PETER LINDBERGH Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford, British Vogue, New York, 1987 |
Superinfluencer’ Something Navy Soars at Nordstrom
Arielle Charnas is said to have driven more than $1 million in sales for her exclusive line with the retailer in less than 24 hours.
Excerpt from WWD By Rachel Strugatz
Over $1 million.That is said to be how much Arielle Charnas’ Something Navy line racked up in sales in less than 24 hours after going live on nordstrom, where the collection is carried exclusively [...]. Hours after the collection launched on the retailer’s site, popular pieces that were quick to sellout on nordstrom started to populate eBay. A quick search on the marketplace found that certain items are listed for as much as double their original price. [...] A source said it was projected to do between $3 million and $5 million for the season. At the rate of first-day sales, that means Nordstrom is likely to reorder a lot — and could easily blow through the initial projections.
“As an influencer, my platform has given me the resources to real-life data and feedback by listening to my followers and seeing what they got excited about on my Instagram. We felt an obligation to use this incredible knowledge to give my followers what they wanted. We are hoping to build upon this formula for success and continue to listen closely to my amazing audience,” said Charnas, who has one million followers on Instagram. [...] Charnas’ use of data and feedback to tailor collections she knows will appeal to her followers has clearly worked — and has vaulted her into an increasingly elite club. Call them the “superinfluencers.”
Similar to the rise of the supermodel in the Nineties, there’s been an ascension of these superinfluencers today — a group that not only includes Charnas, but Chiara Ferragni of The Blonde Salad, Aimee Song of Song of Style and Leandra Medine of Man Repeller.
These superinfluencers can break into two separate — but equal — categories: brand builders and converters.
Several industry sources have coined Ferragni, who borders on celebrity status, as a brand builder who does little in the way of converting, while Danielle Bernstein of We Wore What is more of a rarity. She’s one of the select few in the blogosphere with the ability to both brand build and convert. Charnas is a proven converter in the fashion and beauty space — it was previously reported that the 30-year-old was able to sell more than $40,000 worth of clothes she linked to in an Instagram Story but the notion that she was able to move more than $1 million in product in less than 24 hours at Nordstrom is relatively unprecedented in the influencer world. Sure, the volume pales in comparison to the social media-fueled sales of Kylie Jenner, who told WWD last month that her Kylie Cosmetics e-commerce site [Shopify] once drew in almost $19 million in a single day. [...] Take Bernstein, who sold $70,000 worth of her own line, Second Skin Overalls, on her e-commerce site [...] This is an impressive sales volume, especially taking into account that Bernstein’s operation is a direct-to-consumer one that doesn’t have the e-commerce muscle or in-store presence that partnering with a leading retailer such as Nordstrom provides. “As an influencer, my platform has given me the resources to real-life data and feedback by listening to my followers and seeing what they got excited about on my Instagram. We felt an obligation to use this incredible knowledge to give my followers what they wanted. We are hoping to build upon this formula for success and continue to listen closely to my amazing audience,” said Charnas, who has one million followers on Instagram. [...] Charnas’ use of data and feedback to tailor collections she knows will appeal to her followers has clearly worked — and has vaulted her into an increasingly elite club. Call them the “superinfluencers.”
Similar to the rise of the supermodel in the Nineties, there’s been an ascension of these superinfluencers today — a group that not only includes Charnas, but Chiara Ferragni of The Blonde Salad, Aimee Song of Song of Style and Leandra Medine of Man Repeller.
These superinfluencers can break into two separate — but equal — categories: brand builders and converters.
The superinfluencer — and even the mere influencer — is clearly here to stay and is becoming an increasingly important part of the fashion and beauty world, both with their own collections and as a way to drive sales of other brands — hence their presence at front rows throughout the fashion weeks in New York, London, Milan and Paris.
Mike Froggatt, director, Intelligence, at L2, said even though some of the biggest bloggers might have cultivated massive followings, “it’s almost equivalent to a word-of-mouth recommendation, and we see the traffic and all other metrics — not necessarily conversion — that point to influence.”