The Great Fashion Reset: Can Designer Debuts Revive Luxury?
The Business of Fashion Podcast
The Business of Fashion
4.5 • 813 Ratings
🗓️ 10 September 2025
⏱️ 36 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
This fashion month arrives after years of post-pandemic boom giving way to a sharp slowdown in luxury demand. Weaker consumer confidence in China, pressure on aspirational shoppers and a wave of price hikes have left many brands struggling to keep momentum. To win back customers and justify higher prices, luxury houses are turning to new creative leadership. Runway debuts won’t provide complete solutions, but they will offer early signals of strategy, with some brands leaning into craftsmanship and heritage while others chase louder fashion moments.
Alongside executive editor Brian Baskin and senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young, luxury editor Robert Williams details why the real test will come in the weeks after the shows, when follow-through determines whether excitement lasts.
Key Insights:
- Creative resets are a response to macro pressure and price inflation, not just consumer fatigue. “This isn't just about people being tired of the way fashion looks or the kind of designs a designer was showing us but maybe more about the wider context in which those designs exist,” says Williams. As prices climb, luxury houses need to add tangible value: “the prices for luxury brands have been hiked up so dramatically over the past few years, either the quality or technical craftsmanship … needs to be improved, or the creative.”
- The role of the creative director is more constrained than ever before. As Williams explains, brands must excite new customers without alienating existing ones. “You can't necessarily count on the fact that if you lose an old client from the previous vision, you're going to be able to get two more because you've got something fresh and new.” Unlike in earlier eras, “brands that have tried to scrap their old business and just count on a new one coming in — they've been burned in recent years.”
- Williams warns not to expect complete strategy blueprints on day one. “I don't think we're gonna get a fully realised vision for how any company plans to totally turn itself around. But there's certainly gonna be some hints,” he says. Some houses may skew to visible craftsmanship and codes, as Bottega Veneta has done under the new hand of Louise Trotter. Others must take a different route. “It will be quite interesting to see what Gucci and Dior do,” says Williams. “Celebrating heritage is not what anyone is looking for them to do in the current market.”
- Some brands have had “one really hot day” but then consumers quickly lost interest, while others managed to “milk the content cycle for days and days and really make a big arrival,” says Williams. What matters next is sustaining attention: “Are they able to keep the excitement alive in the days and weeks following the runway show?”
Additional Resources:
- The Great Fashion Reset | Can Designer Revamps Save Fashion?
- Ready for Relaunch? Jonathan Anderson’s Dior Challenge
- Why Gucci Picked Demna
- Why Chanel Chose Matthieu Blazy
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion where each week we delve into our most popular B-O-F professional stories with the correspondence who created them. |
| 0:17.2 | I'm senior correspondent, Sheena Butler Young. And I'm executive editor, Brian Baskin. |
| 0:22.5 | I'm just going to dive right in. This year we have seen, I hope you're all ready for this, |
| 0:26.6 | designer debuts from Jivanchi, Tom Ford, Dries Van Norton, Dior Menz, Celine, Margella. And coming up in |
| 0:34.9 | the next few weeks, we have debuts from new creative directors at |
| 0:38.2 | Chanel, Gucci, Dior Women's, Balenciaga, Botega, Jil Sander, Luevae, Versace, Mugler, and Jean-Paul |
| 0:46.4 | Galtier. How did I do with all those pronunciations, Sheena? I am impressed. Thank you very much. |
| 0:51.7 | Readers, please do not email in if I messed anything up. We've gotten used to designers at big luxury brands having shorter tenures, but there's clearly something more going on here. The luxury industry is in its worst creative and commercial funk in a decade or more. Brands see a new creative direction as a crucial step to re-engaging with consumers. But will it work? What can a dazzling debut collection actually do for a brand? |
| 1:17.0 | And what else needs to happen to ensure that even a successful runway in September or early |
| 1:22.3 | October translates into stronger sales next year? Here with us to discuss is luxury correspondent at-large Robert Williams, |
| 1:30.0 | who recently wrote a story about all of these debuts and what they mean for the future of luxury fashion. |
| 1:35.9 | Robert, welcome back to the debrief. |
| 1:37.5 | Hi, Brian. Hi, Shina. Thanks for having me. |
| 1:39.9 | Before we get into the debuts, Robert, can we ground the moment a little bit? |
| 1:43.3 | Talk to us about what's broken in luxury and what are brands actually trying to fix right now? Wow, big questions. |
| 1:49.8 | What's broken in luxury and what are brands trying to fix? Well, you know, at least two years |
| 1:54.8 | into a pretty dramatic slowdown in luxury demand, which had been steadily climbing for, you know, about 20 so years with only |
| 2:02.9 | occasional blips and then had just boomed in the wake of the pandemic. |
| 2:07.6 | So now as the demand is really seen as it went from slowing down, declining, and now brands |
| 2:15.3 | are really seeing wondering, how can they turn around you know |
| 2:18.2 | this trajectory how can they get people excited about fashion again so I think they've |
| 2:24.0 | thought that you know changing up their creative operations is going to be a really key step |
... |
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