Each quarter, the Glossy team explores key themes and topics from the rapidly evolving beauty and fashion industries and breaks them down for you. In this report, we looked at the future of beauty and wellness and the top five trends shaping the industry.
In this week's episode of the Glossy Podcast, Wackermann discusses why Instagram followers should be more about quality than quantity, how consumer demand is shaping the industry and why his company has turned its focus to Snapchat.
In this week's episode of the Glossy Podcast, Hilary Milnes sat down with Aflalo to discuss what investment is needed to be a sustainable brand, why Reformation's retail experience is unique and why she doesn't use data to manipulate customers. Below are excerpts from the conversation, edited for clarity.
For this week's episode of the Glossy Podcast, Blair Eadie sat down with Hilary Milnes to discuss her early blogging days, her approach to brand partnerships and her recent collaboration with Nordstrom.
For this week's episode of the Glossy Podcast, Davis joined Glossy at Advertising Week for a live conversation about empowering the customer, filtering through feedback and navigating the double-edged sword of social media.
For many, influencer marketing invokes images of products aesthetically photographed and blasted to a mass following. It’s easy to see how brands might interpret the tactic as something impersonal, best suited for retailers with mass appeal. But influencer marketing is most effective when it gets personal. Sponsored by Obvious.ly
On this week's episode of the Glossy Podcast, Scott joined us to talk about how she built a brand with heart, why it's important to talk directly to the consumer and why a good retail experience will never go out of style.
Although The Arrivals launched in 2014 as a direct business on the premise that it would leave out the wholesale middlemen, founder Jeff Johnson predicts now that wholesale will eventually account for 20 percent of the company’s revenue. It wasn’t an overnight decision.
It’s no longer enough for a fashion brand to be just that: a brand. They have to be retailers. Brands up and down the fashion ladder, from Michael Kors to Milly, from Alice + Olivia to Theory, from Acne to Vince, from Burberry to Gucci, are focusing business efforts not...