What makes a holiday bragworthy?

A camel rider looks for customers inside the Giza pyramid complex in Egypt. Shawn Baldwin Bloomberg

A camel rider looks for customers inside the Giza pyramid complex in Egypt. Shawn Baldwin Bloomberg

Published Jan 28, 2019

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With mobile apps that can make you a dinner reservation, find a taxi, a dog walker or even arrange your dry cleaning, who needs a personal assistant, let alone a luxury concierge?

The very, very wealthy. That’s who.

In 2017, personal wealth worldwide reached a record $201.9trillion (R2801 trillion), a 12% gain from a year earlier, and millionaires and billionaires held almost half of that, according to a June report by Boston Consulting Group.

With all that money, the competition among luxury concierge companies for leisure dollars has become more cut-throat than ever.

Instead of meeting simple requests like last-minute helicopter rides to the Hamptons, “lifestyle managers” must be ready to stun with private tours of the Sistine Chapel or balloon rides over Buddhist temples in Myanmar. And for their increasingly younger customers, all must be instantly available via smartphone.

For a few hundred thousand dollars a year, London-based Quintessentially promises all the spontaneity and bragworthy experiences any 1-percenter could want. Along with its less expensive rival, Velocity Black, the company can still get you that great table at a hot restaurant or a dependable house cleaner. But the real draw is the option for extraordinary adventure, part of the growing, decadent “experience economy”.

Or, as Quintessentially calls it, “bespoke experiences”.

“It’s fun to say ‘Oh yeah, we had dinner on an iceberg and a cocktail party in the Great Pyramids’,” said William Reedy, Quintessentially’s head of US concierge servicing and a former lifestyle manager himself.

“It’s not cool just because it was really expensive, but because it was something no one had thought you could do. We basically do anything and everything under the sun.”

Quintessentially was founded in 2001 as a 24/7/365 concierge service for the embarrassingly wealthy. Today, it has 60 offices around the world and thousands of members who pay annual fees ranging from $7 500 to six figures.

For that kind of money, members want whatever they want when they want it.

The average net worth of a Quintessentially member is $50million, Robbie Guevarra, the company’s US marketing manager, said. The typical member is 35 to 55 years old. But newer members have been even younger. And that means better technology is critical to keeping up.

“When I started, I don’t even think iPhones were around, so there weren’t apps,” Reedy said. “There wasn’t Blade (the helicopter service), so you couldn’t just book a helicopter on your phone. Uber didn’t exist.” (Quintessentially is in the process of developing an app for its members, he said.)

A December 2017 report from McKinsey & Co found that, over the previous three years, spending on “experiences” including travel had grown almost four times faster than spending on goods.

Millennials are driving that shift, according to Sophie Marchessou, an author of the report. “Social media most likely plays a role,” she said. “It has such a focus on showcasing experiences.”

Nevertheless, Marchessou notes that less-digital-savvy baby boomers are also driving the experience economy. Along with Generation X, they tend to be wealthier. Reedy can attest to that.

When Reedy was a lifestyle manager, he was responsible for coming up with plans and ideas to entertain a 60-something Manhattan millionaire. At the client’s beck and call, Reedy even had to attend events when a companion was needed. The client paid $20 000 a year for the service.

“We found him a dance teacher, singing lessons, and a dialect coach to lose his Long Island accent - even a magician and private lessons,” said Reedy, 33. He also recalled working with a 12-year-old piano prodigy once. The boy requested “a lot of birthday cakes”, he said.

The luxury lifestyle concierge industry is made up of a small universe of players. Luxury Attaché and Alberta La Grup, like Quintessentially, are full-service. Others have niche focuses, whether it’s location or industry. Stupak Las Vegas, for example, focuses only on planning corporate and leisure trips to Sin City.

Velocity Black is another do-it-all lifestyle concierge, but it’s audience is younger, with an average age of 34 and a lower net worth, around $7m.

The price of the 3-year-old service is much less than Quintessentially - $2800 a year with a $900 initiation fee. Founder Zia Yusuf, 32, said he’s trying to provide members with something that’s usually elusive - spontaneity. 

Washington Post

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