Zegna CEO Ermenegildo Zegna on the Indian market, personalisation in the age of casualisation, and balancing luxury and digital
Ermenegildo Zegna, CEO, Ermenegildo Zegna Group, is constantly trying to bring something new to the party of dressing
Image: Vikas Khot
Luxury brand Ermenegildo Zegna, which began as a small woolen mill in Trivero, Italy, in 1910, is today probably the biggest luxury menswear brand with 500-odd stores across the world. After a year of falling sales in 2016, the company has been getting back to growth. In 1991, it became the first luxury goods company to expand into China and, 10 years ago, it entered the Indian market, long before other luxury brands. CEO Ermenegildo Zegna, 62—grandson of the original Ermenegildo—who was in the country recently, spoke to Forbes India about how the brand has been transforming itself in the age of digital and of millennials, how the lessons he learnt when he worked in retail at Bloomingdale’s in New York in the ’70s still hold true and how they are in for the long haul in India. Edited excerpts from the conversation:
Q. How did Zegna succeed in arresting 2016’s trend of falling sales? What are the recent changes at the company?
I think we were known as a clothing company; today we are called a lifestyle brand where, with a change of lifestyle, men’s fashion is becoming more casual, more accessories driven, more digital. All these important features have to be met by any brand, including ours. So I’ve been working in the last couple of years to make it happen, and to turn back to growth.
We recently changed our artistic director (and brought in Alessandro Sartori). I think with him I brought a kind of rejuvenation, which goes exactly in this direction of casualisation, which can be intriguing, also for a millennial. There is a lot of talk about millennials, there are some luxury brands that have declared that 50 percent of business will be [accounted for by] millennials, which is huge, not necessarily in our case, but we cannot disregard this phenomenon.
One of our biggest markets is China and I think the Chinese and millennials, and digital, are three important ingredients that have to be taken seriously and our new brand strategy looks in that direction as well. And you have to cater to your loyal customer, because a few percentage points of clients make a big chunk of our turnover, so you have to keep those loyal customers happy.
Travel today is becoming an extremely important part of the equation so you have to create a travel wardrobe—items that are good for travel at the same time keeping the high quality associated with our brand. On the other side, you also need to do more fashion items. Sartori has created this collection, part of our couture collection, which is millennial, celebrity-driven, which is more than casual wear… very, very stylish. So the challenge is how to manage all these things together and still keep the DNA of the brand the same, which is made of 107 years of history.
Q. What, according to you, is the DNA of the brand?
The DNA is, surely, high-quality products with strong ingredients of innovation in what it represents in terms of performance, in terms of style, and a capacity to put the pieces together. You can tell a Zegna wardrobe by the look, and that is what Italian style is about. And we go from sheep to shop and shop to screen, in which we control the entire process from industry to product to store management and to the online future that we’ve brought around the world.
(This story appears in the 02 February, 2018 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)