Designing a Business Model: How to Create a New Category Within Your Industry


In 2014, our clothing company announced plans to largely transition out of traditional offline wholesale partnerships, to focus on connecting directly with our consumers. Our rationale was simple: to create a new category in our industry, we couldn’t rely on the people who pushed forward only the existing categories.

We were already operating online, retailing directly to our loyal customer base. But in 2014, we decided to branch out and ended up with four channels; retail online, retail offline, wholesale online, and wholesale offline. Like many young companies, we prided ourselves not only on our product and brand, but also on our ability to tell our story. We consider education a key component of our growth strategy. Our business is based on consumer-insight design; however, we were shifting towards buyers, not customers. This would have been a dangerous mistake–not only preventing us from telling our story, but also from designing our way.

After about a year of pushing–attending grueling trade shows, succumbing to painful terms, and, worst of all, hard selling our product line–we decided to call it quits with traditional wholesale. Here’s why, and how you can do the same without losing too much business, if you find yourself similarly constrained.

Questioning Categories Shouldn’t Be Off Limits

In traditional brick-and-mortar sales, such as local department stores, you can’t question traditional categories. But, like our predecessors Lululemon and Tesla–who each invented a new space–we aimed to create a totally new category of clothing, in our case, performance menswear. The old guard doesn’t leave much room for category creation, where locations are stocked by tightly defined, existing constructs of categories. These are separated by aisles, buying teams, and pricing strategies. Unfortunately, this wasn’t a model that fit our product.

Read more at www.businesscollective.com.com…

Aman Advani is CEO and Co-Founder of Ministry of Supply, a menswear company focused on creating a new category of clothing, performance professional, through a collaboration between experienced engineers and seasoned fashion experts.

BusinessCollective, launched in partnership with Citi, is a virtual mentorship program powered by North America’s most ambitious young thought leaders, entrepreneurs, executives and small business owners.


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