On Friday, Oct. 3, The Business of Fashion will unveil 100 new additions to The BoF 500, our definitive index of people shaping the global fashion industry. To mark the occasion, we sat down with three members of The BoF 500 community to discuss how they are responding to the tumultuous state of fashion and the wider world.
This yearâs BoF 500 comes at a pivotal moment. Across the industry, from emerging brands to global giants, fashion companies are feeling the pressure of an increasingly unstable world, marked by geopolitical conflicts and macroeconomic uncertainty.
But the industry is suffering from self-inflicted wounds as well. Too many companies have prioritised revenue and profit growth at the expense of long-term brand values and customer trust. Rampant price increases, declining quality, supply chain scandals and a general lack of creativity and innovation have all played a part in weakening fashionâs value proposition at a time when competing lifestyle categories are capturing greater share of wallet.
This yearâs BoF 500 cover stars â Yohji Yamamoto, Matthieu Blazy and Kim Kardashian â are each grappling with this moment in their own way, in their own segments of the market.
Fashionâs punk poet Yohji Yamamoto is angry. He is exhausted with geopolitical conflicts, frightened by steadily creeping climate change and anxious about the current state of the fashion system.
âFashion has become a joke,â he told me at his headquarters in Tokyo. âItâs all about money. The major companies of fashion, theyâre like kids playing kid soccer, just running after the ball. Theyâre not thinking about their customers. I just think they have too much money, so they donât need to work hard. Money is always floating on them.â
Following a bankruptcy and restructuring during the last great fashion crisis in 2008, Yamamotoâs âsmall but strongâ business is now generating more than $200 million in revenues and growing at 15 percent annually, far outpacing the market. But he knows that he will stop designing in the coming years and has been quietly focused on putting in place his succession plans. In our exchange, he revealed what he is thinking and feeling about life, love, loss and the future of his business and the wider industry.
In Paris, Chanelâs Matthieu Blazy has been tasked with re-energising the French couture giant, itself a global symbol of luxury fashion. In a series of interactions with BoFâs Tim Blanks that took place in the run up to Blazyâs highly-anticipated debut show on October 6 we learn how the designer is charting new territory for Chanel â and fashion at large.
Meanwhile, Kim Kardashian, the social media star, entrepreneur and one of the most visible women in the world, is cementing her role as an era-defining brand builder with her $4 billion shapewear label Skims. Just last week, she unveiled NikeSkims, a blockbuster partnership with Kardashianâs body-positive, shade-diverse label that could help Nike finally crack the code with women â and send Skimsâ valuation higher still.
BoFâs Sheena Butler-Young spoke at length with Kardashian, as well as top executives at Nike and Skims just as they were putting the finishing touches on the launch, to understand their game plan.
âSeeing the marketplace and how overcrowded that is, I wanted something that was so just clear, different, innovative,â Kardashian said. âI wanted it to have the credibility that Nike has and I wanted the customer to have this feeling that theyâre going to get a really strong Skims product.â
But Kardashian knows todayâs customers are seeking more than a better product. âI donât measure it just on sales,â she added. âI measure a lot of it on the cultural impact that it would have.â
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