
How Jean-Claude Biver’s Eponymous Watch Brand Is Navigating a Challenging Market
After five decades as an industry bigwig, JCB’s biggest challenge yet has been opening an independent family atelier in a farmhouse outside Geneva.
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Starting from scratch with two watchmakers and an artisan specialising in movement finishing is testing for anyone, and the sky-high expectations that come with Jean-Claude Biver’s name only dialled up the risk factor. Debuting in a declining 2023 market, the $550,000 Biver Carillon Tourbillon was a bold move, but has the audacious debut paid off? I visited Jean-Claude’s growing namesake family company, Biver, where Pierre Biver is creative director and Filipe Biver is responsible for the Asian market, to find out how the company is faring in a challenging market.

We’re not out of the post-pandemic market reset yet, but Jean-Claude Biver’s eponymous brand has experienced growth and considerable up-staffing. James Marks was headhunted from Phillips as CEO in October 2024, and Nolan Buchi has taken the role of marketing director after previously working as a consultant for the brand. Marks mentored Pierre Biver at Phillips, underlining the Biver family’s love of vintage timepieces. Alongside his father, 25-year-old Pierre brings youthful insight and a sharp eye for design as co-founder and plays a key role in the brand’s focused direction.
But let us first address the horological elephant in the atelier. The Carillon Tourbillon was not met with universal praise and thunderous applause—some felt it was too much, too soon. I loved the bracelet with its intense detailing and complex design on its own merit. Likewise, the 42 mm case had a natural sense of balance with lugs to die for. But the triple threat of stone dial drama, a tourbillon, and a minute repeater made it appear overpowering. However, my initial impression changed with the pared-back Automatique and wearing the intricate Carillon Tourbillon in Givrins, where the Biver atelier is located in Switzerland, was eye-opening. With two monochrome takes on intricate guilloché work the new dial designs come across as more restrained, even with baguette-cut indices. And just like the 39 mm Automatique, the ergonomics are mature and well-measured for such a young brand.
A larger-than-life doyen of Swiss watchmaking, Jean-Claude Biver made a name for himself in the industry for his irrefutable business acumen and larger-than-life personality. But does his corporate business savvy translate to independent, small-scale watchmaking? The Biver atelier is in a converted farmhouse about 50 minutes north-east of Geneva, and over a second helping of croissants, I asked the former head of watches and jewellery at LVMH if the first two years had met his expectations.
“I would say, yes. Thank God,” says Biver. “It would be dramatic to say no, but it could have happened. Nevertheless, there were a few unexpected elements, and unlike being a boss surrounded by people, suddenly I had nobody around me. I was alone”. His answers often incite him to pound his fist on the meeting table, interspersed with loud exclamations. He doesn’t hold back and he often reveals an unrelenting and deeply personal focus.

After decades of working with large corporate teams and personal assistants, he works only with his two sons. “We were together, but we were two debutants starting a new adventure, which was very special,” says Biver of himself and his son Pierre, who founded the company with him in Switzerland. “I also realised the importance of the unmentioned people (in a larger corporate team). They might do a job that is not always valued, but if these people leave you, you are naked.” His technical director, François Perez, is one of those key members and his fervent enthusiasm nearly matches that of his boss.
Still, there were other surprises in store for Biver with the launch of the family business, including a learning curve on what clients would be willing to pay. “I had expected more attraction from the Carillon, but I underestimated the importance of price,” he says. “At half a million Swiss Francs, it was an expensive debut, and customers told me that we were close to their pain threshold, even if our finishing was extraordinary. And we felt it in slow initial sales. On the contrary, interest in the three-handed Automatique (launched September 2024) was unexpectedly high. So, while I felt slightly disappointed, I could see it turning into an incredible success.”

Biver also knows his unshakeable reputation comes from big brands, not crafting bespoke timepieces. “I had a little bit of goodwill because of my name, which helped us overcome the market challenge, and the Biver brand name meant something,” he says. The elevated position of a brand with watches above $500,000 needs to be deserved, a point which is not lost on Biver. “Our duty is not to offer perfection, or to produce the best quality,” he says. “It is much more, because we must master all the parts that nobody can see. And by mastering this invisibility, that will set us apart.”
This focus on the unseen details is a valid reason for a high markup. At $80,000, the Automatique offered these thoughtful nuances at a more palatable price. Taking a loupe to a detail like the soldered, angular lugs, it all becomes clear. Their dramatic shape is engineered for durability despite their soft gold structure, with lug holes meticulously fitted with strong titanium inner sleeves for strength and versatility. “It’s normal to have elaborate finishing on what you can see, but we polish the heads of our screws that are unseen inside the movement,” says Biver. “For me, the invisibility that we master means we come close to eternal perfection, because a perfect movement will still work after 500 years.”

Under the technical guidance of Perez, the number of watchmakers and finishers has also grown considerably in this short space of time. “People came to me because of my reputation and because word spread about our quality, and this crazy guy who says that invisibility is his speciality,” says Biver. The draw of small-scale independent ateliers is clear, as skilled watchmakers find more variation, instead of being relegated to more repetitive tasks. At the Biver manufacture, watchmakers are often working on multiple steps of the process and have ownership of the complete assembly of a single watch. “I believe each one could be mentioned as one of the best, devoted watchmakers I have ever employed,” says Biver. “They get to follow one watch, doing what they were trained to do, and are in synchrony with their job. I’m amazed by the quality of my people. This is something that I never expected to have come so easily and, at our level, people are the key. People are the key to everything.”
He admits, however, his biggest challenge is to stay grounded. “When independent people, including myself, receive compliments and too much success, we forget that the boss will always be the product,” says Biver. “So, the biggest threat is forgetting to be humble.” And while I wouldn’t call the 39 mm Biver Automatique a humble design, it speaks a subtler horological language than the flamboyance of the Carillon. The Automatique entered the stage in September last year, including two Atelier stone dial versions. The Pietersite iteration was like a thunderstorm framed in rose gold but the design was still restrained, with immaculate details like the multi-faceted indexes. Not surprisingly, being very close to his father, a well-known Patek collector, vintage aesthetics inspire Pierre Biver. And judging by the smile of his technical director Perez when I bring it up, Japanese horology has also been an inspiration to the team.

Considering the retro twist of soldered lugs that match the aggressive indexes for drama, the design is contemporary. Wearing the Automatique with its angled lugs, the mature ergonomics struck me, and the platinum monochrome version epitomises stealth wealth. And despite my predisposition for smaller case sizes, the same applies to the Carillon Tourbillon. Especially the two 42 mm grade 5 titanium versions, featuring guilloché-engraved inner dials in Obsidian or a clean silver-white Mother-of-Pearl.

The details are perfected, but unlike some brands at this level, not clinically. The passion is felt through each index, and I’m even drawn to the high drama of the $1.5 million extravagance of the Deep Blue—the least understated of all Biver’s creations. An overpowering number of sapphires encircle a hypnotic hyperspace-inspired white gold guilloché dial. These are set in two rows, echoed in the full gem-set bezel. And just like the fan-shaped guilloché pattern of the titanium Carillon, each sapphire has a familiar wedge-shaped form, a trademark Biver cut.
With today’s rising interest in the brand, production is limited by the size of Biver’s atelier and, I wouldn’t be surprised to see further expansion or even a move to larger premises to cope with demand. Biver has strong feelings (cue fist on table) on waiting lists and production times. “We should be focused on the customer,” he says. “You are making a great watch, but you are not the king. The customer is the king. We might tend to become arrogant, but if a watch cannot be delivered within a year or two, say so and be sorry that you cannot deliver the watch earlier. But you can’t tell a customer they can’t buy the watch for eight years, see what I mean?”
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