Kiki McDonough on Changing How Women Buy and Wear Jewellery
The Business of Fashion Podcast
The Business of Fashion
4.5 • 813 Ratings
🗓️ 3 October 2025
⏱️ 32 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Raised in a family of antique jewellery specialists, Kiki McDonough launched her namesake jewellery brand in 1985 with accessible pricing and pieces women could wear anywhere. Her early crystal-and-bow designs ended up in the V&A, while her growing client list came to include members of the royal family, and her brand has helped normalise women buying jewellery for themselves.
At first, “a man would come in and buy a piece of jewellery for his wife,” she says. Soon the couple arrived together and she would choose. Today, the behaviour is normalised. “Now it’s just, ‘I need a pair of earrings for my daughter’s wedding’… I think it’s all changed.”
This week on The BoF Podcast, McDonough joins BoF’s founder and CEO Imran Amed, to reflect on her resilience through recessions and a pandemic, the enduring appeal of coloured gemstones, and why jewellery’s longevity and the everyday joy it can inspire.
Key Insights:
- When McDonough launched in 1985 she set out a clear price ladder that brought fine jewellery into everyday life. “I thought the prices should be under £1,000 … £95 to £950 and that’s where I started.” Her first pencil sketch became a heart crystal design that a Birmingham maker took “a punt” on and they’re now in the Victoria and Albert Museum. The moment matched a broader cultural shift. As she puts it, the 1980s had “an atmosphere … full of can-do” and women were “open to wearing something else.”
- She helped move jewellery from being gifted to being self purchased, a shift accelerated by social change and London’s Big Bang. At first, “a man would come in and buy a piece of jewellery for his wife,” she says. Soon the couple arrived together and she would choose. Today, the behaviour is normalised. “Now it’s just, ‘I need a pair of earrings for my daughter’s wedding’… I think it’s all changed.”
- McDonough says jewellery outperforms fashion because it carries both longevity and daily joy. Pieces become heirlooms that keep working across generations. “I’ve got lots of women now whose children are wearing the jewellery they bought from me 15 years ago,” she says.
- Four decades in, resilience and pacing have been McDonough’s strengths. “I’ve [been through] two recessions, a pandemic and 10 prime ministers,” she says, crediting “resilience, a sense of humour and common sense.” She built slowly and on her own terms. “People used to say to me how many shops have you got and I’d say, ‘I’ve got one shop and two children.’”
- The financial discipline needed for success, McDonough learned early. “Look after the pennies because the pounds look after themselves,” she says. Her advice to founders is to start carefully, test products, preserve cash and keep going. “It’s terribly important not to spend the money immediately … pace yourself,” because momentum that lasts beats scale for scale’s sake, she adds. Her last piece of wisdom? A good brand can outlive its founder. “I don’t believe that anyone is indispensable,” she says.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. |
| 0:08.0 | Welcome to the Bof podcast. It's Friday, October 3rd. |
| 0:13.0 | Raised in a family of antique jewelry specialists, Kiki McDunna launched her namesake brand in 1985, |
| 0:20.3 | with accessible prices and jewelry pieces women could |
| 0:23.8 | wear anywhere. Her early crystal and bow designs ended up in the VNA, while her growing client list |
| 0:30.5 | came to include members of the royal family, and over time, she helped to normalize women |
| 0:36.6 | buying jewelry for themselves. When I first started the business, a man will come in and buy a piece of jewelry for his wife. A couple of years later, the man and the wife come in together. And she says, oh, I really love that. And he goes, okay. And then he rings up and he comes in to get it. And then a woman will come in and say, I love those. I'll ring my husband. |
| 0:56.2 | Now it's just come in. I need a pair of earrings to my daughter's wedding. Let me have a look. |
| 1:01.1 | This week on the BOF podcast, Kiki joins me to reflect on resilience through recessions and a |
| 1:06.8 | pandemic, the enduring appeal of collared gemstones, and why jewelry's longevity and everyday joy |
| 1:13.9 | set it apart in a challenged luxury sector. Here's Kiki McDonough on the Bof podcast. |
| 1:22.8 | Well, good afternoon, Kiki McDonough, Welcome to the BOF podcast. Thank you. |
| 1:28.3 | You're officially the first person to come and join us in the BOF offices to record. |
| 1:34.4 | So it's a bit of an experiment today. We're testing out our new equipment here so we can do more of these in person. |
| 1:41.7 | But you and I have never met before. So this is going to be |
| 1:46.1 | as informative and educational for me, hopefully as it is for all of the people listening. |
| 1:52.7 | I guess I want to start with your family history. You know, everything that I've read about you |
| 1:59.6 | kind of starts with the fact that you're a fifth generation. |
| 2:04.4 | I am, yes, I am. |
| 2:06.2 | My father and grandfather, great-grandfather, and back we go, dealt in antique jewelry. |
| 2:12.5 | My father was the world expert in English silver and Georgian jewelry. |
| 2:16.1 | And in those days, museums used to come over with a piece |
... |
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