Rachel Zoe: Being a designer today means ‘navigating the noise’

Subscribe: iTunes | Stitcher

Rachel Zoe launched her brand in 2011, as direct-to-consumer businesses were booming online. But even though she already had a following from her time spent working as a celebrity stylist and sending out her then-newsletter, The Zoe Report (now a media company), Zoe targeted traditional retailers first.

“Starting my brand in the traditional sense just felt right,” said Zoe. “Taking time to actually understand your customer on your own takes years.”

Zoe didn’t launch her own e-commerce site for the brand until 2016, in fact, but since finally coming around to selling direct online, she and her brand have been much more experimental. She’s also become more entrepreneurial: In addition to her fashion line, she’s in charge of The Zoe Report as well as Box of Style, a subscription box of clothing and other lifestyle products chosen by her and her team.

Zoe joined the Glossy Podcast to discuss the perks and downfalls of traditional retail, her take on see-now-buy-now, her plans to open Rachel Zoe stores and how she uses customer data to her advantage. Edited highlights, below.

On her relationship with wholesale
When Zoe first launched her brand, it was immediately available in 250 doors in the country, at stores like Intermix, Bloomingdale’s and Bergdorf Goodman. With that came a lot of exposure, as well as a lot of noise from buyers who suddenly had a say in what her collection should look and feel like. The downside of the department store middleman is that they have their customer, not the designer’s, in mind, at the end of the day.

“I didn’t know how to navigate that [relationship] very well. When someone’s asking you for product, you say yes,” said Zoe. “The traditional market is helpful, in terms of buyers telling you what they need, and what trends you may or may not, but you can lose yourself in that. You have to stick to what you stand for.”

On opening up an e-commerce store five years after launch
E-commerce seems like a no-brainer for brands today. Having a direct connection with customers that isn’t muddled by the demands of a team of buyers helps build a lasting relationship. But Zoe said it’s not as easy as just launching a store online.

“You can’t just wake up and say you want to sell online on your own,” she said. “You have to have the time, the people, the tech and the inventory, plus the understanding of what you’re selling to the customers, why and when she would come to your site, and what you offer that’s different. It’s been an unbelievable experience since we launched, because it gives us so much insight into the customer — but that came with very steady and careful growth.”

On not being sold on see-now-buy-now
In February, Zoe launched a small see-now-buy-now capsule collection of eight pieces, alongside her main collection she was showing for the fall. The idea was that those who wanted to wait for the full collection and shop it traditionally could; those who wanted the immediate gratification could shop right away. She decided not to bring back the capsule for her September collection.

“[With see-now-buy-now], you’re just chasing inventory. You’re pretending you have a crystal ball,” said Zoe. “It’s a big gamble for small brands. That said, it could be very effective. For me right now, I want to try a lot of different things for our customer and audience, and see what works the best from all sides.”

https://digiday.com/?p=262618

More in Marketing

With the rise of the chief AI officer, it’s time to examine ‘czar’ culture

Even if it’s a familiar pattern — hot new thing, new C-Suite exec to tackle said thing, a few years go by and that C-Suite position no longer exists as everyone is now doing said thing (or it was a fad that has since faded away) — does it make sense for businesses to continue to appoint new czars with every new trend? 

Why Cava’s bid for brand awareness means prioritizing streaming ads

Fast-casual restaurant chain Cava has been in growth mode over the past year and is leaning into streaming ads in an effort to boost brand awareness.

A history of middle manager stress: The Return podcast, season 3, episode 1

In episode one, McKinsey partner Emily Field tells us more about why middle management is critically important to the workforce.