Retailers dangle celebrity names to draw young
shoppers
Macy's is experimenting with
celebrity brands, such as Taylor Swift's Keds, Friday April 19, 2013. (Abel
Uribe/ Chicago Tribune/MCT)
Posted: Tuesday, April 30, 2013,
1:07 PM
Sixteen-year-old Gabriel Aguilar, of
Chicago, an avid shopper, prefers to patronize specialty shops such as Urban
Outfitters or Forever 21 for party and hang-out-with-friends apparel.
Sears? Not a chance.
"Every time I think of Sears, I
think of a washing machine," he said. "They barely have clothing in
their commercials, and I never see their commercials on the things that we
watch."
But when the high school sophomore
learned that Sears soon would be offering skinny jeans branded with pop star
Adam Levine's name, his interest was sufficiently piqued - enough that he said
he'll be checking out the goods.
Sears and a number of other
department stores are hoping they can convince Aguilar and other young shoppers
that they're worthy of a second look, and, ideally, their lifelong loyalty.
They're beefing up mobile shopping tools and bringing in more affordable,
fashionable merchandise as well as signing up celebrities to sell their wares.
The goal: winning over a coveted
generation of those born after 1980 who spend about $430 billion annually on
discretionary items, according to The Boston Consulting Group.
"Right now, all retailers are
going after the millennial customer. They have to, because it represents the
future of their business," said Carol Spieckerman, president and CEO of
Newmarketbuilders, a retail consultancy.
Late last year, Macy's rolled out
more than 20 brands, including lines inspired by Madonna and her teenage
daughter, Lourdes Leon, known as Lola, and Marilyn Monroe aimed at the younger
set, which the company acknowledged cares about "trends, style and
value."
In February, Nordstrom revamped its
trend-driven Savvy women's department, bringing in new merchandise and lowering
the average price point to $50 from about $100.
"We thought we had the opportunity
to be more relevant to that truly trend-driven customer who wanted us to be
more accessible in price, and that was a hurdle for us before in that
department," said Nordstrom spokesman Colin Johnson.
This month, Sears launched a
business unit dedicated to signing up celebrities to sell their wares,
including trendy dresses and jeans. First on its list: pop stars Nicki Minaj
and Levine, who moonlight on the popular TV shows "American Idol" and
"The Voice," respectively.
Retail experts say department stores
have a ways to go. They have never "owned" the millennial customer,
who has typically been the primary focus of specialty shops such as H&M and
Old Navy with their cheap-chic merchandise. A recent report by WSL Strategic
Retail, a New York-based consultancy, found that 79 percent of millennials shop
at specialty stores and 52 percent shop at department stores.
Celebrity branding isn't new.
Designers have long competed to win the affections of Hollywood stars. But the
embrace of social media among millennials has opened up new opportunities for
retailers to capitalize on celebrities' star wattage.
Hoffman Estates, Ill.-based Sears,
which has been suffering from sluggish sales for years, has seen some success
recently selling apparel with celebrity headliners such as actress Sofia
Vergara and the Kardashian sisters reality TV trio. With Minaj and Levine,
officials are seeking to capitalize on the mix of music, fashion and Hollywood.
"Any retailer that taps into
that celebrity taps into their transmedia presence - online, radio, TV, movies,
Twitter, everywhere," Spieckerman said.
Still, Spieckerman and other
industry watchers are predicting it will be an uphill climb for Sears, which is
better known for its home appliances than its fashion offerings.
Sears' customer is not a fashion
customer, according to Roseanne Morrison, fashion director of New York-based
retail consultancy Tobe.
"They are trying to envision
themselves in different milieus to make it happen. So I don't know. It'll be a
big challenge for them," she said. "The jury is out."
Retailers also have to do more to
keep millennials coming back, said Wendy Liebmann, CEO of WSL Strategic Retail.
The clothing and the in-store "experience" have to be right, she
added.
"There are just too many places
for younger consumers to shop," Liebmann said.
Macy's has created entire divisions
devoted to young shoppers: Its Mstylelab is dedicated to customers ages 13 to
22, and Impulse is aimed at 19- to 30-year-olds.
It has created private (Macy's-only)
labels such as urban-inspired denim line G Star Raw and the skateboarder-driven
Comune to draw in millennials with varied interests. And it also has the likes
of Taylor Swift, P. Diddy and Justin Bieber selling its merchandise.
"We're a destination for prom
and for the first interview suit, said Martine Reardon, Macy's chief marketing
officer. "It's the 14- to 30-year-old and every year between that's
important."
Macy's is also using promotional
events, such as a recent book-signing with Bravo TV executive and talk show
host Andy Cohen, along with other "retail-tainment," to create
excitement in the store.
Still, there are exceptions.
Elizabeth Barton, 25, isn't looking
for celebrities and glitz. The Chicago executive recruiter likes new clothes
and prefers Nordstrom over H&M, where she was snapping pictures of herself
trying on sunglasses in front of a mirror on a recent afternoon.
"I assume celebrity brands
aren't well made, and they aren't catered to my taste anyway," she said.
"My style is quality over quantity. I'd rather have one nice pair of jeans
and one nice purse than a bunch."
Discerning millennials like Barton
are what Nordstrom was gunning for when it overhauled its trendy women's
department. The goal was to lure younger customers in search of quality with a
nod to their limited budgets. The move wasn't so much a change in strategy but
a realization that it wanted to be the retailer of choice.
"We thought we had an
opportunity to be more relevant to that truly trend-driven customer who wanted
us to be more accessible in price, and that was a hurdle for us before in that
department," said Nordstrom spokesman Johnson. The response to Savvy's new
look has been positive overall, he said.
Nor will the celebrity branding
trend be fading soon. It's likely that a growing number of retailers will add
celebrity brands to their merchandise lineup, according to Michael Stone, CEO
of Beanstalk, a celebrity licensing firm.
"(Celebrity branding) gives the
retailer a real point of differentiation," he said, adding that it's a way
to create "sizzle" in stores without having to develop brands from
scratch.
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