What’s Next for Independent Fashion Retailers?

MILAN — Italy’s peculiar role in the fashion industry is not limited to its marquee brands or high-end manufacturing supply chain.

The country has traditionally had one of the strongest representations of independent luxury and fashion retailers that over the years have been instrumental in launching and supporting hot labels and up-and-comers.

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Scattered throughout the country’s second-tier cities are retailers that have grasped the fashion taste and sensibility of local consumers, forging strong ties with luxury brands and acting like closet curators with select product and brand mixes.

As consumer confidence feels the pinch of economic instability and geopolitical unrest, the reality check for local retailers has been hard to digest.

The performance of e-commerce operations has been sluggish. Luxury brands’ direct retail strategies have reduced independent stores’ access to marquee names. The discount policies of online retailers have come at the detriment of small — and often brick-and-mortar — entrepreneurship.

How can the multibrand retail formula forge ahead?

The topic was discussed Monday at the “Re-Retail: Technology, Market and Consumers in the Fashion Retail World” summit, the first one organized by Camera Buyer Italia, the country’s association gathering about 100 fashion and luxury retailers in the country boasting 500 doors overall.

The consensus pointed to a return to basics, as in retailers rediscovering their unique selling proposition, hinged on offering a one-of-a-kind curation tailored to their customer base, as well as building a universe around the transaction that can lure big spenders in-store.

“Our recipe at times of uncertainty has always been ‘back to basics,’ homing in on what we do best which is listening to our clients and defining our offering based on their current needs while also trying to forecast their future ones,” said Luis Sans, chief executive officer of the Barcelona-based Santa Eulalia luxury boutique.

Santa Eulalia is one of the first global retailers to join the Camera Fashion Retailer. Promoted by Camera Buyer Italia’s president Maura Basili, the international organization aimed at grouping international players, has already drawn Mitchells from the U.S., Germany’s Emerson Renaldi and Benesch, and Antwerp-based Verso, in addition to the Spanish store and the Camera Buyer Italia associates.