Episode 26: Guest Marla Aaron
The Jewelry District
JCK
4.9 • 50 Ratings
🗓️ 1 September 2020
⏱️ 24 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
In This EpisodeIn this edition of The Jewelry District, JCK editor-in-chief Victoria Gomelsky and news director Rob Bates interview Marla Aaron, jewelry designer and founder of her eponymous brand. They’ll be discussing Marla’s rise as a self-taught newcomer in the jewelry industry and how she built her online presence and jewelry business from the ground up.
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Show Notes00:30 Rob and Victoria introduce New York City–based jewelry designer Marla Aaron.06:27 Victoria asks Marla how her background has affected her launch into the world of jewelry.11:43 Marla describes some of the more unconventional things her business has done.15:06 They discuss Instagram and Zoom as tools Marla uses in her business.17:23 Marla discusses her Lock Your Mom project.19:16 Victoria asks about Marla Aaron’s new jewelry collection.
Episode CreditsHosts: Rob Bates and Victoria GomelskyEditor: Olivia BrileyProducer and engineer: Natalie ChometPlugs: jckonline.com, @jckmagazine
Show Recap
Introducing Marla AaronVictoria and Rob kick off by introducing their guest Marla Aaron. She’s a jewelry designer based in NYC and known for her for her “emotional hardware”—her lock jewelry, which has been around since 2012. She had a 20-plus year career in marketing and advertising, but she’s always been obsessed with jewelry and hardware. She worked on creating jewelry for several years while holding onto her full-time job before leaping headfirst into the jewelry industry. She also recounts her fascination with hardware, which started in her youth, and historically traces back to the Victorian and Georgian eras.
Marketing and AdvertisingVictoria asks if Marla’s background in marketing has at all affected her line of work, but Marla explains how much she is driven by her own passion, so much so that she says she has thrown out many things she believed to be an absolute truth in order to pursue her dream of designing jewelry. Marla explains how as a relatively new designer she put herself on the map. There were certainly some bumps in the road, but, luckily, Instagram was starting to take root at the same time, which helped her boost her company.
Unconventional Business PracticeMarla Aaron is in about 40 stores around the world and has its own showroom in NYC. It's also opening a new showroom on 47th street in the next few months. The company doesn’t do consignment as it would limit Marla in what she could do. Marla describes some of the more unconventional things that her business does that makes it stand out. One of the most unconventional is its fine jewelry vending machine, and you’ll hear her describe this installation at the Brooklyn Museum.
Self-Taught, Self-Built Online PresenceYou’ll hear Marla explain her company's online presence and talk about the second Instagram account that her customer experience staff runs. She also explains how she Zooms with her customers using two employees—one at the ready to show off the jewelry and one to answer questions. Her Instagram has 95,000 followers, so Rob asks what she thinks of influencers and if she believes jewelry owners are becoming their own sort of influencer.
Lock Your Mom ProjectVictoria asks how the pandemic has been for her, and Marla explains how on March 11 she sent all of her staff home, and since then has implemented daily 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Zoom calls to keep up. You’ll also hear Marla explain her Lock Your Mom project, where every year her company gives jewelry to single moms who might be feeling bittersweet on Mother’s Day. The sterling silver heart lock has an explanation point for the exclamation of motherhood.
New Jewelry To Look Out ForRob asks what has been driving Marla Aaron jewelry to flourish during this time, and Victoria asks Marla about her new fall collection. Marla explains how excited she is for the September 15 release of the collection. An enormous departure from what it normally does, the pieces have a new lock function that she has been working on for three years and other pieces that are outside her wheelhouse. Rob asks Marla as a newcomer what she thinks needs to be changed in the business, and Marla explains how she thinks accessibility is a problem.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the Jewelry District, a podcast by JCP Magazine and JCPK Online. |
| 0:15.1 | Today, Dacey K's Rob Bates and Victoria Gamalski talk with Marla Aaron, jewelry designer and founder of her eponymous brand. |
| 0:31.0 | Welcome, everyone. Welcome to the jewelry district. This is Victoria Gimelski, editor-in-chief of JCPK and J--K Online. I'm here at home in Los Angeles, and I'm with. Rob Bates, news director of J-C-K and J-C-K Online, and I'm in exile somewhere in the tri-state area. Still in exile. So we've got a really interesting guest today. It's been a while, I think, since we've had a designer on. We've been so COVID-focused over the last few months. And our designer is New York City-based Marla Aaron. She's been designing jewelry, or at least her collection, has been around since 2012. And most of you will probably know her for the emotional hardware she makes, or at least that's how it's been described. She's famed |
| 1:11.4 | for her lock jewelry and all kinds of combinations of it. Locks and bridges and hardware and |
| 1:17.6 | those motifs are really ubiquitous in her collection. So we're looking forward to talking to |
| 1:22.4 | her. And welcome, Marla. Welcome. Thanks for joining us. Victoria, Rob, thank you so much for having me. |
| 1:27.7 | I'm excited to speak to you. And I love the name of the podcast because it's a place that's very |
| 1:32.1 | close to my heart and it's where I work every day. So you're right there. Are you on 47th Street? |
| 1:37.2 | Actually, because of how noisy my office is and knowing that I had to do this, I'm actually |
| 1:42.5 | working from my home office today, but my office |
| 1:45.6 | is very proudly on 47th Street and has been for some time. So I know you have an unusual |
| 1:51.9 | background for jewelry. You want to talk a little bit about how you got into the business and |
| 1:56.5 | how you got where you are? I'm happy to. So I have had a career primarily in marketing and |
| 2:03.3 | advertising, probably 20 plus years. I worked on the launch of Spanish Cosmopolitan, and I was in |
| 2:09.9 | Spain for five years. I worked for Departures Magazine as the marketing director. I worked for Time, Inc. |
| 2:17.0 | in their corporate offices. And I worked for the marketing director. I worked for Time, Inc. in their corporate offices, and I've worked for |
| 2:21.0 | the IAB, the Interactive Advertising Bureau running communications, were just some of the |
| 2:25.7 | varieties of work I've done in the marketing and advertising arena. I have always been obsessed |
| 2:33.3 | with jewelry and also equally obsessed with hardware. |
| 2:38.2 | And sometime around 2003, 2004, I started going beyond dappling, spending a lot of my free time, |
| 2:46.9 | making things, taking jewelry classes. And I had this idea in my head that was really crystallizing about taking elements of |
| 2:56.9 | hardware and combining them with chains that had no clasps. |
... |
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