meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Business of Fashion Podcast

Ask Imran Anything: Luxury’s Flop Era, Global Market Dynamics, Fashion Careers and more

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Business, Fashion & Beauty, Arts

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 6 February 2026

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this Ask Me Anything episode, Imran Amed answers questions submitted by listeners from around the world, spanning luxury’s current downturn, the collapse of major wholesale platforms, the realities facing emerging designers, and how global growth narratives in India and Africa are often misunderstood. The conversation later zooms out to hear Amed’s advice on education and training, fashion journalism, and the skills needed to build a lasting career in an industry undergoing structural change.



Key Insights: 


  • Amed frames the current downturn in luxury as fundamentally different from previous crises, arguing that this moment is rooted in structural choices made by the industry itself. Years of overexpansion, inflated pricing and relentless product drops have weakened trust and eroded meaning, leaving consumers disengaged. “The moment we’re in now feels different to me, because what’s happening is coming from inside the industry,” he says, pointing to oversaturation and a breakdown in perceived value. 


  • Despite the democratisation promised by direct-to-consumer channels, Amed believes this is one of the most difficult environments in decades for independent brands to gain traction. The collapse of key multi-brand platforms, combined with slow payment terms and intense competition, has made growth and cashflow management increasingly precarious. Yet, he sees opportunity for designers offering clarity and restraint where big brands have overreached. Smaller brands can compete by offering real value — “beautifully designed, high-quality products…that come from a sense of quality,” he explains, positioning scarcity and sensible pricing as advantages rather than constraints.


  • Amed cautions against simplistic narratives that frame India or Africa as the next, immediate growth engines for Western luxury. In India’s case, he argues that expectations often ignore deep-rooted cultural and economic realities. “India already has a luxury industry that goes back hundreds of years,” he says, pointing to longstanding traditions in jewellery, tailoring and textiles that continue to shape consumer behaviour today. Africa, meanwhile, represents enormous long-term potential, driven by demographics, creativity and cultural influence — but much of luxury’s engagement still happens outside the continent. “Africa has more than a billion people and the fastest-growing population in the world — there’s no doubt that’s a huge future opportunity,” he says.


  • Amed rejects the idea that there is a single route into fashion, but he is clear that success today demands a broader skill set than creativity alone. For designers, technical understanding and business literacy are increasingly essential if you want to build something sustainable. For journalists, Amed argues that a “point of view is the single most important thing in fashion journalism today.” He summarises: “ The one thing that’s true, whether you go to journalism school or not, is you just need to practice. If you’re a writer, you need to write every day. If you're a creator, you need to create every day. The more you write, the more you create, the more you’ll develop your own voice and the more you’ll feel confident in what you’re doing.”


Additional Resources:



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, this is Imran Ahmed founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:08.4

Welcome to the Bof podcast. It's Friday, February 6th. This week we're doing something a little bit

0:15.3

different. I have our amazing podcast producers with me, Olivia, and Angel. And we've been gathering questions

0:24.5

from all of you, from all around the world that I'm going to answer in our very first

0:29.7

Ask Me Anything episode. So Angel, Olivia, thank you for gathering all the questions. Should we get started? So we've had some very

0:40.4

insightful questions come in from the BOF community about the current state of luxury, the growth

0:44.6

narratives happening across the globe, and also the state of emerging designers in 2026. We asked

0:50.8

our community also to submit some questions in voice note form.

0:55.4

And there were two questions that really stood out.

0:58.2

Hi, I'm Ron. It's Osama Shabby from Dubai.

1:00.7

Would you say luxuries and its flop era?

1:03.1

That is such a good question.

1:05.2

It's something I have been thinking about quite a bit, actually.

1:09.4

I've been covering and kind of working in this industry

1:12.3

for 20 years. I started back in 2007 and we hit the global financial crisis pretty quickly

1:18.4

and that seemed like a pretty existential moment. Then of course, the next big crisis I remember

1:25.3

was COVID.

1:30.0

And that seemed like a big existential moment.

1:34.6

But the moment we're in now feels different to me.

1:43.3

And I think the biggest difference is that the crises of 2008 and 2020 were driven by exogenous events.

1:49.0

They were really driven by big shocks to the global economic system. The global financial crisis, we all thought that, you know, literally the financial

1:55.0

markets were going to completely collapse after Lehman Brothers collapsed and Bear Stearns collapsed. You know, we didn't know where

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Business of Fashion, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Business of Fashion and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.