Instagram, Pinterest will lure more business for fashion houses
Recently commentetors rushed to
criticise the Beckham Fashion House 's choice of owners 16-year-old son for the shoot, instead of an established industry
professional.
"Insulting to
every artist out there"; "completely disrespectful to the artist
community"; and "so tired if these celebrities buying their kids into
everything" were some of the printable reactions.
But Burberry boss
Christopher Bailey suggested it might have been Brooklyn's 5.9 million
Instagram followers, rather than his parents, that got him the gig.
"Brooklyn has a
really great eye for image and Instagram works brilliantly for him as a
platform to showcase his work," he said.
And this is the new
reality: the choice of Brooklyn as photographer was less about how
well-connected famous people can get their kids into competitive professions
than a reflection of just how much social media has shaken up the fashion
industry.
Beckham for Burberry's Brit fragrances ad campaign
It's now the number of
followers on Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook and Twitter, rather than your
experience necessarily, that can secure you a top job.
"You don't want
to be a commercial photographer unless you're famous," says Scott
Galloway, clinical professor of marketing at the NYU Stern School of Business
in New York, and founder of "digital benchmarking" firm L2.
Model behaviour
The influence of
social media has also rapidly changed how models are chosen.
Kendall Jenner, who
shot to fame thanks to the Keeping Up with the Kardashians reality TV show, has
been dubbed the "ultimate Instagirl" for her huge social media fan
base: 48 million followers on Instagram and 15.3 million on Twitter.
It was probably this
status as the most-followed model on Instagram, as much as her looks or talent,
that scored her the top job as the face of cosmetics giant Estee Lauder, says
Mr Galloway.
"You're seeing a
reshaping of an industry," he argues. "My friends don't forward me a
picture of a really great air conditioner, but forwarding fashion is fun and
interesting."
While trying to work
out whether sales are directly linked to social media campaigns is difficult,
companies with higher levels of engagement on Instagram are tending to grow
their online sales faster than their less clued-up rivals, turning the
traditional fashion hierarchy on its head.
In L2's Digital IQ
Index, which ranks fashion brands according to their website offerings,
e-commerce, digital marketing and social media awareness, US women's clothing
designer Tory Burch beats well-known global luxury brands such as Gucci, Hermes
and Chanel.
luxury brands like Hermes could
lose out if they don't embrace social mediaDomenic Venneri,
founder of digital marketing agency Vokent, says his firm always looks at the
social media profiles of people before deciding who to use in a campaign.
In some cases, not
just the models but the entire backstage team - including the make-up artists,
stylists and producers - are selected according to their influence on social
media.
"We won't do a
photoshoot that goes on a billboard somewhere unless everyone involved has some
sort of [social media] following and some sort of leverage," says Mr
Venneri.
'Loose and conversational'
For fashion firms, the
appeal is two-fold: it's cheaper and it seems more personal and authentic.
Lee Friend, founder of
fashion photography company Fashot, says that photos firms share on social
media are often at the very bottom end of the budget range.
"They're trying
not to make it look too slick. It's meant to be loose and conversational rather
than structured and professional," he says.
For customers, the
appeal is obvious: they think they're getting a peek inside a famously
exclusive and private world.
ave fans a behind-the-scenes look at its
latest perfume brand photoshoot
The reality is rather
different, says Emma Parlons, head of digital at fashion and beauty public
relations agency Push PR.
"They don't
reveal too much. What we see is highly curated. Yes, fashion houses are using
social media to engage with their fans, but it's in a very controlled
way."
Controlled or not, she
says it's effective, bringing in a new, typically younger audience than the
customers who use a brand's website or shops.
"It's a walking,
living magazine," she says. "People think 'oh that's what it looks
like with a denim skirt'."
The three key
platforms for fashion houses are Instagram, Facebook and Twitter, says Ms
Parlons.
Fast-growing channel
It's worked for Burberry.
Behind-the-scenes pictures and videos shared on its Instagram and Snapchat
feeds of the Brooklyn shoot had some 15 million impressions in the eight hours
the shoot was live.
The fashion retailer
has nearly 40 million followers across 20 different social media platforms and
openly admits that it has become as much a media content producer as a design
company. micro-site, Art of the Trench,
features people wearing trench coats in all styles
It was the first of the big fashion houses to "live
stream" its catwalk shows over the internet. On some platforms customers
can click through to buy certain garments as soon as they see them on the
catwalk. And it has its own Instagram-style micro-site -Art of Trench.
In September, it
debuted its spring/summer 2016 collection on photo messaging app Snapchat ahead
of the official show.
While the company is
coy about the exact breakdown of online versus shop sales, it says the
"majority of traffic" to its website now comes from mobile, its
"fastest growing digital channel".
Yet not all the big
fashion houses have embraced social media due to concerns over the potential
loss of control over their brand image.
This may be a risky
approach, however.
Online sales in 2014
accounted for just 6% of the $250bn (£172bn; €224bn) global market for luxury
goods, but they're growing at a much faster rate than shop sales, according to
management consultancy McKinsey.
Its latest research,
based on analysis of 7,000 shoppers, found that three out of four luxury
purchases, even if they still take place in shops, are influenced by what
consumers see, do and hear online.
"The question is
no longer if and when luxury brands should embrace the digital opportunity, but
how they should go about doing it," it said.

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