Condé Nast Turns Style.com Into E-Commerce Site/ Now Vogue Runway.com

That Times article was a great read. I love how the last paragraph speaks volumes about today's state of journalism and how everybody got used to puff pieces where most facts haven't even been checked.

I thought this e-commerce move was a bad one from the start and it is turning out to be true. I'm just not buying the whole 'medium-turned-store' thing.
 
I'm so disappointed. It took them forever and the turn a great style.com brand into this? Functionality-wise it's quite bad. No zoom in and they just use a lot of photos from brands, making it worse. A big player like them should be investing more money to actually operates the store. If I wan to buy something at Colette, I can go to their website and find more stuff there. I want to see moving forward how many big brands will collaborate with them. The were desperate enough to go with Vetements.
 
2 years seems about enough time to conclude that this was a bad decision. Who even goes to style.com anymore?.... when it was the primary source for anyone with minimal clue or interest in fashion.

Meanwhile, vogue.com is easily one of the worst websites to visit for collection pictures, I go there when I really *must* and have ran out of all options. The homepage is a nightmare both in computer and cellphone and (pretty much like tFS :rolleyes:), you'll have to close some ridiculous Burberry ad that takes up the entire page (in the case of cellphones) or that is actually a video you did not choose to play (if it's a computer). Getting to the review (which is more like an ad full of flattering nonsense) before the slideshow starts is quite the journey (which doesn't even start with the homepage). And that content.. "20 women trying to raise minimal wage in rural Utah" "how cheerleaders in Louisiana succeeded at changing their university mascot".. really? is this what anyone goes to Vogue for? wouldn't I go to The Guardian or NYT for sociopolitical updates and indirect encouragement about making a difference in my community?.. it's upsetting because it's so damn hypocrite, they're so desperate to capture and embody what perceive as a millennial trend they can cash on. If they were so committed to being critical about lack of equality, lack of regulations within a broken system, they would grab a mirror and take a long, hard look at themselves, at what they endorse... should we still employ photographers with more accusations of sexual harassment than creative input in his field? where do we draw the limit on fashion photography? "20 instances when fashion photography was empowering" :smile:lol:smile:, why is some of it degrading? should models have unions? should we criticise designers when they emit sexist comments on journalists or should we let it pass because it's their collections what we're paid to judge?..

Considering the lobbying and how they've f*cked up in the past trying to have some weight in social commentary (Syria, Trump), they should align themselves a bit and stick to their day job, which is fashion.. and which has a lot of questionable aspects anywhere you look at it.
 
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I completely agree.

There's a glimmer of hope though, Now Fashion is slowly morphing into what Style.com used to be. They still have a lot of work to do though.

But I miss the easy navigability of Style.com.

Cell phones have ruined website viewing, I hate all these scroll-able sites that go on endlessly. Give me clickable drop-downs any day. I don't understand why there can't be 2 versions of web interfaces that are detected by what kind of device you're viewing from.
 
^ There can be ... I use a tool that detects the size of the screen the output is being viewed on to figure out whether it's a phone or not, and changes the display accordingly.
 
No surprises here

Style.com Discontinues, Redirects To Farfetch.com

STYLE.COM is to discontinue operations and moving forward will redirect to Farfetch.com. The announcement concerning the e-commerce website - which was launched by Condé Nast last year - was made this morning.


"Today Farfetch, the leading global platform for the fashion industry, and Condé Nast, the preeminent content provider, announced a strategic partnership to connect Condé Nast’s global editorial portfolio with Farfetch’s e-commerce, technology and logistics platform," read a statement from the company, adding that, "The partnership will offer readers the unique ability to browse and shop Condé Nast’s inspirational editorial content on a global scale, further commercialising the editorial portfolio."

“As an early investor in Farfetch, this partnership is the next step in our evolving business relationship," Jonathan Newhouse, chairman and chief executive of Condé Nast International and newly appointed board member of Farfetch, said this morning. "It further unites two leaders in their respective sectors, combining best-in-class content with the world’s leading online luxury shopping destination. This is an industry defining collaboration, and I am very pleased to be joining the Board of Farfetch. I would like to take this opportunity to thank the entire Style.com team for their dedication, energy and commitment.”

Style.com was acquired by Condé Nast in April 2015 and marked the company's first solo venture into e-commerce. Its initial focus was to "sell merchandise to consumers, including readers and users of its magazines and websites such as Vogue, Vanity Fair and GQ, targeting fashion brands as well as upmarket brands from other sectors such as beauty, travel services and technology", read a release at the time. Its new venture with Farfetch - founded by José Neves - which it already owns a large stake in, marks a consolidation of all its online-shopping interests.

“We have long felt that inspirational content is a natural part of any luxury shopping experience," said Neves this morning. "In the same way as we empower the fashion industry and connect consumers with the world’s best brands and boutiques, we want to connect them with outstanding content. This global partnership with Condé Nast will significantly augment the retail experience for our customers, and we see it as a natural step in Farfetch’s approach to commerce and our strategic vision to connect those who create fashion, curate fashion and develop fashion content. Farfetch’s DNA is about partnering with those who are the best in their fields, and Condé Nast is one of the world’s best content providers. I am also thrilled that Jonathan Newhouse will be joining our Board of Directors."

The announcement is the latest big development to come from Farfetch this year. In February, Natalie Massenet announced that she was joining the company as non-executive co-chairman, ending industry speculation about her next move after her exit from Net-a-Porter, which she founded in 2000, following its merger with Yoox.

“We are thrilled to be partnering with Condé Nast," said Massenet today. "Since 1999 I have believed in the importance of combining content and commerce in order to elevate the digital shopping experience. Content educates, entertains, and inspires purchases which is crucial in the customer journey of discovery. We have long admired the depth, breadth and sophistication of Condé Nast’s international reach and are excited for Farfetch to partner closely with Condé Nast. For the consumer this will be a joy to move from inspiration to transaction at any time and any place. And for the brands and international boutiques that have always partnered with Condé Nast this will further enhance their presence in Condé Nast’s media. It will be thrilling to develop the next evolution of content and commerce with Anna Wintour and all the brilliant talented minds at Condé Nast.”

Wintour, who as well as being editor-in-chief at American Vogue is also artistic director of Condé Nast, compounded Massenet's point. “I’ve always believed that what sets Condé Nast apart is our voice and our vision. Partnering with Farfetch only enhances that, and brings a new dimension to all that we offer the world.”
vogue.co.uk
 
Some more insight....

Inside the costly fashion faux pas that was ill-fated Style.com

By: Ashley Armstrong, Retail Editor
17 June 2017 • 8:01pm

Style.com was hoping to sell designer items such as by Gucci

Anna Wintour’s reputation at Vogue is as much built on her immaculately coiffed helmet of hair as it is for rarely taking a wrong step in her long career editing the fashion bible’s lucrative US edition. But last week that carefully polished reputation was ruffled when one of the most ambitious projects she had overseen fell flat.

Condé Nast, the fashion publisher behind Vogue, Tatler and GQ, last week pulled the plug on Style.com, its ill-fated attempt to go solo in the world of online shopping. Instead, it is to partner with relative online fashion upstart Farfetch.

It was an expensive fashion faux pas. Not only was it a humiliating misstep, but Condé Nast had pumped in around $100m (£783m) into the joint venture which was meant to be “a shopping experience inspired by the world’s best magazines”.


Instead, fashion insiders have slammed Style.com as “Anna Wintour’s greatest failure”. Condé Nast’s chairman Jonathan Newhouse was more diplomatic when he said that it had fallen “far below our hopes”. But where did it all go wrong for Style.com?

The website domain had previously been used as Vogue’s collection of catwalk shots, video and hot editorial takes from the runway. But two years ago Condé Nast, long seen as the pillar of good taste, unveiled its plans to relaunch the website and transform it into an online fashion retailer.

It was always going to be an ambitious move, and one that seemed to rely on the open doors that Wintour walks through on a daily basis. Yasmin Sewell, the Australian-born “tastemaker” hired as Style.Com’s fashion director, knew of the pressure. “It’s Condé Nast, you know?”, she said last year. “It’s their first owned ecommerce site, so we have to raise the bar on every level. I like the challenge of that.” Sewell did not respond to requests for comment by The Sunday Telegraph, however.
"It was always going to be an ambitious move, and one that seemed to rely on the open doors that Wintour walks through on a daily basis"

Looking back, perhaps the writing had been on the wall for some time. There were several false dawns that immediately sparked whispers that all was not well.

Firstly, the launch date was pushed back several times, which was taken as a bad omen even in an industry that prides itself on being fashionably late. Then Sewell was left scrabbling to sign major fashion houses as the promise of having Gucci, Burberry, Valentino and Christopher Kane failed to materialise.

Many fashion insiders spoken to in the days since Condé Nast pulled the plug have said that failing to sign up the “big boys” of the sector – LVMH, Kering, Burberry – was one of the surprising, failings of the business.

“Prada, Gucci, Versace, McQueen, LVMH, they were not there. And you can get them elsewhere,” said one insider, on the condition of anonymity. For all the cattiness that has surrounded Style.com’s failure, few want to publicly criticise Condé Nast for fear of the wrath from Wintour, whose ‘Nuclear’ nickname is said to be well earned.

At the heart of the site’s problem appears to have been luxury brands’ wariness about the creeping level of control that Condé Nast could wield. While Sewell had always promised that she would have no influence over the editorial coverage, the fashion houses were unconvinced.

They questioned what would happen if a particular fashion editor wasn’t enthused with a particular collection – would that mean that Style.com would not sell it? Or worse, would they attempt to sell it with negative coverage alongside it? Rather than leave themselves vulnerable to a potential double-blow, the major fashion houses simply declined to take part. One industry insider said: “It is one thing for fashion editors to be paid to give advice to ateliers or for magazines to survive on the advertising. We all like the glossies as a status symbol. But there is a difference between trying to make money out of then selling it.”
"It is one thing for fashion editors to be paid to give advice to ateliers or for magazines to survive on the advertising. We all like the glossies as a status symbol. But there is a difference between trying to make money out of then selling it"

Designers simply didn’t want to be dependent on Condé Nast for distribution. Luca Solca, luxury analyst at Exane BNP Paribas adds: “I think the idea of combining editorial content with ecommerce is great on paper. In practice, it proved difficult for a publisher to transform into a retailer.”

One of the major criticisms of Condé Nast’s Style.com shopping venture was that it was simply too late to the party. There was already fierce competition from Net-a-Porter, which by the time Style.com actually launched in September 2016 had undergone a huge merger with Italian rival Yoox; Matches Fashion was already beloved by many and was making huge inroads online while relative upstart Farfetch was also shaking up the online shopping model. Net-a-Porter and Matches have heavily invested in their own editorial teams to create fashion advice for shoppers.

As a result, come launch, whatever Style.com did had to blow the others out of the water. Instead, it caused barely a ripple. “They made a lot of noise before the launch and in reality it was all very disappointing,” said one fashion veteran.
"One of the major criticisms of Condé Nast’s Style.com shopping venture was that it was simply too late to the party"

Shoppers also were unconvinced with the amount of time web users spent on Style.com languishing significantly below its rivals, according to figures by market intelligence company SimilarWeb. Global traffic figures for Yoox.com show that users spend an average 10.14 minutes on the site, Matches Fashion.com and Net-a-Porter run a close competition for second place, with average time on site at 5:46 minutes, and 6:23 minutes, respectively. By comparison the average visit on Style.com was less than two minutes.

With Style.com now redirecting to Farfetch, since the announcement, many in the industry are now pondering what the partnership will mean for the relationship between Wintour and Farfetch’s co-chairman Natalie Massenet, who left Net-a-Porter ahead of its merger with Yoox in September 2015.

“We have all been swapping jokes, there have been so many messages flying around because they really did not get along”, said one fashion insider. “When Natalie first launched Net-a-Porter, Wintour was so upset about it Vogue didn’t even report on it, and now they are going to team up? It’s an alliance against nature!”, one fashion critic scoffed. When Style.com launched, in direct competition to Net-a-Porter, there were “handbags at dawn” headlines.

In public, Wintour and Massenet have often appeared friendly with Wintour talking supportively of Massenet’s role as chairman of the British Fashion Council. And last week Massenet, who was once turned down for a job at Vogue as a fashion intern, said that it would be “thrilling to develop the next evolution of content and commerce with Anna Wintour and all the brilliant talented minds at Condé Nast”.

Massenet founded Net-a-Porter in 2000 and launched it just as the tech bubble burst. Nevertheless she spectacularly proved the doubters wrong. But after 15 years of building the business and selling the business to Richemont in a deal that valued the company at £350m she quit just months before the deal with Yoox closed. It later emerged that she was unhappy with the low valuation that had been agreed.
"Where Farfetch differs from Yoox Net-a-Porter or Matches Fashion is that it doesn’t actually own the stock that it sells to shoppers. Instead it is a hi-tech platform that connects shoppers to 500 boutiques around the world"

What Massenet would do next was the source of much speculation but rumours about her arrival at Farfetch started back in November. Stephanie Phair, who ran Net-a-Porter’s discount site Outnet was already at Farfetch.

Phair said last week that the Style.com deal, agreed for an undisclosed amount, was part “of the strategic approach for building us to become the luxury platform and leverage the strength of Condé Nast’s editorial”.

The agreement will also no doubt help Farfetch’s reputation in the US, where it is mulling an ambitious $5bn (£3.9bn) stock market listing. The loss-making business was valued at $1.6bn (£1.25bn) last year.

Where Farfetch differs from Yoox Net-a-Porter or Matches Fashion is that it doesn’t actually own the stock that it sells to shoppers. Instead it is a hi-tech platform that connects shoppers to 500 boutiques around the world that stock 200 brands from Dolce & Gabbana to Valentino. As one pundit put it – it’s the Just Eat takeaway model for fashion.

The London-based business, founded by Portuguese Jose Neves is breathtakingly ambitious. Unlike his online rivals, Neves still believes in the role of shops but believes that the artificial technology will transform them. Farfetch has since launched a “Gucci in 90 minutes” service for the most impatient consumers. Already, this has bigger weight than Style.com ever did. Handbags at dawn? It looks like that fight has already been won.

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2017/06/17/inside-costly-fashion-faux-pas-ill-fated-stylecom/
 
My jaw dropped at $100M ... how in the world did they spend that much on nothing?
 

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