Tag Heuer has openen an office in Silicon Valley, marking the first time a big Swiss watch maker has expanded into the cradle of the US technology sector and cementing its smartwatch alliance with Google and Intel.
The office, which opened on 1 November and is located on Intel’s campus in Santa Clara, California, will house about a dozen research and development employees, according to CEO Jean-Claude Biver.
Tag Heuer also hired Intel’s Tom Foldesi to lead its smartwatch programme, tasked with setting up labs and product teams.
The move shows how the Swiss have battled back against Apple’s encroachment into the market for fancy timepieces. Tag Heuer sold out all of the 60 000 smartwatches it produced this year, at US$1 500 (about R20 000) a pop. The LVMH unit plans to sell some 150 000 pieces of an advanced smartwatch that should go on sale in April.
“We want to have our finger on the pulse,” Biver said in an interview. “In Switzerland, we’re where everything is happening in the traditional watch making industry. We believe in the future of connected watches, so we have to go where they’re being developed.”
The Silicon Valley office also makes it easier to recruit smartwatch specialists and be close to start-ups that the company might acquire, he added.
Early concerns that the Apple Watch’s arrival in 2014 would threaten the Swiss watch industry as a whole didn’t materialise, though it has hurt sales of lower-priced timepieces.
Brands such as Montblanc and Tag Heuer went on the offensive by introducing electronic functions of their own. Tag Heuer’s model gives consumers the option of paying a fee to trade it in for a mechanical version once it’s out of date.
“The connected watch will definitely be a permanent part of the TAG Heuer brand,” Biver said. The label is selling a $9 900 (R134 000) 18-carat rose gold version of its smartwatch for the Christmas season and is working on offering a collection with various sizes, materials and price segments.
The announcement comes just two months after Apple discontinued its $17 000 (R230 000) 18-carat gold version of the Apple Watch. Failing to gain much of a foothold in the luxury watch segment, Apple has now pushed more into fitness functions. Still, Apple was the second-best selling watch brand in the world by revenue last year, behind Rolex, CEO Tim Cook said in September.
Foldesi will report to Guy Semon, Tag Heuer’s head of research and development. He previously held various executive positions at Intel, where he also helped develop wearables. — (c) 2016 Bloomberg LP