Corporate Gucci
A turnaround of the company devised in the late 1980s made Gucci one of the world's most influential fashion houses and a highly profitable business operation. The Gucci brand is considered one of the most frequently mentioned brands. The firm was named "European Company of the Year 1998" by the European Business Press Federation for its economic and financial performance, strategic vision as well as management quality.
New Management
In 1989, Maurizio managed to persuade Dawn Mello, whose revival of New York's Bergdorf Goodman in the 1970s made her a star in the retail business, to join the newly-formed Gucci Group as creative director. At the helm of Gucci America was Domenico De Sole, a former lawyer who helped oversee Maurizio's takeover of the company and the purchase of the company's remaining shares by Investcorp, a Bahrain-based holding company between 1987 and 1989. The last addition to the creative team, which already included designers from Geoffrey Beene and Calvin Klein, was a young designer named Tom Ford. Raised in Texas and New Mexico, he had been interested in fashion since his early teens but only decided to pursue a career as a designer after dropping out of Parsons School of Design in 1986 as an architecture major. Dawn Mello hired Ford in 1990 at the urging of his partner, writer and editor Richard Buckley.
Tom Ford
Ford had long been an avid follower of two of
America's top designers,
Ralph Lauren and
Calvin Klein. Klein, much like Ford, was a
'superstar designer,
the exemplar of his own brand:
stylish, suave, and modern. His scandalous
advertisements made the brand synonymous with
eternal youth and the mystery of adolescent
sexuality. Lauren, as Ford described, was
the only
designer to really create an entire world
you know
exactly what his people look like, what their houses
look like, what kind of cars the drive,
a mantra he
would adopt at Gucci years later. But where Ralph
Lauren embodied the
WASP culture of New England, Ford created a
lifestyle brand for the hedonistic, urban-dwelling
fashionistas who emblemized the brand in years past.
Ford's 1995 ready-to-wear line for Gucci dazzled
fashion critics. The collection was reminiscent of
the jet-set clientele that created a buzz around the
label in the 1970s, with its unbuttoned silk shirts
and tight velvet hip-huggers. "It was hot! It was
sex!" Joan Kaner, fashion director for
Neiman Marcus, exclaimed. "The girls looked like
they had just stepped off someone's private jet. You
just knew that wearing those clothes would make you
look like you were living on the edge
doing it and
having it all!"
While Ford's 1995 ready-to-wear line was met with
rave reviews by industry insiders, it was the
celebrity following that would propel Gucci back to
the top of the industry. In 1995,
Madonna appeared at the
MTV
Video Music Awards to collect an award for
Take
A Bow
in head-to-toe Gucci. Soon thereafter,
Gwenyth Paltrow graced the red carpet in the
season's signature look, a red crushed velvet tuxedo
with an unbuttoned blue dress shirt, and British
actress
Elizabeth Hurley donned that season's patent
leather spiked boots to a movie premiere.
Celebrities, fashion models, and wealthy young
patrons around the world were clamoring for pieces
from the new collection. In the years that would
follow, nearly every major celebrity in
Hollywood came to Ford for formalwear on awards
night, and celebrity sightings once again became
commonplace in the company's boutiques.
Gucci's warm reception among the glitterati had
an unintended side effect: the elevation of Tom Ford
from designer to sex symbol. Practically overnight,
Ford became one of the most celebrated new stars in
entertainment. He graced the pages of entertainment
and fashion magazines alongside advertisements that
featured his company's sexy new look.
People Magazine called him one of the 50 most
beautiful people of the year. The defining
characteristic of Ford's work was what came to be
known as the
Gucci sex factor.
His spring 1996
collection, which was reminiscent of the flower
child fashions of the early and mid-1970s, continued
Ford's signature trend of sky-high hemlines and
plunging necklines. By his third collection, it
became clear that the highly suggestive
advertisements and scanty clothing were not passing
fads at the generations-old fashion house, but
rather the attribute that would set Gucci apart from
its competitors.
Gucci Group became a publicly traded company in 1995, incorporated in the Netherlands, and listing on the New York and Amsterdam Stock Exchanges. It issued further shares in 1996.
LVMH Takeover Attempt
In the late 1990s, Gucci became mired in a
standoff with one of fashion's biggest
conglomerates,
LVMH Mo
t Hennessy Louis Vuitton. Just before
Gucci Group's IPO in 1995, Investcorp approached
LVMH chairman
Bernard Arnault with a proposition to sell him
the entire Gucci brand, including its lucrative
watch and fragrance divisions. Arnault balked at the
$500 million price tag and was unsure that Gucci
could ever be revived. Four years later, he sorely
regretted that decision. Prada, in an effort to
replicate LVMH's success at consolidation, had
purchased a sizeable stake in Gucci Group in an
ill-fated attempt to take over the company.
Realizing that his company didn't have the assets to
execute the takeover,
Prada's
Patrizio Bertelli offered to sell the shares to
someone who could: Arnault. Arnault jumped at the
chance. In 1999, LVMH staged an effort to acquire
Gucci Group through a creeping takeover, purchasing
34.4% of the company's stock.
Domenico De Sole was incensed by the news and
declined Arnault's request for a spot on the board
of directors, where he would have access to Gucci's
confidential earnings reports, strategy meetings,
and design concepts. De Sole reacted by issuing new
shares of stock in an effort to dilute the value of
Arnault's holdings. He also approached French
holding company
Pinault-Printemps-Redoute (PPR) about the
possibility of forming a strategic alliance.
Francois Pinault, the company's founder, agreed
to the idea and purchased 37 million shares in the
company, or a 40% stake. Arnault's share was diluted
to a paltry 20%, and a legal battle ensued to
challenge the legitimacy of the new Gucci-PPR
partnership. Courts in the Netherlands ultimately
upheld the PPR deal, as it did not violate that
country's business laws. PPR now owns 68% of the
group. The second largest shareholder is
Cr
dit Lyonnais with 11%
Ford Leaves Gucci
After a failed attempt at contract renewal with PPR in 2003, Tom Ford and Domenico de Sole decided to take their leave from Gucci Group. Ford's last show for Gucci returned to the roots of his first successful collection: the culture of celebrity. Print advertisements featured models in sleek, simple gowns inspired by the glamour of 1920s silent film stars. Ford priced up the ready-to-wear and used exotic fabrics like alligator and boar hide. His collection for Yves Saint Laurent followed the lead of the previous season's Gucci women's wear, with form fitting kimonos and Asian patterned dresses, while the menswear collection featured classic-looking tuxedos and smoking jackets. The announcement of his departure led to a complete presale of many items in New York department stores, and waitlists for his last accessories formed just days after the collection showed in Milan. In 2005, Tom Ford began designing a line of cosmetics for Estee Lauder, and planned to launch his own line of ready-to-wear and accessories under a Tom Ford label.
Brands
Using the capital obtained from the PPR issue, the Group has steadily expanded beyond just the Gucci brand through a series of takeovers. As of 2004, the Gucci Group maintained whole or partial interests in the following companies or brands:
- Fashion
- Gucci (100% share of ownership, also watches 100%)
- Yves Saint Laurent (100%, also perfume brand 100% and watches brand 100%)
- Sergio Rossi (70%)
- Bottega Veneta (78.5%)
- Alexander McQueen (51%, also perfume brand 100%)
- Stella McCartney (50%, also perfume brand 100%)
- Balenciaga (91%)
- Perfume
- Roger & Gallet
- Boucheron (also jewelry and watches)
- Ermenegildo Zegna
- Oscar de la Renta
- Van Cleef & Arpels
- Fendi
- Watches
- Bedat & Co (85%)
See also
| The above article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gucci 1/7/06 |
