Four Seasons Yachts named a Chief Marketing Officer this week as the brand positions its first oceangoing vessel for a late-2025 launch, marking the hotel group's entry into the $200M-plus residential yacht segment. The appointment arrives eight months before the inaugural 207-meter vessel begins Mediterranean sailings, a timeline consistent with luxury hospitality soft-launch protocols.
The CMO hire follows Four Seasons Hotels' 2022 partnership with Marc-Henry Cruise Holdings and Fincantieri, the Italian shipbuilder behind recent Ritz-Carlton Yacht Collection deliveries. The first vessel will carry 95 suites starting at $850,000 per voyage, with 14 owner suites priced north of $10M for fractional equity stakes. The brand has committed to three vessels by 2028, each targeting six to eight sailings annually—a deliberate scarcity model distinct from Ritz-Carlton's 14-voyage calendar or Explora's year-round operations.
The move matters because Four Seasons enters a segment where brand extension rarely works. Aman, Belmond, and Ritz-Carlton each spent 18 to 24 months rebuilding credibility after initial yacht launches missed occupancy targets or repositioned mid-contract. Four Seasons is borrowing Aman's playbook: hire the marketing architect early, control the narrative before renderings leak, and ensure the 250 family offices already holding suite deposits hear product updates from a single voice. The CMO will report directly to Four Seasons corporate rather than the cruise-holdings entity, a structural choice that keeps messaging aligned with the hotel portfolio's $1,200-per-night average rate and avoids the discount-sailing perception that damaged Ritz-Carlton's first year.
Operators should watch three developments through Q3 2025. First, whether Four Seasons announces a dedicated yacht reservations platform separate from hotel systems—Aman built this in-house and now converts 40% of yacht inquiries into hotel bookings, a halo effect worth modeling. Second, if the brand reveals its crew-to-guest ratio; anything below 1.3:1 will draw unfavorable comparisons to Scenic's 1.4:1 standard. Third, timing of the first broker partnerships. If Four Seasons follows Belmond's path and signs Virtuoso or Signature six months before launch, expect aggressive cabin buybacks. If it waits until 90 days out, the brand is betting entirely on direct Four Seasons Preferred Partner channels, a higher-margin but narrower funnel.
The Marunouchi reopening in Tokyo this spring and Coconut Grove residences launch in Miami both telegraph Four Seasons' broader 2025 strategy: expand the brand into asset classes where $50M-plus households already concentrate spending, then cross-pollinate. A family office principal booking $1.2M in yacht suites this year becomes a Coconut Grove buyer in 2026. The CMO's actual job is making that handoff feel inevitable, not opportunistic.