CONSUMERS

Heritage Is Not Dead

by

Susanna Nicoletti

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit: This is the featured image credit

Innovation is becoming an obsession for the contemporary brands. Disruption is considered the key to success. Stellar growth is a must.

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

Innovation is becoming an obsession for the contemporary brands. Disruption is considered the key to success. Stellar growth is a must.

Earlier this month Apple shares slid by 10% and many insiders ascribed this weak performance to the lack of innovation in its latest products. Brunello Cucinelli shares dramatically dipped following its 2018 report that saw a revenues increase of +8.1% – something considered too low and slow by analysts.

It is certain that the investors are eager for quick, phenomenal results. It is also clear that innovation is not an automatic process leading to stunning revenues. Brunello Cucinelli himself said that it is expected for 2019 another year of what he calls "crescita garbata" (kind, not exaggerated growth).

Innovation as a driver for growth

Innovation is expected to be the driver for unlimited growth at the fastest pace. But at the same time, this is also the best way to rapidly burn down a Brand and a company, if badly managed – because innovation is expected to kill and bury products, styles, entire Brand stories and to repeatedly reproduce new items.

But can innovation itself be the major growth factor? Is a never-ending disruption the best way to keep the pace in a very competitive market?

On the contrary, there are superlative, cool brands that made their own story and DNA the key success factor. Cool brands that relied more on their heritage than disruption.

Brands and heritage

Fendi is one of them. Founded in Rome in 1925, it went through different stages of its own style but it always consistently developed the Brand around its own heritage: Creativity, craftmanship and glamour. The Fendi sisters hired Karl Lagerfeld well before Chanel ever did. They grew a shop into a Brand fully immersed in the Roman atmosphere and lifestyle. They dressed and accessorized the likes of Federico Fellini and his wife Giulietta Masina as well as Sophia Loren, Catherine Deneuve and most recently Sienna Miller, Sharon Stone, Jennifer Lopez, Rihanna. Their double F logo was featured on travel luggages as well as on very cool clothes worn by Nicki Minaj. In 2017, they also launched a collection with Fila, the re-born sportswear brand.

The double F is a staple that was designed several decades ago. And Fendi is still capitalizing on it thanks to new interpretations and new products but with the same respect and love – from the "Fendi Fur" concept developed in 1965 by a young and hyper talented designer named Karl Lagerfeld, to its most recent interpretation of "Fendi Fun".

In 2006 the brand launched the first of several amazing collaborations with other brands, including a duvet Spy Bag with Moncler – when Moncler was not yet the global powerhouse it is now.

The Moncler sucess story

Remo Ruffini recently revealed that while managing Moncler through its relaunch, he was very clear on the mistake that took place in the '80s when the Moncler down jacket phenomenon fizzled out and the brand's popularity waned. Ruffini managed the legendary brand's revamp with a long term and clear vision. It made its core down jacket business the key asset, with focus on brand heritage. What took place next was an organic and well developed evolution of an outstanding brand that didn't need a creative director under the spotlight to develop exciting collections. Moncler's success formula comprised of putting the brand, as well as its history and heritage, first. And it worked so very well.

Founded in 1952 in a small French village, Moncler down jackets became an icon during the '80s when designer Chantal Thomass worked on some collaborations with the brand. Acquired by Remo Ruffini in 2003 and quoted at the Stock Exchange ten years later, the brand saw a revenue of 1.1 billion euros in 2017.

In this case, Moncler became a long term fashion icon without any radical and jarring disruption in the form of new-fangled innovations. It simply focused on its heritage and developed it well. While heritage is usually perceived to be something retro or vintage, and covered in tradition and dust, Moncler showed that there are fresh ways to highlight this.

The "Ice Jacket" innovation

Yet another success story is that of Stone Island, a "frozen" brand that kept its heritage and coolness intact over the years. Stone Island was founded by genius Massimo Osti in 1982 in Emilia, Italy. With a heavy stock of innovation in its own DNA and great research and development on fabrics and materials, the company became an icon even outside the Italian borders. Massimo Osti used to say "clothing is too expensive to respond only to aesthetic requisites. It must also be functional and last for practically an eternity".

The first Stone Island collection launched the brand logo and symbol: The compass rose label and a special innovative, bi-color, reversible, stone washed fabric inspired by the canvas covering the trucks. In 1987, they launched the "Ice Jacket" in a fabric changing color depending on the environment temperature. The brand's glory days saw it conquering the hearts of the coolest people and fashionistas (as well as winning the favor of British hooligans, it seems).

Then came oblivion, made worse by the death of Massimo Osti in 2005.

The brand was reborn in 2008 and relaunched with its DNA and heritage at the heart of it all. Over the next 10 years, the company more than doubled its turnover from 64 million euros to 146 million euros in 2017. Massimo Osti's research and development vision has been further developed and it breathed new life into the Brand whose success was also due to cool collaborations with the likes of Supreme and NikeLab.

Stone Island CEO Carlo Rivetti recently said in an interview "inspiration is always that we start from the treatment and the study of new fabric. Then there’s the style of the army, and of workwear, where the functional nature of the garment is always very strong. What is really fantastic is, now we can use new technology to make our clothes. So something that we did in the ‘80s, now we can remake it with new technology. And this is very interesting because it helps us see the future, because we know the past."

Seeing the future, knowing and benefiting from a glorious past. Yes, we can definitely say that heritage is not dead.

Susanna Nicoletti
Susanna Nicoletti

Brand Catalyst and Founder of LuxFashion

Susanna Nicoletti is a Marketing, Digital and Communication Senior Executive in the fashion and luxury industry with a track record in top global groups and brands. A Brand Catalyst helping fashion and luxury brands building authentic leadership thanks to long lasting, strong Brand Equity and successful Business Growth Management. A Business and Strategy Writer. Explorer of new luxury and fashion marketing frontiers.

CONSUMERS

Heritage Is Not Dead

by

Susanna Nicoletti

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit : This is the featured image credit

Innovation is becoming an obsession for the contemporary brands. Disruption is considered the key to success. Stellar growth is a must.

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

Innovation is becoming an obsession for the contemporary brands. Disruption is considered the key to success. Stellar growth is a must.

Earlier this month Apple shares slid by 10% and many insiders ascribed this weak performance to the lack of innovation in its latest products. Brunello Cucinelli shares dramatically dipped following its 2018 report that saw a revenues increase of +8.1% – something considered too low and slow by analysts.

It is certain that the investors are eager for quick, phenomenal results. It is also clear that innovation is not an automatic process leading to stunning revenues. Brunello Cucinelli himself said that it is expected for 2019 another year of what he calls "crescita garbata" (kind, not exaggerated growth).

Innovation as a driver for growth

Innovation is expected to be the driver for unlimited growth at the fastest pace. But at the same time, this is also the best way to rapidly burn down a Brand and a company, if badly managed – because innovation is expected to kill and bury products, styles, entire Brand stories and to repeatedly reproduce new items.

But can innovation itself be the major growth factor? Is a never-ending disruption the best way to keep the pace in a very competitive market?

On the contrary, there are superlative, cool brands that made their own story and DNA the key success factor. Cool brands that relied more on their heritage than disruption.

Brands and heritage

Fendi is one of them. Founded in Rome in 1925, it went through different stages of its own style but it always consistently developed the Brand around its own heritage: Creativity, craftmanship and glamour. The Fendi sisters hired Karl Lagerfeld well before Chanel ever did. They grew a shop into a Brand fully immersed in the Roman atmosphere and lifestyle. They dressed and accessorized the likes of Federico Fellini and his wife Giulietta Masina as well as Sophia Loren, Catherine Deneuve and most recently Sienna Miller, Sharon Stone, Jennifer Lopez, Rihanna. Their double F logo was featured on travel luggages as well as on very cool clothes worn by Nicki Minaj. In 2017, they also launched a collection with Fila, the re-born sportswear brand.

The double F is a staple that was designed several decades ago. And Fendi is still capitalizing on it thanks to new interpretations and new products but with the same respect and love – from the "Fendi Fur" concept developed in 1965 by a young and hyper talented designer named Karl Lagerfeld, to its most recent interpretation of "Fendi Fun".

In 2006 the brand launched the first of several amazing collaborations with other brands, including a duvet Spy Bag with Moncler – when Moncler was not yet the global powerhouse it is now.

The Moncler sucess story

Remo Ruffini recently revealed that while managing Moncler through its relaunch, he was very clear on the mistake that took place in the '80s when the Moncler down jacket phenomenon fizzled out and the brand's popularity waned. Ruffini managed the legendary brand's revamp with a long term and clear vision. It made its core down jacket business the key asset, with focus on brand heritage. What took place next was an organic and well developed evolution of an outstanding brand that didn't need a creative director under the spotlight to develop exciting collections. Moncler's success formula comprised of putting the brand, as well as its history and heritage, first. And it worked so very well.

Founded in 1952 in a small French village, Moncler down jackets became an icon during the '80s when designer Chantal Thomass worked on some collaborations with the brand. Acquired by Remo Ruffini in 2003 and quoted at the Stock Exchange ten years later, the brand saw a revenue of 1.1 billion euros in 2017.

In this case, Moncler became a long term fashion icon without any radical and jarring disruption in the form of new-fangled innovations. It simply focused on its heritage and developed it well. While heritage is usually perceived to be something retro or vintage, and covered in tradition and dust, Moncler showed that there are fresh ways to highlight this.

The "Ice Jacket" innovation

Yet another success story is that of Stone Island, a "frozen" brand that kept its heritage and coolness intact over the years. Stone Island was founded by genius Massimo Osti in 1982 in Emilia, Italy. With a heavy stock of innovation in its own DNA and great research and development on fabrics and materials, the company became an icon even outside the Italian borders. Massimo Osti used to say "clothing is too expensive to respond only to aesthetic requisites. It must also be functional and last for practically an eternity".

The first Stone Island collection launched the brand logo and symbol: The compass rose label and a special innovative, bi-color, reversible, stone washed fabric inspired by the canvas covering the trucks. In 1987, they launched the "Ice Jacket" in a fabric changing color depending on the environment temperature. The brand's glory days saw it conquering the hearts of the coolest people and fashionistas (as well as winning the favor of British hooligans, it seems).

Then came oblivion, made worse by the death of Massimo Osti in 2005.

The brand was reborn in 2008 and relaunched with its DNA and heritage at the heart of it all. Over the next 10 years, the company more than doubled its turnover from 64 million euros to 146 million euros in 2017. Massimo Osti's research and development vision has been further developed and it breathed new life into the Brand whose success was also due to cool collaborations with the likes of Supreme and NikeLab.

Stone Island CEO Carlo Rivetti recently said in an interview "inspiration is always that we start from the treatment and the study of new fabric. Then there’s the style of the army, and of workwear, where the functional nature of the garment is always very strong. What is really fantastic is, now we can use new technology to make our clothes. So something that we did in the ‘80s, now we can remake it with new technology. And this is very interesting because it helps us see the future, because we know the past."

Seeing the future, knowing and benefiting from a glorious past. Yes, we can definitely say that heritage is not dead.

Susanna Nicoletti
Susanna Nicoletti

Brand Catalyst and Founder of LuxFashion

Susanna Nicoletti is a Marketing, Digital and Communication Senior Executive in the fashion and luxury industry with a track record in top global groups and brands. A Brand Catalyst helping fashion and luxury brands building authentic leadership thanks to long lasting, strong Brand Equity and successful Business Growth Management. A Business and Strategy Writer. Explorer of new luxury and fashion marketing frontiers.

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