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The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Best of The BoF Podcast: James Whitner on Culture, Community and Building Brands with Purpose

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 8 August 2025

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

James Whitner — founder of The Whitaker Group and the visionary behind retailers such as A Ma Maniére and Social Status — reveals how culture, purpose, and empathy drive his approach to business. Whitner witnessed firsthand how marginalised communities often face limited options, shaping his commitment to serving communities typically overlooked by the fashion industry.  


“I think what helped me understand life is difficult, it's just seeing a difficult life, right? Watching people struggle and seeing that there is privilege in pain,” says Whitner, about growing up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. “When I look at what we’re creating now, it has purpose and is about standing up Black culture at the centre,” Whitner adds. “Everything is about real experiences and connections to people.”


This week on the BoF Podcast, founder and CEO Imran Amed sits down with Whitner to explore his journey, learn about the driving force behind The Whitaker Group’s community-centric retail experiences, and understand why authenticity and cultural connection are non-negotiables in today’s fashion landscape.


Key Insights: 


  • Intentionality and human connection are integral to James Whitner’s approach to retail spaces. Rather than focusing solely on product or profit, he strives to shape how people feel and engage with his brands. “We want to be really intentional about how we make humans feel, our connection to humanity, and how we can build a community,” he explains, emphasising that empathy and shared purpose can help to forge vibrant, long-lasting communities.


  • Whitner also contends that building authentic connections starts with recognising the integral role of culture and purpose. “We sit in brand experiences and purpose because you can't leave culture out. I think everything we do is centred in culture,” he says. 


  • A key to Whitner’s success is resisting the temptation to be “for everybody.” Instead, he focuses on aligning with partners who share his vision for serving specific audiences with integrity. “If you want to work with brands who want to be for everybody, that means you’re for nobody,” he explains.


  • Whitner champions an unwavering optimism that stays intact even amid shifting political headwinds. “We have to wake up and work and we have to be optimistic about the things that we can accomplish. If not, we've already lost because an administration change doesn't mean that my feelings around the work we're doing has changed and it doesn't mean that we can't be as impactful as we've always been.”


Additional Resources:



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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.

0:08.4

Welcome to the Bof podcast. It's Friday, August 8th.

0:13.2

As our hardworking podcast team takes a well-deserved summer break,

0:17.6

where are we visiting some of the most powerful conversations from the past year,

0:22.2

episodes that resonated deeply and deserve another listen. Today, we're returning to my

0:28.2

conversation with James Wittner, founder of the Whitaker Group, originally published in February.

0:34.4

James is a visionary behind retail concepts like Amamagnier and social status. In June,

0:41.0

he introduced a new women's retail concept called Jade, which stores now open in Atlanta, Georgia,

0:47.3

and Charlotte, North Carolina. By the end of next year, the Whitaker Group is set to operate

0:52.8

28 stores across the United States.

0:56.6

For James, intentionality and human connection are central to how he builds and conceives retail

1:03.0

spaces. Rather than focusing solely on product or profit, he's driven by how people feel in those

1:10.1

environments and how those feelings can nurture

1:13.4

a real community.

1:15.3

We want to be really intentional about how we make humans feel and our connection to

1:21.1

humanity and how we can build a community.

1:24.1

This week on the BOF podcast, James opens up about his personal journey, the origins of his purpose-driven approach, and why cultural connection sits at the heart of everything he builds.

1:36.3

Here's James Wittner on the BOF podcast.

1:42.0

James, it's such a pleasure to have you on the BOF podcast. We've been trying to schedule this one

1:47.5

for a while. You and I have not met in person, but I have been following from afar the business

1:55.5

that you've been building and really, really curious to learn about the backstory. I always want to start with the individual

2:05.2

and their personal story. And with you in particular, I really want to get to the drive that you

...

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