J.Crew and the Mail-Order MakeoverMost of the information shared in the article has been discussed previously on the blog. However, it it is still an interesting read. I also hope that our JCAs in Canada get to visit J.Crew stores of their own!
By Julia Belluz
September 21, 2010
Mickey Drexler, known as “the Steve Jobs of retail,” once had a reputation for breakneck retail expansion. Before the native New Yorker took the helm of J.Crew in 2003, he steered the Gap through its heyday in the 1990s, helping the company grow from 450 stores to more than 2,000. The Gap, he once said, should be as ubiquitous as Coca-Cola. But this overreaching contributed to Drexler’s downfall: the Gap’s growth stalled, and after a series of bad decisions, its stock plummeted. In 2002, Drexler was fired.
At J.Crew, Drexler has taken an altogether different approach, and the company has been on a hot streak for the last few years. Between 2003 and 2008 revenues rose 107 per cent, and in 2009, after both Oprah and the first family expressed their ardour for the label, revenues rang in at US$1.57 billion, outstripping pre-recession levels. But Drexler has not responded with aggressive expansion. Instead, the CEO squeezed growth out of the existing footprint of the business (just 321 stores) through a mix of retailing strategies that have transformed the brand. Once synonymous with preppy clothes and mail-order catalogues, Drexler’s J. Crew is now one of the most creative and fashionable retailers in North America.
When the recession hit the retail industry in the U.S., and many clothing shops slashed prices and offered deep discounts, J.Crew moved into affordable luxury, mixing fashion-conscious pieces (a $1,200 cropped leather jacket) with high-quality basics (T-shirts, jeans). Richard Jaffe, retail analyst at New York’s Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, says it’s this broad appeal that has reinvigorated the 27-year-old brand. “There are people who shop at J. Crew now who spend $2,000 on a handbag and those who think T-shirts shouldn’t cost more than $5,” he says. “[J.Crew] is part of many peoples’ wardrobes.”
In perhaps its biggest gamble, J.Crew has been introducing big-name third-party brands ...These partners were invited to design merchandise to be sold specifically through J.Crew. “We did this because we think there are great brands and companies out there who are masters at their craft,” says one company insider (who spoke on the condition of anonymity). “We’re not going to try to be an expert in all products.” Rather than dilute the J.Crew brand, Drexler is piggybacking off the cachet of more respected labels to help raise his company’s status. Since 2007, some 40 relationships have been formed, and, Jaffe notes, “They dress up the store and create a halo effect on the rest of the products.”
J.Crew has also continued to make gains online, where overhead is low and margins are great.
The company just announced plans to open an Internet outlet store and, this May, went global through the online luxury retailer Net-A-Porter. Imran Amed, editor of the Business of Fashion blog, says the move surprised insiders. “But it was also a great endorsement from the authority in online fashion retailing and it enables J.Crew to reach a global market at minimal cost.” Plus, he adds, “It may lay the groundwork for international expansion in the future.” (Indeed, J.Crew has said it plans to open up shops in Canada, where they operate via catalogue and the Web, and in London, England.)
Meanwhile, the company has been reaching out to often-neglected male consumers, opening stand-alone J. Crew men’s shops (four since 2008). ...David Ian Gray, retail analyst and principal of Vancouver-based DIG360 Consulting, anticipates that focusing on menswear will lead to future growth. “Men’s clothing tends to be overlooked because men spend less. At the end of the day, they need to buy clothing, and they have partners who will buy it for them as well.”
For now, J.Crew is in uncharted retail waters: a mostly mail-order catalogue company that also runs couture-calibre boutiques; a clothing company that’s making a name for itself by plugging other brands. Yet it’s working, says Gray. While the ideas may seem radical, the approach is still cautious. “Drexler is following a more prudent, quality-growth approach,” Gray says, “while retaining a clear drive to succeed. It’s a nice balance.”
What are your thoughts on the article? Any points made that you found particularly interesting? If so, please share! :)
Oh and London how wonderful would that be? I thought that Net a Porter was going to be the extent of thier international expansion, so fingers crossed.
ReplyDeleteThe line saying; some of the JC clientele spend $2K on a handbag and some think a T-shirt shouldn't cost more than $5 is so on point with this blog community. JC offers something for everyone and hopefully they will keep up the good work. I think MD is a freak-of-nature-clairvoyant genius but fear like a good TV serial he will want to quit while he is ahead and it will all fall apart. I know... I could be a groupie. Movie and rock stars--phhtt! ;-)
ReplyDeleteHaha, the thing that most stuck out to me was does Tabitha know about the plan to expand to London?! ;)
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