【Shanghai, Ch】Bvlgari Weaves Craftsmanship and Innovation into a New Luxury Vision

Editor’s Note

Bvlgari’s sixth appearance at the China International Import Expo highlighted a strategic focus on balancing heritage craftsmanship with modern innovation. Under the theme “Sustainable by Innovation,” the brand emphasized digital transparency and technology’s role in advancing sustainability—key themes shaping the future of luxury.

Bvlgari Weaves Craftsmanship and Innovation into a New Luxury Vision
A Measured Approach at CIIE

Bvlgari took a measured approach at this year’s China International Import Expo, focusing on how craftsmanship and innovation can coexist within a changing global luxury landscape. In its presentation, titled “Sustainable by Innovation,” it explored digital transparency, sustainability, and the role of technology in preserving the artistry of jewelry-making. This marked Bvlgari’s sixth participation in the expo and the third occasion on which its CEO, Jean-Christophe Babin, attended the event.

“The fair has become a barometer of how foreign luxury houses read China – not just as a market, but as a mirror of global change.”
Long-Term Temperament Over Short-Term Sales

In a year when much of the luxury sector has been grappling with slower growth, Babin’s remarks were less about short-term sales and more about long-term temperament.

“Every economy goes through cycles. What matters is resilience, and China has that.”

He views the recent softening of consumption as part of a broader realignment rather than a downturn.

“People are buying differently. They think more carefully about what is meaningful, what endures.”

For him, this shift reflects a maturing relationship between consumers and brands – one that privileges craftsmanship, emotion, and credibility over novelty. Babin has watched China’s well-off families grow into one of the world’s most important luxury customer bases. Yet he believes the next chapter will not be driven by volume but by discernment – a subtle change that requires patience and cultural sensitivity.

A Balanced View on Consumer Demographics

The CEO resists the popular assumption that the market’s future rests solely with Generation Z.

“We talk a lot about the young consumer, but most of the world’s wealth still sits with people in their fifties and sixties.”

His point is not to downplay youth but to argue for balance.

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“A sustainable strategy means engaging both ends, making the brand accessible without flattening its depth.”

For Babin, sustainability extends beyond environmental practice; it includes the durability of relationships, materials, and meaning.

Digital Experience as an Emotional Stage

China’s rapid digitalization is testing that durability. Babin perceives China’s e-commerce platforms as both beneficial and disruptive.

“In most places, people browse online and buy in-store. Here in China, the digital experience itself must carry emotion.”

He views this as a structural evolution of luxury in China, one that demands a new kind of storytelling in which digital space is not merely a channel but a stage for brand character. He also believes Chinese consumers’ comfort with technology aligns naturally with Bvlgari’s own experiments. At this year’s Expo, the company presents Connected Jewelry, which embeds a unique micro-engraved code in each piece to document its origin. To Babin, such innovations are not about chasing trends but about accountability.

A Hybrid Identity Rooted in Exchange

Such openness to innovation, he added, is also cultural, a continuation of Bvlgari’s long history of drawing connections across worlds. He frames Bvlgari’s identity through the lens of exchange – between East and West, past and present.

“Rome was a city built on encounters. It grew by absorbing other civilizations – Greece, Egypt, and Persia.”

He sees the same dynamic in China’s openness to reinterpretation and its ability to adapt tradition to modern life. The company’s ties with China stretch back nearly a century, when Bvlgari exhibited Chinese jade in Rome, an early gesture of aesthetic dialogue that Babin likes to cite as evidence of continuity rather than opportunism. Today, the brand’s design team includes creators from China, South Korea, the United States, and other countries working alongside Italian artisans.

“Our culture was never purely Italian. It’s Roman, which means hybrid by nature.”

That hybridity, he suggested, will define how global luxury evolves in the coming decade. Instead of clear boundaries between markets or aesthetics, he expects overlapping identities: technology informed by heritage, local craft with global visibility, and sustainability built into design rather than declared through campaigns.

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“Bvlgari is rooted in craftsmanship and inspired by technology. At CIIE, we want to show how tradition and innovation can create something timeless and to deepen our connection with China’s dynamic, sophisticated consumers.”
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⏰ Published on: November 07, 2025