Highsnobietyâs New Store That Isnât a Store
LONDON â On Monday, Romeo Beckham â the son of English football legend David and Spice Girl-turned-fashion entrepreneur Victoria â was passing by Highsnobietyâs âNot in Londonâ pop-up at Selfridges when a certain sweater caught his eye: a pullover designed by London-based brand Knitwrth was woven with old-school paparazzi images of his parents on the front and back.
Beckham tried on the £365 ($460) knit and posted a picture to his four million Instagram followers, tagging his mum and dad â sending the product instantly viral. The spontaneous interaction was the kind of fashion magic that wouldnât be possible without the physical store.
The buzz validated Highsnobietyâs approach to retail as the company plans to follow up the Selfridges event by opening its first-ever flagship store in Berlin next week.
The store opening on March 1 will stock products from 80 to 100 different brands, across categories including luxury and streetwear clothing, sneakers, beauty, accessories at homeware.
Visits from ultra-famous âchildren ofâ like Beckham are unlikely to be a regular occurrence â but the youth culture publication, brand consultancy and e-tailer is betting it can create value in a difficult climate for multi-brand retail by generating buzzy moments with a curated cast of brands, hypebeasts and style tastemakers. They may not always buy (or buy a lot) but they post, and brand partners will pay for that.
To make this a viable business opportunity we cannot simply just buy and sell product.
âTo make this a viable business opportunity we cannot simply just buy and sell product,â Highsnobietyâs founder and chief executive David Fisher said. âWe want the store to be a physical space which we constantly reinvent to bring all our digital projects to life.â
The Berlin opening marks the latest development of the companyâs experiments in retail, which in recent years have ranged from opening concept stores in airports to staging fashion week pop-ups in London, New York, Paris and Milan â not to mention a multi-brand e-commerce unit powered by its owner, German retail giant Zalando, which paid â¬124 million ($133 million) for the company in June 2022.
Zalando has struggled to turn the companyâs devoted readership into profitable online sales in a brutal market for fashionâs wholesale boutiques. Multi-brand players both online and in brick-and-mortar fight an uphill battle as they seek to hold onto consumersâ attention, control soaring costs for marketing and logistics and attract top brands, which increasingly prioritise retail. Shares in Zalando have fallen 50 percent in the last year.
But if Highsnobietyâs community isnât ordering online as much as hoped, the brand hasnât lost its feel for putting on packed-out parties or generating savvy ideas for co-branded merch (such as its Chiltern Firehouse T-shirts and hoodies, or its hit Highsnobiety x Café de Flore collection).
At the Berlin flagship, Highsnobiety plans to leverage its pop-up store playbook. Beyond selling products â a curated selection from brands like Our Legacy and Acne mixed with margin-boosting private label items â the space is hoped to serve as a gathering point for the cityâs streetwear and fashion communities, whom the company bets big brands will pay to reach.
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The store will host a packed roster of activations, from launches for its print magazine to events for well-known designers or local cultural institutions (at the London pop-up, for example, the brand even collabed with a beloved local bagel store). The new storeâs activations will be calibrated to coincide with high-profile events such as Berlin Art Week in April and the European Football Championships in June, Fisher said â moments which present opportunities to activate specific apparel categories as well as event-specific collaborations and merch, as well as a chance to benefit from increased footfall in the city.
Of course, there are worrying precedents for this sort of immersive retail space. Attempts to revive the model of long-lost concept stores like Colette or Opening Ceremony include the New York flagship of rival streetwear publication Hypebeast, which closed in February just two years after its launch.
âRetail is a completely crazy thing … the news around it is so dark,â said Fisher.
But Highsnobiety is encouraged by the success of its pop-ups, which in three or four days can generate upwards of $150,000 in revenue. Fisher believes the model can be replicated in a permanent store.
âHighsnobietyâs journey from media organisation to pop-up tastemaker has allowed it to put its audience right where its brand collaborators are,â said Alison Farrington, retail trends consultant for The Future Laboratory.
Physical retail accounts for roughly 10 percent of Highsnobietyâs business. The rest is a mix of advertising, consultancy and â importantly â brand partnerships, a part of the business where clients are increasingly hungry for ways to reach new customers in the physical world as well as online.
At the brandâs New York fashion week pop-up last September, for example, brand partnershipsâ income ended up being 10 times what came through actual sales. Products on sale comprised New York-inspired Highsnobiety private label clothing, alongside Reebok sneakers and apparel collaborations with partners like Coca-Cola.
The flagship store will provide a location on the companyâs home turf in which to bring its signature brand of activations to life year-round, rather than relying so heavily on pop-ups, which are expensive and time-consuming to execute.
âSometimes brand partners want to do three of four things with us per year, whether thatâs a dinner, party, exhibition, or all three â the store gives us the perfect place to do that,â Fisher said.
In addition to being the companyâs home turf, the Berlin market stands as a sort of beacon of cool where standard-issue strategies are likely to fall flat. Big brands need players like Highsnobiety or the high-low sports and luxury boutique Voo Store to broker access to sought-after tastemakers.
If all goes well, the Berlin location could pave the way for more stores.
âOf course, thereâs the ambition to potentially bring this into other cities as well,â Fisher said.