Chapter 6: What distinguishes premium, luxury, and grail positioning?
Probably north of a billion. No money on media buying. Swatch stock rose almost 5%, confirming that the collaboration not only worked, but it's profitable. No doubt good for Swatch. Yeah, at least $150 million. And the analysts report that it may exceed a billion dollars in total sales. Right now, I think it's about sitting upwards between $150 to $300 million. But it didn't cheapen the brand.
I'll tell you why. Ferrari sells merchandise. Porsche sells SUVs. Rolex has Tudor. You can segment. What they did was, and this sounds a little bit like a Gen Zer, they democratized the vibe, not the grail. They kind of made it available. They kind of gave you a little bit of a taste. The truth of the matter is what prevents you or what allows you to buy something? Why do you buy something?
That 1956 IBM bans, budget, authority, need, and timing. The barrier can't be higher for Royal Oak AP. It's the budget. The guy or gal that can afford that can still afford that. And if they can't, they can't.
Because the B in the budget is probably the highest barrier to entry world, aside for availability, the people that are going to own it may want to own it even more now because they have the real deal. Just imagine Ferrari rolled something out with Kia and they did 1,000 vehicles for $35,000. Those 1,000 vehicles are going to sell. They're going to sell great for aftermarket.
But that attention is, great, you have that Kia Ferrari, but I want the real one. It's going against everything you and I taught as marketers in the books. as experienced, as agency owners, as our own marketers, but having the signal versus noise on this and having that level of earned media behind it, I think it was a huge win for both brands.
I had to play the contrary there, Tom, but I do agree. It was brilliant. I wanted people to hear both sides of that coin because I could have just started this and gone, Tom, it was brilliant and all that, but it was. Because literally, you nailed it. It takes a different way to seed your brand to the youth than maybe it did when the availability of media was so sparse 40 years ago.
You didn't have to. Brands didn't have to do this, and they also didn't have the opportunity to do it. Now, to be able to do it, to plant the seed, like you said, I love the grail. The grail didn't change. They still want the $50,000 watch. Swatch now doing this was brilliant for them, too. It was a no-brainer for them. It was more of a risk for AP.
This got mastered in the sneaker culture and streetwear. Supreme, Nike, sneakers drops, Travis Scott collabs, scarcity, limited access, resale demand, the social flex, all that stuff. The watch industry just caught up and said, hey, you know what? The sneaker culture mastered this a few years ago. Let's get on that train. Exactly.
And I'm in the trading card shop that I own, and trading cards are doing the same thing.
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Chapter 7: Why did some legacy brands succeed while others failed?
Travis Scott collaborations, other collabs, other things. Some people don't like this term, but borrowed interest is powerful. And some people frown upon it because they're arrogant and think they can carry the show themselves. But it's okay to share the sunshine that something else has and bring it over to your side. So I always love the right strategic borrowed interest.
And I think in this case, the media value alone, like you talked about, is just outrageous. Yeah. And the truth of the matter is, doesn't this hurt exclusivity? You kind of mentioned that. Exclusivity nowadays is emotional. It's not just financial. And then what happens is recognition actually increases that desire. Swatch, it's a win. It elevates their brand.
AP gets them out there inexpensively and people want it even more. A family member of mine, has a Royal Oak. I asked him right away, joking around. I said, great, I'm going to get mine for 400 bucks. And he laughed and he goes, hey, absolutely. It's going to be a beautiful watch, but there's still only one Royal Oak.
I have one, but in my rush to head out today, because I was going to wear it on the show, it sat on my dresser. I have a couple of them. To talk about watches and you being a watch guy, this is what brought watches back, right? What happened was watches were dead for a while. I never wore a watch. A lot of people didn't wear watches. We're probably similar age.
Watches kind of had its run and then it retracted and then it ran again. And then what happened was Apple created a utility out of it. By creating a utility, everybody started wearing watches again. What happens when everybody watches again? Well, I want to wear a better watch than him or her. I had to go ahead and buy a better watch. But you, I want a better watch than you.
And it recreated that demand. And then the scarcity during the pandemic is what drove it to a different level. But again, there's certain watches that participated in that drive and ones that didn't. For example, Rolex won big time during COVID. Two brands that didn't make it, at least in terms of the posterior, were Panerai and Breitling. Both nice watches, both good watches.
I would argue Panerai is more of a watch guy watch, but neither of those participated versus the other skyrocketed. In your opinion, why is that? I think they both missed the boat. I think Breitling really missed it because I think they were closer to this culture anyway with automobiles and everything else. They could have leaned heavy into this. They were asleep at the wheel.
Panerai, I don't know who's running it. That was my first watch. I'm a watch guy.
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Chapter 8: How important is owned media and controlled distribution for brands?
That was my first good watch. I still love their watches. I wish they'd pushed the envelope more. They did a little bit, but they barely have touched the surface. I think it's a miss. It's easy to say, well, why didn't they do something like this when the idea is out there? Every good idea is obvious once it's done. They've missed the boat.
I don't have a good rationale because if I was leading their marketing, they should have leaned in to being a little more hip and a little more available. All these brands can do this without throwing the baby out with the bathwater, so to speak. You could stay premium or luxury or
super luxury just like we're seeing here without giving away some of your core values and things like that but just leaning into because i don't have an excuse for them and i love their watches breitling completely fell they're kind of like close to the sun and it's almost like they never turned around to look at it from a segment standpoint i felt that brightling could have been your entry-level premium watch right yeah okay well wheelhouse and i don't know if they just thought they were higher than they were i don't know
Yeah, they pooped the bed. And then for Panerai, I think Panerai for a minute, the watch is probably better than I do. Panerai was going to be the watch guy's watch, where everybody's kind of walking around the Rolex. It's like the guy at the gym.
The guy may work really hard to impress the ladies, but then there's a guy at the gym who wants to impress the ladies and guys because he wants other guys to be like, wow, what are you doing? What's going on? Most guys wear the watches for the other guys, not the girls, actually. I need to tell you. I do it because I'm happily married. I don't need to impress anybody.
But I know what that culture is because the girls don't even know. There's something to be said here about this. In my agency life, one of our big clients is actually the leading plastic surgeon for men. He has three centers and he just does men. Follow the blue ocean strategy. 12 years ago, where everybody's kind of doing boobs and butts. He did men, which people looked at us.
We like, we had 10 heads. As it evolved, at every dinner party, every meeting, everything that they knew what I did would pull me aside and say, hey, can you get me an appointment? I want this, this, and this taken care of. And now the guy's killing it. In the largest account, I could go on and on about it. But something to be said here, though, is men's interests have changed over the years.
And you know this probably better than I do. It's hard to get to men. So for example, if we were to run a campaign selling anything to women or selling anything to men, men are inherently more expensive to get to.
So this kind of buttresses the point back to most of the men were going crazy over this for the Royal Pop and they got all that earned media for men, which I would probably put a multiplier of 2X on there because getting to men is even harder than it is to women because your tastes change over the years. Yeah, totally agree. I think well stated.
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