Photo: ThirdLove
This article was co-written by Patricia Vekich Waldron and Jeff Sward.
I used to love ThirdLove. The digitally native women’s intimates brand known for inclusivity, online fit quiz, and its wide range of sizes solved one of women’s top apparel challenges for me and many others.
Founded in 2013, ThirdLove gained popularity in a market dominated by Victoria’s Secret and other global chains due to product education, range, and fit. ThirdLove has since opened physical stores, acquired Kit Undergarments, and added sleepwear and activewear lines in order to broaden its market and drive growth.
The brand has also phased out sizes at the edges of its core lingerie product range. I found a favorite item discontinued when reordering online and confirmed via online chat with one of their stylists that the brand no longer carries the size that works for me.
It’s always a risk to discontinue products, especially when a company’s value proposition is based on having great breadth and depth. Range and assortment management are just one of many challenges merchants face. I checked in with merchandising expert and fellow BrainTruster Jeff Sward to get his point of view.
“There’s a growth opportunity in offering extended sizes, and who doesn’t want to be inclusive? Brands have the best of intentions, but I think it’s a lot more complicated than most people think,” commented Sward. “If the attempt was made and didn’t work, managers should conduct a postmortem to determine why didn’t it work.”
Root Cause Analysis
Sward’s guidance is to understand the root cause of why an offered size, style, or range did not perform up to expectations by asking these questions:
- Was it a design issue?
Even within a given brand’s aesthetic and attitude, some fabrics, colors, and patterns might not translate into smaller and larger sizes. Was the assortment appropriately curated with this consideration?
- Was it a fit issue?
Offering smaller and larger sizes is not as simple as scaling core size body specs up and down. Body contours and dimensions in the smaller and larger sizes need exacting attention to detail.
- Was it a breadth and balance issue?
If the overall design was on point and the fit was appropriate, was there critical mass in the style offering? Were there enough styles, balanced between basics, key items, and levels of fashion, so that the customer could feel that they had a reasonable range of choices available to choose from? Or were there too many styles, spreading “X” amount of demand over too many choices and causing unacceptable levels of sell-through for too many styles? The resulting markdowns make the whole extended-size offering look unprofitable.
- Was it a marketing and patience issue?
Offering a new size range means attracting and acquiring new customers. Did the right marketing in the right media take place over the right amount of time?
Communicating Changes
Communicating changes to customers should be part of the range review process. Brands should easily be able to identify and notify specific customers and/or cohorts in advance of discontinuations or changes, especially given online purchase history is easily available. Any of the following tactics would go a long way in retaining customers who are impacted by decisions to modify a range:
- “Final buy” promotion for discontinued items
- Suggestions for suitable substitutions
- Invitation to retake a fit quiz
- Appointment to consult with an online stylist
- Promotions for items in related or newly added categories
I’m not sure what the root cause — or possible remediation — was for the items I love being discontinued. I just know that all brands would better serve customers by taking a more proactive approach in communicating changes to consumers who have ordered sizes and styles that will be discontinued.
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