National Post

Ralph Lauren aims to lure young shoppers

Fashion house marketing budget boosted

- Kim Bhasin

NEW YORK • Ralph Lauren isn’t just about plain polo shirts and peacoats anymore. It’s about the hype.

Looking for some buzz, the 52-year-old fashion house using tactics straight from the “hypebeast” playbook — industry slang for shoppers who obsess about clothes that get extensive publicity. Similar to Apple fanatics who camp out in advance of a new iPhone release, these devoted buyers are willing to stand in line for hours to get their hands on the latest drop of sneakers or T-shirts from brands such as Supreme or A Bathing Ape.

“We’re in the brand-building business,” Ralph Lauren Chief Executive Officer Patrice Louvet said in an interview last week. That comes at a cost. The company increased its marketing investment 18 per cent in fiscal 2019 compared to the year prior. Louvet plans to increase that budget to five per cent of total sales — which would be more than US$300 million — to court younger buyers. “We do want to make sure we have competitiv­e marketing support” in order to lure new shoppers to the brand, he said.

That cash will be spent largely on social and digital as the brand moves away from traditiona­l print ads. The company has brought on a new cohort of younger celebritie­s to sell its goods, such as Taylor Hill, the face of its Romance fragrance. The 22-year-old supermodel walks in the world’s biggest fashion shows and has 12.3 million followers on Instagram. A holiday gift campaign included social-media savvy stars Rachel Zoe, Cameron Dallas and Olivia Palermo.

So far, the boosted marketing budget has been a successful piece of Ralph Lauren’s revitaliza­tion plan, along with a cutback on discounts and inventory. Last quarter, it reversed a streak of same-store sales declines going back to 2015. On Tuesday, the company reported rosy earnings that exceeded analysts’ estimates and said its marketing during the crucial holiday season paid off, sending shares up the most in eight months.

In recent years, Europe’s luxury houses have concluded that streetwear cannot be ignored if they’re to win over millennial­s and Gen-Z. Last May, Louis Vuitton hired Virgil Abloh, the designer behind the Off-White streetwear label, to lead men’s design. That same month, Supreme had its high-fashion moment at a US$1 million auction in Paris. Yet few of America’s oldest fashion brands have fully embraced the skater-friendly clothes that have become a cultural phenomenon.

Ralph Lauren, however, is starting to learn the playbook. When the brand released its Winter Stadium collection last fall, it partnered with streetwear mainstays Opening Ceremony and e-commerce site HBX.

In November, Ralph Lauren released a collaborat­ion with British streetwear label Palace. Rather than sell the items in limited quantities across all its stores, the clothes were sold in a few select Ralph Lauren locations and specialty boutiques such as Dover Street Market, a Commes des Garçons store in South Korea and online through the Polo app. The strategy is right out of the classic sneaker drop playbook: Create scarcity and borrow the credibilit­y of a partner label.

Upon release, the Ralph Lauren website struggled to keep up with demand and Palace items are now selling for much more than their retail prices on the secondary market, as limited-edition goods often do. A Palace x Ralph Lauren sweater with a preppy bear on a skateboard that retailed for US$475 is going for about US$800 on popular streetwear reselling site StockX.

Seventy-five per cent of shoppers who bought items from the collaborat­ion were new customers, Louvet said. Those buyers were about 10 years younger on average than the usual Ralph Lauren shopper, according to company data.

The label must be careful not to overdo these splashy collection­s, Louvet said. Otherwise, the hype train might run out of steam.

ONSET TIME IS GOING TO BE ONE OF THE CRITICAL FACTORS IN THE NEXT STAGE OF CANNABIS-INFUSED BEVERAGES, AND THE INVESTMENT­S BEING MADE ... ARE GOING TO DRAMATICAL­LY MOVE THAT NEEDLE. — JOHN KAGIA, CHIEF KNOWLEDGE OFFICER AT NEW FRONTIER DATA

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Supermodel Taylor Hill, at the 2018 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, is the face of Romance fragrance, part of Ralph Lauren’s increased marketing budget.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Supermodel Taylor Hill, at the 2018 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, is the face of Romance fragrance, part of Ralph Lauren’s increased marketing budget.

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