The Fashion industry is tough and arguably as saturated as the music industry. This is partly because EVERYONE now seems to have a ‘clothing company’…be it a t-shirt business or a fashion ecommerce business. You most likely know at least one owner or founder of a fashion brand or fashion online retail business. Fashion is so pervasive due to the primary function clothing and design play in our lives on a day-to-day basis. Competition as a result is rife and digital marketing channels such as Search reflect the offline reality of the cut-throat competition in the fashion industry. The best way to illustrate this is with an example….
Let’s imagine you have launched a ladies fashion brand that in your opinion designs the best Maxi Dresses for the 22-34 years old female demographic (all of which are millennials).
Let’s further assume that you are based in the United States and have immediate plans to cater directly to the U.S. and Canada but will be open to fulfilling international orders.
Putting on an SEO hat, you immediately start think about the opportunities that Google has to offer and fire up SEMRush and Google Keyword planner to assess market opportunities.
So there are on average 165,000 searches for Maxi Dresses (alone) on Google U.S. per month – this is a massive opportunity, you snigger to yourself.
You can either buy your way into a market OR organically build a brand – the better option is to do both.
Here is what the first page of Google looks like for your core term ‘maxi dresses’:
You will immediately notice that the top of the fold is dominated by paid AdWords placements of advertisers that are predominantly either NYSE/NASDAQ publicly listed retailers like: Macys, Nordstrom, JC Penney, Kohls, Express, Bebe or reasonably sized private fashion brands.
Here’s some (very rough and) quick AdWords math showing Average CPC to be about $1.14 and more importantly deducing that $38 will be your estimated cost per acquisition (CPA):
The above table (which is a simplified computation), reveals that it will cost your business $38 to acquire a customer. So if your maxi dresses retail at $99 on average, you have $61 left to cover your remaining overheads.
You will most likely not make a profit on a first time purchase of a single dress; and will either have to figure out ways of increasing Average Order Value (AOV) from each sales sent via AdWords or/and increase customer Life Time Value (LTV) so you start to make a decent profit from their second and subsequent orders.
Looking at the Page 1 SEO results in almost all competitive ecommerce market segments, the organic SERPs listings tend to have either or both the following characteristics:
The above image shows the organic search results on Google U.S. (generated by SEMRush) for our head-term ‘maxi dresses’ – notice the trend? The websites listed are either owned by publicly traded companies or private companies with an extensive range or long history of trading.
If you decided to use SEO as a driver for growth for your fashion ecommerce business, the question is whether your company can deliver a wide enough range to compete in addition to getting the other two fundamentals right i.e.
If it can, then it will take time; 12 months will be a typical minimum, if you go full-on with executing the above.
Depending on the amount of capital or marketing budget your fashion brand has to either launch or expand, the following strategies should be considered and will loop back into the brand building elements required for your overarching SEO strategy:
The key here is to align your brand values and target demographic with the key influencers that can tap into audiences likely to be buyers of your wares. Outline a list of influencers comprising of bloggers, instagram models, celebs, musicians, YouTube vloggers and any other public figures with a significant social following or online audience. Whilst small influencers might be easily approachable, bigger influencers might be reachable either through their managers or by referrals.
Your remit is to get these influencers and celebs to wear or use your product and then have them share and also mention your brand with their audience.
Photographs are your core collateral as they drive awareness and interest about your brand.
You might have to hire a PR Consultant or PR agency. I especially like the case study on this episode of Shopify Masters (start from 32:00).
Video offers significant exposure and opportunity for Fashion ecommerce brands to get in front of their target audience. Here are some of the most effect video marketing tactics to can use now in fashion:
Identify Fashion YouTubers with an audience that matches your target demographic. Get in touch with them with the possibility of featuring your products.
Single brand product feature videos with prominent YouTubers are tough to secure but offer the most exposure as your brand is presented to their audience.
Lookbook videos like all other collaborations you make with influencers should be based on the target audience of the vlogger and how well they will pair your products with other brands featured in their lookbook video. There has to be an alignment with the choice of pairing.
ASOS run a #BeautyChat roundtable session with prominent fashion bloggers who come to their studio to discuss
If your fashion brand is in the luxury segment, unboxing videos might be a format to consider with YouTubers and vloggers. Unboxers tend to pay special attention to the wrapping and packaging of products and will meticulously untie and present them to their audience. For potential customers, it is the closest way to experience a product without having to physically handle it.
A lot of Fashion ecommerce businesses seem to overlook the power of bricks and mortar and online distribution through the right channels. The success of your fashion brand is likely going to ball down to key relationships and distribution deals you are able to secure.
In order to find potential distribution and wholesale deals for your fashion brand into both large and small retail stores, ensure that you attend as many industry trade events like:
Join local or national trade associations to help build your brand among peers and pro-actively seek out potential wholesalers.
Online marketplaces and websites offer ample opportunity to grow your brand. If you are for instance a luxury brand, then consider approaching luxury online department stores such as net-a-porter.com, huckberry.com, mrporter.com, yoox.com, coggles.com, theoutnet.com and brownsfashion.com (there are a tonne of other online shopping platforms with wide audiences).
Marketplaces also offer opportunity for exposing your brand to new audiences. Here are some of the top fashion marketplaces available:
If you intend to offer a truly unique direct to consumer fashion brand set out to change the industry or the world, crowdfunding should be an option on the table because you are able early adopters and your first true fans will vote with their wallets; and you are able to raise capital.
Minimalist luxury leather bag brand: Linjer raised over $500,000 from Indiegogo and Kickstarter.
Fashion is all about the visuals and your story has to trigger emotive responses that lead to loyal customers. Investing in a lookbook enables you pair up your brand with complementary brands.
Tom Montgomery, the founder of Chubbies, the U.S. based men’s short company that reportedly sold $600,000 worth of American flag shorts in 1 day do not blog – they instead rely on visual content and user generated content to build their brand.
Creating content is not enough – its power comes from distribution. And today’s core distribution channels for fashion brands are inherently visual social media platforms such as: Instagram, Facebook and Pinterest. Organic reach is a challenge on Facebook but Pinterest and Instagram tend to have strong reach with a decent sized audience and quality content/imagery.
Re-target users (or potential shoppers) that have visited with your website with highly targeted content and advertising. The two core retargeting platforms are:
You are also able to upload your customer email list to both Google and Facebook; and their figure out the profiles of emails that they have records on for custom audience targeting
Nailing your brand story is essential to connecting with your target audience and customers. Driving in an emotive brand in addition to producing high quality products will ensure customer loyalty over the long term. Tie in your brand story with video and images. Emphasize the craftsmanship, your attention to detail and your WHY.
Advertising on the following platforms offer ROI to advertisers and are scalable.
Pop-up shops help bridge the gap between online and offline selling. As a retailer or fashion label, you are able to get direct tangible in-person feedback from your customers and connect with them.
A few factors to bear in mind when considering pop-up shops are:
You will need a location that is along transitional pedestrian traffic. For example at a major train station, an underground metro station in a city; or in a shopping area.
You will also want to investigate the demographic of the footfall traffic to see if they match your target customer. For instance, if I owned a vintage trainers brand, I will not hesitate to locate a pop-up shop in or around the Shoreditch tube station because it will match my target audience: colourful 20-34 year olds, hip, stylish, street art and graffiti culture.
Regardless of whether you will be actively engaging in SEO or not, the one most important marketing metric to track is ‘brand name’ search volume i.e. the number of searches for your brand each month. This metric is indicative of the effectiveness of your marketing as a whole. You can build upon ‘brand name’ search be extending it from Search to Social mentions and trends reporting.
Here is an example of a Swedish brand called: Totême. They are minimalist fashion brand established in 2014. They utilise distribution as a core strategy for expanding their brand by listing on net-a-porter, theoutnet.com and norsestore.com.
Here is another relatively new brand – mahabis. They are a London based footwear (slippers) brand founded in 2013, that utilize audience targeted Facebook advertising to grow their brand – there were close to 20,000 searches for their brand name in November 2015. As at the time of writing this post, they had over 235,000 Facebook fans.
The Fashion industry is tough and arguably as saturated as the music industry. This is partly because EVERYONE now seems to have a ‘clothing company’…be it a t-shirt business or a fashion ecommerce business. You most likely know at least one owner or founder of a fashion brand or fashion online retail business. Fashion is so pervasive due to the primary function clothing and design play in our lives on a day-to-day basis. Competition as a result is rife and digital marketing channels such as Search reflect the offline reality of the cut-throat competition in the fashion industry. The best way to illustrate this is with an example….
Let’s imagine you have launched a ladies fashion brand that in your opinion designs the best Maxi Dresses for the 22-34 years old female demographic (all of which are millennials).
Let’s further assume that you are based in the United States and have immediate plans to cater directly to the U.S. and Canada but will be open to fulfilling international orders.
Putting on an SEO hat, you immediately start think about the opportunities that Google has to offer and fire up SEMRush and Google Keyword planner to assess market opportunities.
So there are on average 165,000 searches for Maxi Dresses (alone) on Google U.S. per month – this is a massive opportunity, you snigger to yourself.
You can either buy your way into a market OR organically build a brand – the better option is to do both.
Here is what the first page of Google looks like for your core term ‘maxi dresses’:
You will immediately notice that the top of the fold is dominated by paid AdWords placements of advertisers that are predominantly either NYSE/NASDAQ publicly listed retailers like: Macys, Nordstrom, JC Penney, Kohls, Express, Bebe or reasonably sized private fashion brands.
Here’s some (very rough and) quick AdWords math showing Average CPC to be about $1.14 and more importantly deducing that $38 will be your estimated cost per acquisition (CPA):
The above table (which is a simplified computation), reveals that it will cost your business $38 to acquire a customer. So if your maxi dresses retail at $99 on average, you have $61 left to cover your remaining overheads.
You will most likely not make a profit on a first time purchase of a single dress; and will either have to figure out ways of increasing Average Order Value (AOV) from each sales sent via AdWords or/and increase customer Life Time Value (LTV) so you start to make a decent profit from their second and subsequent orders.
Looking at the Page 1 SEO results in almost all competitive ecommerce market segments, the organic SERPs listings tend to have either or both the following characteristics:
The above image shows the organic search results on Google U.S. (generated by SEMRush) for our head-term ‘maxi dresses’ – notice the trend? The websites listed are either owned by publicly traded companies or private companies with an extensive range or long history of trading.
If you decided to use SEO as a driver for growth for your fashion ecommerce business, the question is whether your company can deliver a wide enough range to compete in addition to getting the other two fundamentals right i.e.
If it can, then it will take time; 12 months will be a typical minimum, if you go full-on with executing the above.
Depending on the amount of capital or marketing budget your fashion brand has to either launch or expand, the following strategies should be considered and will loop back into the brand building elements required for your overarching SEO strategy:
The key here is to align your brand values and target demographic with the key influencers that can tap into audiences likely to be buyers of your wares. Outline a list of influencers comprising of bloggers, instagram models, celebs, musicians, YouTube vloggers and any other public figures with a significant social following or online audience. Whilst small influencers might be easily approachable, bigger influencers might be reachable either through their managers or by referrals.
Your remit is to get these influencers and celebs to wear or use your product and then have them share and also mention your brand with their audience.
Photographs are your core collateral as they drive awareness and interest about your brand.
You might have to hire a PR Consultant or PR agency. I especially like the case study on this episode of Shopify Masters (start from 32:00).
Video offers significant exposure and opportunity for Fashion ecommerce brands to get in front of their target audience. Here are some of the most effect video marketing tactics to can use now in fashion:
Identify Fashion YouTubers with an audience that matches your target demographic. Get in touch with them with the possibility of featuring your products.
Single brand product feature videos with prominent YouTubers are tough to secure but offer the most exposure as your brand is presented to their audience.
Lookbook videos like all other collaborations you make with influencers should be based on the target audience of the vlogger and how well they will pair your products with other brands featured in their lookbook video. There has to be an alignment with the choice of pairing.
ASOS run a #BeautyChat roundtable session with prominent fashion bloggers who come to their studio to discuss
If your fashion brand is in the luxury segment, unboxing videos might be a format to consider with YouTubers and vloggers. Unboxers tend to pay special attention to the wrapping and packaging of products and will meticulously untie and present them to their audience. For potential customers, it is the closest way to experience a product without having to physically handle it.
A lot of Fashion ecommerce businesses seem to overlook the power of bricks and mortar and online distribution through the right channels. The success of your fashion brand is likely going to ball down to key relationships and distribution deals you are able to secure.
In order to find potential distribution and wholesale deals for your fashion brand into both large and small retail stores, ensure that you attend as many industry trade events like:
Join local or national trade associations to help build your brand among peers and pro-actively seek out potential wholesalers.
Online marketplaces and websites offer ample opportunity to grow your brand. If you are for instance a luxury brand, then consider approaching luxury online department stores such as net-a-porter.com, huckberry.com, mrporter.com, yoox.com, coggles.com, theoutnet.com and brownsfashion.com (there are a tonne of other online shopping platforms with wide audiences).
Marketplaces also offer opportunity for exposing your brand to new audiences. Here are some of the top fashion marketplaces available:
If you intend to offer a truly unique direct to consumer fashion brand set out to change the industry or the world, crowdfunding should be an option on the table because you are able early adopters and your first true fans will vote with their wallets; and you are able to raise capital.
Minimalist luxury leather bag brand: Linjer raised over $500,000 from Indiegogo and Kickstarter.
Fashion is all about the visuals and your story has to trigger emotive responses that lead to loyal customers. Investing in a lookbook enables you pair up your brand with complementary brands.
Tom Montgomery, the founder of Chubbies, the U.S. based men’s short company that reportedly sold $600,000 worth of American flag shorts in 1 day do not blog – they instead rely on visual content and user generated content to build their brand.
Creating content is not enough – its power comes from distribution. And today’s core distribution channels for fashion brands are inherently visual social media platforms such as: Instagram, Facebook and Pinterest. Organic reach is a challenge on Facebook but Pinterest and Instagram tend to have strong reach with a decent sized audience and quality content/imagery.
Re-target users (or potential shoppers) that have visited with your website with highly targeted content and advertising. The two core retargeting platforms are:
You are also able to upload your customer email list to both Google and Facebook; and their figure out the profiles of emails that they have records on for custom audience targeting
Nailing your brand story is essential to connecting with your target audience and customers. Driving in an emotive brand in addition to producing high quality products will ensure customer loyalty over the long term. Tie in your brand story with video and images. Emphasize the craftsmanship, your attention to detail and your WHY.
Advertising on the following platforms offer ROI to advertisers and are scalable.
Pop-up shops help bridge the gap between online and offline selling. As a retailer or fashion label, you are able to get direct tangible in-person feedback from your customers and connect with them.
A few factors to bear in mind when considering pop-up shops are:
You will need a location that is along transitional pedestrian traffic. For example at a major train station, an underground metro station in a city; or in a shopping area.
You will also want to investigate the demographic of the footfall traffic to see if they match your target customer. For instance, if I owned a vintage trainers brand, I will not hesitate to locate a pop-up shop in or around the Shoreditch tube station because it will match my target audience: colourful 20-34 year olds, hip, stylish, street art and graffiti culture.
Regardless of whether you will be actively engaging in SEO or not, the one most important marketing metric to track is ‘brand name’ search volume i.e. the number of searches for your brand each month. This metric is indicative of the effectiveness of your marketing as a whole. You can build upon ‘brand name’ search be extending it from Search to Social mentions and trends reporting.
Here is an example of a Swedish brand called: Totême. They are minimalist fashion brand established in 2014. They utilise distribution as a core strategy for expanding their brand by listing on net-a-porter, theoutnet.com and norsestore.com.
Here is another relatively new brand – mahabis. They are a London based footwear (slippers) brand founded in 2013, that utilize audience targeted Facebook advertising to grow their brand – there were close to 20,000 searches for their brand name in November 2015. As at the time of writing this post, they had over 235,000 Facebook fans.