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The Business of Fashion Podcast

How Fashion Brands Build Community in 2025

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 20 May 2025

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As inflation bites and politics polarise, the fashion industry in 2025 is facing unprecedented pressure to hold onto its customers. Brands are looking to community as a deeper and more emotional form of engagement. But building true community takes more than buzzwords. 


In this episode, BoF correspondent Lei Takanashi joins hosts Sheena Butler-Young and Brian Baskin to unpack his case study on what it really means to cultivate community in fashion and how brands are navigating the pitfalls.


Key Insights: 


  • In a time when consumers are thinking hard about every purchase, community offers a sense of connection and meaning that goes beyond the product itself. "When I'm shopping today, I'm thinking more about what eggs I'm going to buy this week than the latest release from a brand," says Takanashi. "What really now drives me to make a purchase is like, what does this brand represent? What are its values? How has it improved my life beyond just something I wear?"


  • Different communities serve different purposes, each demanding a unique approach. Takanashi outlines three community types: activity-based, personality-driven and values-driven. Activity-based communities are rooted in shared interests or habits, such as running, where engagement happens naturally through events or clubs. Personality-driven communities hinge on a founder’s charisma and relatability: "People have to see that founder story and kind of see themselves in their shoes." Values-driven communities connect through shared beliefs and causes, but those values must be dynamic. “Your definition of a value can’t be rigid,” says Takanashi. “You have to adapt to how consumers perceive these things.”


  • As brands grow, scaling community takes local focus to remain authentic. "As long as you stay committed to a localized approach and understand that it’s not one size fits all," Takanashi says, pointing to Arc'teryx and Supreme as examples of brands that scale through local relevance and hiring. In addition to staying local, real-world interaction matters and brands shouldn’t rely solely on digital engagement. “You should really be there in person at pop-ups, shake hands with people, talk to the customer... Every brand I spoke about in this case study made some effort to show up in real life."


Additional Resources:


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

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion where each week we delve

0:12.0

into our most popular BOF professional stories with the correspondence who created them. I'm senior

0:17.8

correspondent Sheena Butler Young. And I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. The fashion industry is

0:23.8

facing real economic pressure in 2025, whether it's falling consumer confidence or those

0:29.2

tariffs that we've talked about on episode after episode. In that context, brands are scrambling to

0:35.0

not just attract customers, but retain them.

0:38.0

That's where the idea of community comes in.

0:40.4

It's become one of fashion's most popular buzzwords, but what does it actually mean to build

0:44.8

one?

0:45.4

And how do you do it authentically?

0:47.6

From cult-favored beauty brands to streetwear labels and running clubs, the strongest

0:51.7

communities aren't transactional.

0:53.5

They're emotional.

0:54.9

BOF correspondent Leight Takanashi recently wrote a deep dive on this very topic, headlined

1:00.2

How Brands Build Genuine Communities. And he's with us today. Lay, welcome to the debrief.

1:06.0

Thank you, Brian. Sheena, it's a pleasure to be here again.

1:09.2

All right, Lay, so I'm going to start by basically

1:11.2

questioning the entire premise of this amazing case study you wrote about communities and brands.

1:16.6

I'm always a little skeptical personally when a brand starts talking about its customers as a

1:20.8

community. I mean, convince me there's something real here when a brand basically says,

1:25.1

you're not giving us money, we're a family.

1:28.2

Well, I definitely understand that skepticism, because, yes,

...

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