Selling sexy Vctoria's Secret and the unraveling of an American icon

Lauren Sherman

Book - 2024

"The story of how Victoria's Secret skyrocketed from a tiny chain of boutiques to an intimates monolith with annual sales in excess of $6 billion-all the while defining female beauty and sex standards for generations of Americans-and how the brand's grip on the industry slipped. Victoria's Secret is one of the most influential, and polarizing, brands to ever infiltrate the psyche of the American consumer. The company's catalog made national headlines in the '70s for its glamorization of lingerie, which was, in the post-bra burning era, sold either by puritanical department stores or tawdry, red-light district shops. By 1984, the owners were forced to sell to Columbus retail magnate Les Wexner, who was swiftly b...uilding an empire that would shape retail as we knew it for the next 40 years. Just a decade later, Victoria's Secret was a billion-dollar brand, selling the majority of bras bought in the US. However, its ubiquity in underwear drawers couldn't compare to the influence it had on the greater culture, helping to define what it meant to look like a happy, successful-and most importantly, sexy-modern woman to a whole generation of consumers across the globe through its airbrushed advertisements, pink velvet-lined stores, and annual televised fashion show, which drew in millions of viewers each year. But as culture changed, Victoria's Secret did not change with it. Not only did the company miss out on big expansion opportunities it also refused to change its marketing as the world became less obsessed with thinness and perfection, and more keenly focused on body acceptance. Meanwhile, Wexner, the mastermind, became increasingly known for his complicated relationship with sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, whose lifestyle he funded for many years. In March 2021, with his legacy in peril, Wexner and his wife Abigail stepped down from the Victoria's Secret board as he faced investigation by the FBI. Today, Victoria's Secret is trying to rebuild its reputation-and maintain the still-significant grip it has on the consumer. Selling Sexy expertly draws from sources within the company and across the fashion industry to examine: What happens now to a brand with such a heavy history?"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
New York : Henry Holt and Company [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Lauren Sherman (author)
Other Authors
Chantal Fernandez (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781250850966
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalists Sherman and Fernandez debut with an enthralling deep dive into the history of Victoria's Secret. They recount how husband-and-wife duo Roy and Gaye Raymond opened the first Victoria's Secret store in Palo Alto, Calif., in 1977, seeking to tap an underserved market for upscale lingerie. Roy's thriftlessness imperiled what was otherwise a thriving business, leading him to sell his four stores in 1983 to retail maven Les Wexner, who updated the Victorian decor; stocked cheaper, tawdrier products to bring in more customers; and pushed for rapid expansion across the U.S. Sherman and Fernandez chart the company's transformation into a multibillion-dollar brand, but the most revealing sections cover the business's beleaguered recent past. For instance, the authors discuss how executives' unwillingness to update their business model for the digital age contributed to the company's mounting financial woes throughout the 2010s, when changing mores around body inclusivity heightened scrutiny of the business's glamorization of thinness. Victoria's Secret also took hits to its reputation after Wexner's close ties with Jeffrey Epstein received renewed attention following the financier's 2019 arrest for sex trafficking, and a 2020 New York Times report revealed that chief marketing officer Ed Razek routinely fat-shamed colleagues and made inappropriate advances toward models. A sharp assessment of the company's financial and moral failings, this pulls no punches. (Oct.)

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