
Driving non-green cars can communicate status, but it can also suggest the customer is a selfish and uncaring person. In a study one group (A) was told a story about social status while an other group (B) read a story without a status message. Afterwards, they asked to group members to make a choice between a luxurious and better-performing car and a green car. 37% of Group B chose a green car, while more than 50 percent of group A chose a green car. The author claims that playing on desire for social status is a way to encourage consumers to chose green products.
I personally love the fact that people contribute to buying greener products. But of course, as for all of us, I’m still keen on traditional luxury products. I definitely won’t leave out all the luxury, status related goods to become a fanatic green consumer. Am I a selfish person? No I don’t think so, even if I say it myself. Life isn’t about strictly buying environmentally-friendly goods, it’s about becoming aware of the fact that the environment conscious consumers and contributing yourself in a certain degree.
I do believe there’s a market for green products within the luxury industry. Every social class has conscious people. Especially rich people are looking for new ways to express their wealth by doing something morally good.








As the most profitable luxury brand of the planet Louis Vuitton is a unique brand that trades incomparable there products of desire and ego. The manly strength of Vuitton is its constantly focus on quality ( the company owns a torture chamber for its luxury goods to test their resistance against several human acts), the almost unlimited loyalty of its clients (because one Vuitton bag looks just to lonely in your closet) and the fact that no Vuitton bag is ever marked down (the more they put their prices up, the more the clients come back). An other remarkable thing is that the brand succeeds on the one hand to attract older clients with its quality and its lifetime free repairs and on the other hand to attract younger buyers, thanks to Marc Jacobs and those glossy ads. You could say that a Louis Vuitton never goes out of style.

