meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Business of Fashion Podcast

Ask Imran Anything: On Boring Fashion, the Meaning of Luxury and Building Outside the System

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Business, Fashion & Beauty, Arts

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 10 April 2026

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this second Ask Me Anything episode, Imran Amed responds to questions submitted by listeners around the world, offering a wide-ranging reflection on where fashion stands now — creatively, commercially and culturally. 


The conversation moves from personal encounters with figures such as designer Yohji Yamamoto and Gentle Monster founder Hankook Kim to broader questions about whether the industry has lost its sense of excitement, what luxury means today and how emerging brands can still find a path to market.


“Sometimes big-brand fashion can feel a bit boring and corporatised and cookie-cutter. But there are so many independent, young, exciting brands out there doing really, really interesting things,” says Amed. “I’m starting to feel excited about fashion again.”


Later in the episode, the discussion turns to AI, fashion education and entrepreneurship. Amed makes the case for engaging early with new technologies rather than resisting them, calls on educators to stay connected to the realities of the industry, and reflects on the early failure that ultimately led him to build BoF.



Key Insights: 


  • The creative energy in fashion is returning, driven by a wave of new creative director appointments. After a period where the industry felt productised and corporatised, recent moves — Mathieu Blazy at Chanel, Jonathan Anderson at Dior, Meryl Rogge at Marni, Duran Lantink at Jean-Paul Gaultier — have injected a sense of excitement Imran says he hasn’t felt in years. The lesson: pay attention to independent and emerging brands too, where some of the most thoughtful work is happening away from the spotlight.


  • The old gatekeeper model for launching a fashion brand is over. When Amed wrote his “Business of Fashion Basics” series in 2007, the only path to market for young designers ran through department store buyers, glossy magazine editors, publicists and showrooms. Today, brands can reach customers directly through social media and content — though some may still benefit from selective engagement with the traditional system.


  • BoF’s global editorial perspective has been present from day one, but global coverage requires active effort. Rather than seeing international storytelling as a matter of geographic inclusion, Amed frames it as a responsibility to understand how different markets connect through shared challenges. “The struggles a designer in Brazil is facing are often similar to the struggles, questions and challenges a designer in Dubai is facing,” he says. “You only really realise that when you start going around the world and people are asking you the same questions.”


  • On AI, the biggest risk is inaction. Drawing a parallel to his first experience with email and the internet in 1994, Amed argues that AI represents the same kind of transformational shift — and that professionals who reflexively reject it will fall behind, just as those who dismissed bloggers and influencers did a decade ago.


  • When the world feels uncertain, focus on what you can control. Amed’s advice to designers and business leaders navigating geopolitical instability: you can’t control tariffs, wars or macro uncertainty. You can control the quality of your work, the environment you create for your teams, and your cost base. Beauty and creativity, he argues, are a uniting force — and sometimes the best response to turbulence.


  • The failure that led to BoF: focus on the problem, not the solution. Before launching BoF, Amed tried to build a fashion incubator modelled on Silicon Valley. After eight months, he couldn’t sign a single designer. But because he’d identified the right problem — bridging the gap between creativity and business — the failure pointed him toward a different solution. “If your first solution doesn’t work, try another solution, keep iterating,” he says. “I did.”


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

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

0:08.5

Welcome to the Bof podcast.

0:10.7

It's Friday, April 10th.

0:13.1

We got such a great response to our first Ask Me Anything episode that we've decided to do it again.

0:19.8

Listeners from around the world have been sending in their questions, and once again,

0:23.6

I'm answering them here on the BOF podcast.

0:27.1

This time, the conversation spans some of the biggest tensions in fashion right now,

0:32.1

from whether the industry has become boring, to what luxury actually means in an age of commodification, to how independent

0:40.2

brands can build meaningful businesses outside the traditional system. We also get into AI, fashion

0:46.3

education, and what it means to keep creating in a world that feels increasingly uncertain.

0:53.0

I find these episodes especially rewarding

0:55.1

because the questions are thoughtful,

0:57.2

wide-ranging, and sometimes surprising.

1:00.3

They push me to reflect

1:01.3

not just on where the industry is going,

1:03.7

but on what I've learned building BOF along the way.

1:07.2

Thank you to everyone who submitted questions.

1:10.0

And now, here's our second Ask Me Anything on the BOF podcast. Thank you to everyone who submitted questions. And now here's our second Ask Me Anything on the

1:13.4

BOF podcast. We're back here for our second ever Ask Me Anything episode on the BOF podcast. We were so

1:25.3

pleased with the response to the first one that we decided to do another one.

1:30.0

I actually had someone tell me that episode was their single favorite episode ever on this podcast,

1:38.6

which has now been going for almost 10 years. So that's good to hear. We've been gathering questions from all over the world

...

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.