As president and CEO of Cartier, he helped reinvigorate the brand with new strategies.
When Vigneron first took over as president and CEO, he directed Cartier to buy inventory back from retailers to increase demand for the brand's luxury watches and jewelry, the Australian Financial Review reported.
In 2017, Cartier offered free repairs to Panthère watches from the 1980s. The strategic move helped bring the vintage watches back in style — Cartier sold 15,000 of them that year.
In 2020, Forbes ranked Cartier 56th on its list of the world's 100 most valuable brands with an estimated value of $12.2 billion.
A ranking of the top Swiss watch companies published in April 2023 by Morgan Stanley named Cartier the second-largest watchmaker behind Rolex, overtaking Omega for the No. 2 spot with 2.75 billion francs, or $3.1 billion dollars, in sales, Professional Watches reported.
"From a maison which was not born in watchmaking, it's been remarkable to come to that level," Vigneron told the watch website Hodinkee of the ranking.
With 60 new pieces released in 2023, Cartier's watch business continues to boom, occupying an estimated 7% of the retail market share, according to the Morgan Stanley report.