WWD Digital Daily

Digital Focus

● The 15-year-old fine jewelry firm has become technology, data and digital-driven while expanding the product and price range for greater accessibil­ity.

- BY DAVID MOIN

Jewelry designer Monica Rich Kosann has continued to grow thanks to key investment­s in digital technologi­es.

This week, jewelry designer Monica Rich Kosann beta launches technology on her web site that will enable shoppers to customize necklaces stacked with charms and poesy rings, and get a clear view online of what they’ve created.

“You pick your chain, you pick your charms — the technology puts the charms on the chain and you can zoom in, turn it around, look at the front and back. Add a second charm, see how it looks. Add a third charm, see how it looks,” explained Rod Kosann, co-owner of the company with his wife, Monica.

Or add even more charms or rings, and see how the necklace changes in appearance each time. Between the poesy rings and the charms, there are about 100 stockkeepi­ng units to choose from.

“As you change it up, the technology tells you the price changes, and you can check out from what you’ve created. It’s like being in a store,” said Kosann. The “Design Your Own Virtual Charm and Poesy Necklace Builder” is a “huge investment,” he said. “It basically uses 3-D rendering technologi­es. It took a year to build.”

For a small jewelry company, Monica

Rich Kosann for the past two years has been investing big in technology. Several seasons ago, the “locket bar” was introduced, another personaliz­ation technology. It enables a shopper to download photos of people or places, from their mobile phone or desktop, crop and print them out to the right size to place in a locket. It’s a fiveminute process. The company also added four one-click checkout options — Apple

Pay, PayPal, Amazon Pay, and Affirm.

“Our technology spend is well into the mid-to-high six figures,” said Rod. “That’s a lot to spend even for a mid-size company. We are not a David Yurman, but we are approachin­g that mid-level within the fine jewelry space...We’ve put a tremendous amount of resources to reinventin­g our whole online experience. We re-platformed our site with Shopify. That gave us the ability to scale and make the consumer experience online really strong. We totally redesigned and rebuilt the site, and we started a whole range of initiative­s for digital growth.”

Sitting on the outdoor deck of their new, 4,500-square-foot headquarte­rs in a converted factory building in Fairfield County, Conn., the Kosanns said their company has been undergoing a twoyear-plus “transforma­tion,” becoming technology-, data- and e-commerce-driven while broadening its product offering to be more accessible. There’s been a 35 percent increase in sku counts since 2018.

Fifteen years ago, the business started modestly, with a tiny gift shop selling image cases and frames on the decorative home floor at Bergdorf Goodman, and not long after launched jewelry, a web site and wholesale distributi­on. More recently, several freestandi­ng shops were added.

Monica Rich Kosann is currently primarily a direct-to-consumer fine jewelry company while maintainin­g the wholesale distributi­on to Bergdorf’s, where the shop has grown to 400 square feet; Neiman Marcus, and independen­t jewelers. There’s still the 200-square-foot, glass-enclosed shop on the main floor of The Shops at Columbus Circle in Manhattan. Due to the challenges its compact size poses amid the pandemic, the shop has been closed but the Kosanns expect it will reopen in a matter of weeks. “We want to make it work. The world is talking more and more about the productivi­ty of smaller footprints,” said Rod.

In April 2019, the Kosanns closed their only other freestandi­ng shop, which was in the Century City mall in Los Angeles. It wasn’t getting the traffic hoped for. During the pandemic, the Kosanns have been able to maintain 80 percent of the 20-member staff full-time; the rest, part-time.

“Our brand has pivoted to become so technologi­cal, but we are still keeping that warmth and that connection with our customers,” said Monica, who wears her diamond owl charm necklace amid her “neck mess” with a slim locket and a designyour-own necklace. “My daughters and I all wear the owl critter, for wisdom. I call us the three owls. We are very close and we never take them off. I totally sleep and shower in it. It’s our connection.”

Kosann, who is also a photograph­er, designs her lockets, necklaces, rings, bracelets and charms with sentimenta­l inscriptio­ns. “They’re storytelli­ng keepsakes to empower women, to inspire women. That’s very important to me.”

“We actually trademarke­d the phrase ‘because jewelry should not just be beautiful, it should empower and inspire you.’ A locket creates an emotional connection with the customer because of what they put in it. With all of our collection­s, they have meaning, and because of that we also wanted to start creating experience­s to strengthen that emotional connection we have with our customers,” Rod said, referring to the recent technology and web site investment­s.

Last month a new collection of stackable poesy rings, starting at $48, was introduced, increasing the opening price point options for customers. Also new for fall is a “locket X color” collection, which are in enamel and gold vermeil, on short black steel chains, starting at $395.

“We were always working in sterling silver and 18k gold, but going back three years, $2,000-plus was the opening price in gold. And we didn’t have a lot of sterling silver that was under $300 or $400. So part of the transforma­tion has been really leaning into the opening price points of both those categories. We became more accessible as a brand to more people, we knew more customers and younger customers wanted to participat­e in the brand. Now we have as many customers between 25 and 45 as we have 45 and up, and all that happened in a very organic way,” Rod said.

On the more expensive side of the assortment, the company offers, for example, a sapphire locket with a diamond halo on an 18k gold chain for $10,000. There’s also a one-of-a kind crystal opal locket, priced $100,000. But as Monica stressed, “We are not selling flashy diamonds or big watches.”

To get a better handle of what to sell, being more data-driven “informs our decision-making on an operationa­l level,” said Rod. “We learn about what kind of inventory allocation­s to make. Being a direct-to-consumer company, we’re getting a lot of our own data in real time. Previously, we would have to look at things more on a past-year basis. Now, because we can see things in real time, we can make decisions based on what happened the week before.” Better design and merchandis­ing decisions are being made, he said. “We also look at what ads are performing best. We look at the data behind a lot of digital marketing. It is amazing because we can pivot on a weekly basis; we give our wholesale partners a lot of digital marketing tools to use every month — the ones we know are performing the best.”

The company has been aggressive­ly e-mailing and using social media. “It’s not only a selling thing — we have great blog articles,” Rod said. “We talk about our values, our quality, but we really stepped it up over the last 18 months. We call out what goes into every aspect of the jewelry, even down to the clasps on our chains. There’s been a lot of communicat­ion.”

The company has also been calling out its year-long evolution into a certified B Corporatio­n, one of just 3,600 on the planet. “We ended 2019 with 20 to 30 percent of our gold being recycled. And last month, we crossed the threshold of 50 percent-plus on the recycled gold.” Other factors enter into being B Corp certified, including how employees are treated.

“We started a silver recyclable program as well in September. By the end of 2020 our goal is to be around 20 percent recycled silver...This is all one more way to make an emotional connection.”

While wholesalin­g this year has been “very disrupted” at Bergdorf’s, traffic at the shop has been “slowly coming back,” said Rod.

On the brighter side of business, he said his company “went into this crisis experienci­ng 100 to 200 percent growth in our web business, and we have been really fortunate that has kept going strongly.” He also said the company is profitable and has been seeing a 30 to 40 percent customer return rate. The Kosanns have started to seek outside strategic capital to accelerate growth.

For the future, the Kosanns are considerin­g men’s jewelry, customizat­ion of messages on the rings, internatio­nal distributi­on, engagement and bridal jewelry, and possibly additional brick-and-mortar shops.

“We just don’t want to rush to another category or dabble in it until we are ready to make a real business out of it,” said Rod. “We want to be careful. We have a brand in a place where we’ve been able to transform and pivot. But what we are about as a brand is clearer than ever — emotional connection, empowermen­t, inspiratio­n and accessibil­ity.

“Transformi­ng to a digital-first, directto-consumer business that balances with the traditiona­l distributi­on, that’s been the mission,” said Rod. “It’s really hard to do. It’s a whole different way of thinking. If you are a wholesale business, you are separated from the consumer so you are not necessaril­y privy to the same decisionma­king process. And then in terms of the e-commerce, it requires a tremendous range of digital strategies to build the business.”

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 ??  ?? The new enamel locket collection in gold vermeil.
The new enamel locket collection in gold vermeil.
 ??  ?? From the fall campaign; locket, charm and a design your own necklace.
From the fall campaign; locket, charm and a design your own necklace.
 ??  ?? Rod Kosann and Monica Rich Kosann
Rod Kosann and Monica Rich Kosann

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