Real Authentication Blog | Luxury Authentication News

Real Authentication provides top tier Authentication, Identification and Valuation services for over 100 Designer Luxury Brands: Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Hermes, Prada, Gucci, Fendi and more. Contact us today to shop and sell with the confidence and protection you deserve!

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Madewell Is Reselling Its Own Used Jeans Via a Partnership With Thredup




Photo: Courtesy of Madewell

Photo: Courtesy of Madewell
Madewell began its commitment to extending the lifecycle of clothing long ago with its "Blue Jeans Go Green" denim recycling program: When you donate any pair of jeans, you're given $20 off a new pair. (Could that then fuel unnecessary consumption? Sure, but few recycling/sustainability programs are perfect.) It also launched a fair-trade denim capsule earlier this year. Starting Monday, Madewell is taking that commitment to circularity a step further through a partnership with ThredUp, the massive secondhand online retailer.
They've collaborated on "The Madewell Archive," a collection of pre-owned jeans that Madewell sourced from Thredup. Each pair was hand-selected, washed and refurbished and, now, placed into select stores for sale for $50 a pair — quite a bit cheaper than a new pair of Madewell jeans, which are typically around $130. They'll be available in select stores in Austin, Chicago, Nashville and NYC starting on Oct. 14 and California starting on Nov.1.
"At Madewell, we're on a mission to create the longest, most sustainable lifespan for our denim, whether you're purchasing a new pair that are made through sustainable practices or recycling old ones through our longstanding denim recycling program," said Anne Crisafulli, head of merchandising at Madewell, in a statement.
"At ThredUp, our mission is to extend the life of clothes through resale," added Karen Clark, VP of partnerships at Thredup. "When a brand as loved as Madewell embraces secondhand, it says a lot about the evolution of fashion and the promise of a more circular future."
The news fittingly follows parent company J.Crew's recent announcement that Madewell is being spun off into its own company, which will be taken public with an IPO. As part of that process, the brand released a prospectus that majorly emphasizes the brand's commitment to sustainability.
Meanwhile, as Thredup has raised money and expanded, it's pursued a number of partnerships, including with Reformation and Cuyana, wherein Thredup essentially powers recycling programs for each brand: Shoppers receive or can print a Thredup shipping label, send in unwanted items and receive credit to use at that brand. More recently, it partnered with Macy's and J.C. Penney, both of which are selling used items from Thredup in their stores. Madewell marks the first brand to resell its own items via Thredup, but it's a model we could see becoming more common so long as the items aren't overly trendy and are, well, made well, so that they hold up — both qualities we should all be looking for in our clothing anyway to ensure it lasts.  oa here
SHARE:

Friday, October 11, 2019

Fast fashion is out. Renting and resale will become the new normal

Around the globe people become more aware of the trade off between buying fashion items, wearing them a few times, disposing and what it does to our planet. Many new (online and physical) retail platforms have started concentrating on second hand items and renting out. Some even say that the second hand fashion market will outgrow fast fashion by 2028.
No alt text provided for this image
The end of ownership.
Second to oil, the clothing and textile industry is the largest polluter in the world. The carbon footprint from textiles production in 2015 was greater than the CO2 equivalent of international flights and shipping combined. Three-quarters of our clothing will end up burned or buried in landfill. Some say that more than half of the fast fashion produced around the world is thrown away within one year. New circular techniques are being used in the production processes. But in a world where people are more conscious and aware of what and why they buy, it is normal that new retail concepts enter the market place. Enter, second hand and rental.
No alt text provided for this image
Resale and rental are changing the script.
Fashion is big, really big. The world market is estimated around $1,3 trillion, bigger than Russia's GDP. The market of resale fashion is tiny, but developing quite fast. From just thrift stores and buying on platforms as e-Bay, to a vast array of new brands. Resale apparel used to be the domain of bargain hunters, some were treasure hunting. Now early adaptors are browsing the many new (online) platforms entering the market place.
Some crucial facts and data from US based Thredup:
  • the US resale market will grow from $7bn in 2019 to $23bn in 2023
  • including already existing thrift stores total market will grow to $51bn by 2023
  • resale apparel has grown 21x faster than the retail apparel market in the last 3 years
  • 2/3 of all women shoppers have bought or are willing to buy resale
  • 40% of consumers now consider the resale value of an item before buying it, a 2x increase from 5 years ago
  • Millennials and Generation Z are adapting 2.5 times faster, compared to other groups.
  • second hand, rental and subscription are projected to be the top 3 fastest growing categories in the 2019-2028 timeframe
  • in 2018 the US fast fashion market was $35bn, compared to $24bn for second hand. By 2028 the second hand market will have grown to $64bn, whereas fast fashion's growth is projected at $44bn
  • According to Mintel 44% of young women said they would like tone more eco friendly in their approach to fashion
No alt text provided for this image
Why own stuff?
There are multiple drivers for this massive shift. There is the obvious penetration of social media and the importance of influencers. Female fashion buyers are increasingly savvy on updating their wardrobes to the latests crave of the catwalks. With real buying power mostly being flat, in many economies, this obviously create tension. Add the increasing consciousness on sustainability and the fact that a new perception has been growing on possession and ownership (why own stuff?, aka the sharing economy), it's easy to see why things are moving. Some also mention smaller housing as a driver for change, with the average number of items in consumers' closets declining from 164 items in 2017 to 136 in 2019.
Elizabeth Cline, author of the Conscious Closet: “Resale offers the wardrobe-rotating fun of fast fashion without the guilt or waste. By driving preferences away from disposable fashion towards higher-quality clothes, reuse is a boon for our personal style and the planet.”
No alt text provided for this image
Rental is different, a closet in the cloud.
For many online fashion retailers "wardrobing" or "ASOS parties" are a huge problem. The demand for fresh looks is prompting many people to order online, wear it and return it later ("after the party"), often for free. Fashion industry returns hoover around 40-50% of items being bought online. Many new platforms persuade consumers from wardrobing into hiring. The US apparel rental market is relatively small, estimated to grow to $4,4bn by 2028, just 1% of total clothing sales. But it grew 24% in 2018 compared to 5% for the wider clothing market, GlobalData shows.
These rental platforms are buying clothing wholesale from brands, some are introducing revenue sharing models allowing brands to upload items, the platform taking care of cleaning and delivery in return for a share of revenue.
Rent the Runway redefined the fashion rental market already in 2009, starting with one offs like a dress for a gala. Many platforms have evolved now to a monthly subscription model and are positioned mostly upmarket. Some even IPO-ed recently, because investors love the recurrent revenues of the subscription business model.
Some examples. Both second hand and rental. Physical and online.
No alt text provided for this image
The diversity of brands and formats serving second hand and rental customers is immense. Round Two in the US is a resale outlet, with only two stores. A tactile experience with overflowing racks, but not as in the old thrift stores, where you would occasionally meet a bargain hunter. Round Two is different, young people and kids are roaming the racks, with brand new items and slightly worn ones. A brand new $300 T-shirt by Supreme, next to a vintage bootleg Janet Jackson T-shirt ($250) . It's a place where you can buy and sell. Nothing is on consignment (in that case the seller retains ownership).
No alt text provided for this image
Vintage Brands store in Monnickendam (Netherlands) is doing the same as Round Two, though aimed at a different customer. Yearly over 700 women offer their personal fashion and accessory items, from Zara to Gucci, in consignment in this cosy store. Loyal customer find an extra reason for visiting the store: the social aspect is important, talking with the owner and other customers, on what's "new" and hot. You can sit down and read a magazine, drinking coffee. Sellers are often buyers. Vintage Brands' main marketing channel is word-of-mouth and social with a look book on Facebook and Instagram. The annual catwalks are famous and people drive over 100 miles to see models showing off.
Hirestreet is the UK first high street rental service and aims at budget conscious students. Hirestreet offers 10 day rentals for prices as low as £7. Most stock refreshes every week. Users will enter event date and choose outfit filters (with the "occasions" filter ranging from date night to maternity...) and Hirestreet will generate available rentals. Isabella West from Hirestreet found out that young women were spending over £500 a year on fast or disposable fashion and if they hired rather than bought they could save £400: "I found this amazing. £400 is the price of a holiday."
No alt text provided for this image
In the US the two dominant platforms are Rent the Runway and the RealReal, both very successful and growing fast. Rent the Runway (valued at $1bn) is a fashion subscription platform offering premium and exclusive fashion and accessories brands. It claims 10 million members. Its "unlimited plan" at $159 per month will offer unlimited access to as many items as a customer wants. If you love the idea of wearing premium brands like Gucci, Kates Spade and Diane Von Furstenberg RtR is a great option. RtR merchandise arrives in a garment bag with a prepaid UPS label for returns. Next to its platform they operate 5 stores and multiple drop off locations, but it is essentially a technology (and logistics) company. With the data being used both on the returns and via its "virtual closet" RtR is perfectly positioned to personalise its offering.
The RealReal is a premium luxury resale platform, with a Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) of $710mm in 2018, processing 1,6 Million orders from 400,000 different buyers. Items are authenticated and researched before being offered on its online platform or physical stores. In many cases professionals (authenticators) are visiting the seller, and discuss which items could be sold on the RealReal's platform, they are also advising on price. The merchandise is held in consignment for sellers. The company takes a 40 per cent cut of each sale, which is reduced for high-value items or for consignors who sell more than $10,000 per year. 56% of the RR's consignors count environmental impact as a key reason to sell on the platform. Buying a second hand Fendi bag for the price of the new Michael Kors bag ($300) is probably equally important.
In a complete reversal of things 7 years old Le Tote, a US based rental fashion platform, bought 190 years old Lord & Taylor department stores, some 35 locations located in the Midwest of the US. An old legacy company absorbed by a new one. Le Tote's proposition is different from RtR's. Most of its customers spend just $69 per month for mid-market brands like J Crew and Zara.
Meanwhile high street brands as Scotch & Soda, Rebecca Taylor and Urban Outfitters (with Nuuly) have started renting out items in a comparable scheme as RtR.
H&M could rethink it's $4bn unsold stock and put in on a rental platform. They just announced a limited rental service for its new premium collection from recycled fibers in a Stockholm store. Express, a fashion mall brand with 600 stores in the US, started a rental service with a $70 monthly subscription. Ikea even launched a furniture rental service earlier this year.
Rental and buying secondhand fashion is beyond icky.
So things are definitely moving. This business is beyond the icky feeling people used to have with wearing items somebody else had worn before. It's still early and it is probably harder to persuade consumers to hire affordable apparel than catwalk creations, just because there are just too many cheap alternatives available. Some platforms are growing too fast, causing some hiccups. With young and conscious consumers growing up and becoming more influential this will change. The sharing economy is here to stay. oa here
SHARE:

Saturday, September 14, 2019

Why Competitor Poshmark May Be The RealReal And ThredUp’s Best Friend In Exploding Resale Market

Investment analyst Michael Binetti, Credit Suisse, is out with a bold prediction: “We believe the secondhand/resale market could grow much faster in the near-term than the +mid-teens growth that industry sources project.”
As current projections stand, the combined digitally-native resale and the traditional, largely brick-and-mortar thrift/donation secondhand fashion market will reach $51 billion by 2023, according to ThredUp, a major player in the resale fashion market and the primary source of the industry’s data.
By 2023, the resale segment is expected to account for 45% of the secondhand apparel market’s sales or $23 billion, growing from a mere 25% ($7 billion) of the total $28 billion in 2019.
The RealReal, the recently made public luxury resale company, the privately-held ThredUp, and social commerce peer-to-peer marketplace Poshmark are the current resale leaders.

On The Money Decluttering Tips


Dynamic growth in the online sales channel will be the main driver of growth, gaining twice as fast as thrift/donation or over 30% per year from 2019 to 2023. This will be thanks to consumers, most especially women, gaining awareness of the convenience of this new model as an alternative to giving bags of old clothes to Goodwill, Salvation Army or local thrift stores.
As mentioned, Credit Suisse’s Binette expects it to advance even faster, though he didn’t speculate just how much faster it will grow. However, he said, “We’ve networked extensively with management teams across the secondhand retail category and the most consistent comment we’ve heard is that the industry unanimously believes it is barely scratching the surface with the addressable market of consumers that would consider re-selling/consigning online.”

Supply, not demand is the industry’s challenge

Increasingly, women are willing to give secondhand shopping a try, with ThredUp reporting the number of women who’ve purchased secondhand has grown from 44 million in 2017 to 56 million in 2018, roughly half of all adult women.
However, the linchpin for resale’s future is getting inside people’s closets and convincing them to turn over enough good-old stuff that online buyers will want.
After all, they have been filling their closets with off-price (Marshalls, TJ Maxx), fast fashion (Zara, H&M), value chain (Walmart, Target) clothing at an aggressive pace, but this isn’t the stuff that a vibrant resale market is made on. The ThredUp study, supplemented with data from Credit Suisse, estimates that about 35% of consumers’ closets in 2018 are accounted for by clothing from these three sources and their share has grown from 28% since 2008.
Instead, the stuff consumers are most likely to want to buy in resale is department store (14% share of closet in 2018) and other specialty retail (13%) brands, which they also may want to hold onto longer. Mid-priced fashion (Gap, J.Crew) that comprises 20% share of closet today may go for ThredUp or Poshmark, but not The RealReal.
It isn’t consumer demand that could hold the fashion resalers back. It’s getting their hands on enough stuff that their customers will want. As a result, each player’s consignment strategies are critical to their future success.

Getting real is The RealReal’s key consignment strategy

The RealReal identifies unlocking the ~$200 billion of luxury goods available in the U.S. for the resale market as its greatest market opportunity, as well its most critical challenge.
“The biggest obstacle to growth for REAL is acquiring the right level and types of supply,” writes Cowen’s Oliver Chen, in a report on a recent meeting with The RealReal’s CEO Julia Wainwright and CFO Matt Gustke.
“Management highlights it is more difficult to get someone to consign for the first time,” he explains, but adds that after their first consignment, The RealReal customers typically return two-to-three times a year.
With Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Prada and Hermès its leading brands, The RealReal has found making face-to-face connections with wary luxury consumers critical to getting prime merchandise. So, it operates three stores, two in NYC and one on Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles, where well-heeled shoppers can come in and meet with authentication experts. Such personal connection raises their comfort level.
The RealReal also operates 11 locations nationwide for jewelry, watch and handbag valuations, plus the convenience of free “white glove” in-home consultation and pickup in 20 markets.
In a previous discussion with CEO Julie Wainwright, she shared that not only do the stores pave the way for better consignments, they also result in an order size twice as large as is typical online. “It is a marketing tactic and sales tactic and product acquisition tactic,” Wainwright said. “We find we get lots of high-quality consignments when we do pop-ups,” like one recently in Las Vegas.
The RealReal is approaching half a million buyers and if turning new RealReal buyers into consignors is its primary way to source new supply, it has a long runway.
According to the BCG-Altagamma True-Luxury survey among consumers who met a threshold of luxury spending (~$5,500 in past year), only half of the U.S. luxury consumers surveyed have participated in the secondhand market. Among the other half, 21% have sold and bought, 18% have purchased only and 11% have only sold.
The RealReal is still in the early days in tapping its potential market. “Resale drives a perpetual consumption cycle that fuels recurring consignments and purchases as it provides liquidity to consignors to purchase new and secondhand items – this should support solid GMV (gross merchandise value) growth over the long-term,” Chen writes.

ThredUp has it in the bag

ThredUp’s consignment strategy is literally in-the-bag with its “Clean Out Your Closet” service where a potential consigner requests a postage-paid Clean Out Kit to bag up unwanted items. These item can either be sold for cash or credit to use at Reformation or Polarn O. Pyret for childrenswear or donated to charity along with a $5 cash gift.



The company notes, however, that it is picky about what consignments it accepts: only items in pristine condition with no damage or alterations, including missing sizing information. Given those criteria, ThredUp reports it only retains about 40% of the items shipped for resale. The rejects can be returned to the sender for a small fee or donated to charity.
Right now, through October 20, ThredUp is hot on the trail for fall fashion, offering a 20% extra payout for seasonally-appropriate sweaters, coats, boots, overalls, jumpsuits and designer handbags. In-demand brands it is on the hunt for include Madewell, Patagonia, Lululemon, Everlane, Sorel, Eloquii and Torrid.
ThredUp is also crossing over into physical retail in new partnerships just announced with Macy’s and J.C. Penney. ThredUp departments will shortly open in 40 Macy’s and 30 J.C. Penney locations.
These locations will give consumers an extra dose of confidence and credibility to ThredUp when they first meet the brand there. No word that consignments will be accepted there, but one can imagine each department will have a stack of clean-out bags readily at hand.

Poshmark takes a do-It-yourself approach

Poshmark claims to be the No. 1 fashion buying and selling platform, with some 50 million sellers. A recent survey by Raymond James supports that claim, with 67% of women surveyed recognizing the Poshmark name, as compared with 44% who know ThredUp and 12% The RealReal.
But unlike ThredUp and The RealReal, Poshmark operates under a different business model. It doesn’t take possession of the clothing for sale. It works as a peer-to-peer marketplace where sellers list items and Poshmark takes a piece of the action once a sale is completed.
With its stripped-down business model, it gives sellers the tools to make sales, but also requires them to do the heavy lifting to photograph, describe, and price each item. Poshmark provides a prepaid shipping label when an item is bought, but the seller has to package it and take it to the post office to ship.
It also supports sellers with what it describes as virtual shopping parties where people gather on the app to enjoy selling events around a theme or brand. Success in fashion has given Poshmark confidence to branch out into home decor and housewares.

Awareness builds customers and consignors

To attract people to the circular fashion resale economy, both Credit Suisse’s Binetti and Cowen’s Chen identify building awareness of the potential of resale platforms like The RealReal, ThredUp and Poshmark is critical.
To create awareness, all three companies have taken to television to get the word out. In that Poshmark is the leader, running 14,872 spots in the last 30 days and ranking No. 311 in terms of overall advertising spending, according to ISpot.TV. ThredUp (2,674 airings and No. 839 in sending) and The RealReal (2,533 airings and No. 1,020 in spending) lag far behind.
And from that awareness, consignments grow. Signs are that American consumers are already lightening their load, as the ThredUp study reports consumers have reduced the number of items in their closets from 164 in 2017 to 136 in 2019. But that also means, they may have fewer choice items to pass along into the resale channel.
Ultimately Poshmark’s heavy-lifting in the awareness department may be a blessing for both ThredUp and The RealReal. After a few times a person does all the work on the back end to make a sale –or not make a sale if the price isn’t right or the description fails – my guess is that people looking to get in on the resale action may quickly turn to the frictionless and more convenient alternative that ThredUp and The RealReal offer.
Poshmark may open the door for customers to try online resale, but I bet that ThredUp and The RealReal will be the ones that will keep them around for the long haul and get the best pickings from their closets.

oa here

SHARE:
Blogger Template Created by pipdig