When a brand has been around for 115 years, you’d think it might cling to its past. Samsonite is proving the opposite.

At ETail Boston, David Oksman, VP of Marketing & Direct to Consumer at Samsonite, revealed how the brand is actively reshaping itself to win the loyalty of younger, values-driven consumers while deepening trust with long-time customers. The strategy blends three forces - heritage, innovation, and culture - into a growth engine designed for a retail world where authenticity and agility are now table stakes.

Why modernization is non-negotiable for heritage brands

Samsonite isn’t just a luggage company; it’s a brand with a legacy in craftsmanship, reliability, and global travel culture. But as Oksman explained, legacy alone isn’t enough in an era when younger shoppers prioritize values, digital fluency, and brand experiences that match their lifestyle.

The stakes are high: the brand must serve customers who have trusted Samsonite for decades and meet the expectations of Gen Z and Millennials who approach purchases differently, often seeing a suitcase as more than a product, but part of their identity.

Oksman framed it this way: “If we’re not innovating around what matters most to the customer, we risk losing relevance, no matter how strong our history is.”

Four pillars of Samsonite’s modernization playbook

1. Loyalty built on service, not psoints

For Samsonite, loyalty is not a punch card or a discount code, it’s a promise. That’s why they’ve brought customer service back in-house. The goal? Solve problems faster, keep feedback loops tighter, and deliver experiences that reinforce trust at every stage of ownership.

This service model is reinforced by their repairability pledge, from lifetime guarantees to replaceable parts like wheels. Oksman was clear: in an age of fast fashion and disposable goods, durability is a trust-building superpower.

2. Portfolio strategy that meets every need

Modern Samsonite is more than one brand. The company manages a portfolio, from premium to value lines, allowing them to meet customers where they are, financially and emotionally, without diluting brand equity. The challenge is to maintain distinct identities for each sub-brand while benefiting from the collective trust in Samsonite craftsmanship.

3. Innovation that starts with the consumer, not the factory

Rather than pushing out features for the sake of novelty, Samsonite leans on consumer research to identify what truly adds value. This includes AI-driven personalization — from tailored product recommendations to future-facing search strategies where queries will become more conversational and contextual.

Oksman predicted a shift from SEO to what he calls “AIO”, Artificial Intelligence Optimization, where brands will need to appear in AI-generated answers to natural-language prompts like “What’s the best carry-on for a four-day trip to Miami?”

4. Purpose that’s more than a tagline

Samsonite’s modernization is rooted in sustainability and transparency. This isn’t marketing gloss, it’s embedded into product design, manufacturing, and post-purchase experience. The emphasis on repairability is part of a broader circular mindset that aligns strongly with Gen Z and Millennial values.

The role of AI in reimagining search and creativity

One of the most forward-looking insights from Oksman was his view on AI’s role in marketing. For Samsonite, AI isn’t a threat to creative teams, it’s an accelerator of ideas and execution. The brand is preparing for a world where AI-powered search will drive product discovery, and where storytelling will need to evolve in both format and context to remain discoverable.

In Oksman’s words: “We’re moving from optimizing for keywords to optimizing for conversations.”

Balancing legacy and relevance: The Samsonite tightrope

The most striking takeaway from the session is how deliberate Samsonite is in balancing what to keep and what to evolve:

  • Keep: craftsmanship, reliability, travel expertise, brand promise.

  • Evolve: service delivery, digital channels, cultural positioning, sustainability integration, AI-powered personalization.

This balance ensures that long-time loyalists still see the Samsonite they trust while new generations see a brand that gets them.

Actionable lessons for other heritage brands

  1. Own your customer experience end-to-end
    Outsourcing may save money short-term, but in-house service gives you speed, control, and customer closeness that can’t be bought.

  2. Design for the second sale, not just the first
    Products that last, and can be repaired, invite repeat purchases through trust, not forced obsolescence.

  3. Plan for AI-driven discovery now
    Build your presence for AI search queries today, or risk being invisible tomorrow.

  4. Segment without diluting
    Multiple sub-brands can expand reach without losing the core if managed strategically.

  5. Embed purpose in operations
    Sustainability and transparency must be proven through practice, not just promoted through ads.

Samsonite’s story is a reminder that modernization isn’t about abandoning the past, it’s about using it as a foundation to build a future that’s relevant, resonant, and resilient.

Whether you’re a 115-year-old brand or a five-year-old startup, the principle holds: the market rewards brands that stay true to their DNA while evolving in lockstep with their customers.

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