Counterfeit
Watches
The
woman was in tears, standing in front of the salesperson in the
Rolex
boutique. She had brought her prized Rolex
in for service only to be told it couldn't be repaired. No, it wasn't
broken beyond repair. It was counterfeit!
The Counterfeit Watch Problem
Today's counterfeit watches are not only the $10 fake watches everyone
knows about - you expect those to break within minutes of putting
them on and no one would mistake them for the real thing. No, these
counterfeits are getting better and better. They are better counterfeits
than ever before and their prices are close enough to the real thing
to confuse and deceive consumers. The woman in the story above thought
she had purchased a real Rolex;
she had paid close to the retail price, and she was devastated when
she was told it was a fake.
The Impact of Counterfeit Watches
Counterfeiting is widely considered to be a victimless crime. After
all, these luxury watch brands can surely withstand the loss of
a few watch sales, right? Actually, the opposite is true. The Progressive
Policy Institute estimates that the global trade in counterfeit
goods is $650 billion, representing between 5-7% of the total value
of global trade. In addition to hurting legitimate businesses, counterfeiting
leads to the loss of government tax revenue, which means that the
lost money has to be made up somewhere else. Counterfeiting is a
crime with low risks and high rewards. Contrary to romantic ideals,
counterfeiting isn't being done by anti-establishment individuals
in the in the back of their house - counterfeiting is an operation,
more often than not run by organized crime and may be linked to
other crimes like money laundering, drug dealing and more. Factories,
mostly in Southeast Asia, are cranking out the counterfeits with
no real knowledge of watches and no investment into research
or design. The best watch companies are the ones most likely
to be counterfeited and they have the most to lose. These companies
are committed to furthering the art and craft of watchmaking,
so they spend many millions of dollars a year on research, development,
design, manufacturing, assembly, customer service, marketing and
advertising. When criminals profit from counterfeit watches,
the watch companies lose, big time, and buyers of counterfeit
products lose, because they don't benefit from any of that work
the company has done. Sure, the watch looks similar and has
the brand name on it, but the things that make a Rolex a
Rolex, for example, are not present in the counterfeit.
The Fake Watches
The new fake watches look quite a lot like the originals.
Placed side-by-side it's usually pretty easy to tell the difference,
but by themselves it can be difficult to identify them as fakes.
They don't have misspellings on the dial like the $10 fakes - they
use the same names, the same logos, the right fonts, many times
they even use similar, though less quality, materials (yes, there
are gold fake Rolexes out there) and the same outward designs.
Inside, however, is another story. The movement is a cheap
knockoff, most probably made in Asia somewhere, whereas high-end
watch companies use only the best Swiss movements, the
highest quality components with the strictest quality control. If
you buy a counterfeit watch you are not only funding criminal
activity, you are cheating yourself out of the pleasure of owning
a fine watch with true heritage, well thought out design
and real innovation.
What You Can Do
First off, don't buy a watch from someone you don't know
or trust. Buy your watches only through authorized retailers
or established auction houses. Buying anywhere else is a risk. It's
happened many times - a watch sold on the Internet is purchased
by a legitimate buyer. When that buyer takes the watch to
a retailer to have it serviced, the manufacturer researches the
serial number and tells the retailer to seize the watch because
it is stolen. The watch is returned to the original owner
and the person who bought it on the Internet is out the purchase
price. On the Internet it is definitely"buyer beware"
- very few watch
companies allow the sale of their watches on the
Internet and NO high-end watch brands permit their retailers
to sell via the web.
Bottom
line, if a deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Walk
away. We buy watches for any number of reasons - how they
feel on our wrists, how they make us feel and for the statement
the make to other people. If you buy a counterfeit watch,
what does that say about you?
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