About a year into his tenure as Bloomingdaleâs chief executive, Olivier Bron knows whatâs ailing American department stores: too much focus on financial returns, and not enough on shoppers.
âWeâve lost the element of inspiration over the last 30 years,â Bron told BoF in an interview at Bloomingdaleâs corporate headquarters in Long Island City, New York. âWith pressure from Wall Street, you lose your long-term mindset and then youâre not investing as much as you should in the store experience, in service nor in newness.â
An outsider to American fashion who has worked as an executive for Parisian department store Galeries Lafayette and Thai retail conglomerate Central Group, Bron believes the value of the format hasnât changed since its invention 300 years ago â a sprawling space promising endless variety, with beautiful displays and persuasive salespeople.
What has changed is what counts as inspiration, he said. Simply displaying a mainstream offering of fashion isnât enough. Discovery is about creating something new: bringing two brands together in collaboration, for instance, or an intricately themed event that people have never seen before.
Bronâs job now is to bring this purpose back to Bloomingdaleâs, along with a sense of newness. Since taking over for Tony Spring, now the chief executive of Macyâs Inc., Bron has implemented his own growth strategy at Bloomingdaleâs called Dream Big, focused on updating stores and customising them to their specific markets, as well as investing in vendor relationships. This means improved shop-in-shops, taking risks on smaller brands, hosting events alongside brand partners and facilitating unlikely collaborations, all of which will benefit both vendors and shoppers, Bron added.
It comes at an important time for the upscale department store chain, which is playing an outsize role in Springâs turnaround strategy for the faltering Macyâs Inc. While the company does not break out sales for Bloomingdaleâs nor Bluemercury, its beauty retailer, retail analyst Janet Kloppenburg estimates that Bloomingdaleâs contributes to about 12 percent of Macyâs Inc.âs revenue, or nearly $3 billion in sales last year. But as Macyâs continues to close stores â from 650 locations pre-pandemic to 350 by 2026 â Bloomingdaleâs will open 15 new locations in the coming years, either in a new smaller format or as outlets.
Bronâs timing is certainly apt. The luxury multi-brand market has seen major consolidation in recent months, including Saks Fifth Avenueâs merger with Neiman Marcus and Mytheresaâs acquisition of Yoox Net-a-Porter from Richemont. If he can pull off his planned refresh, Bloomingdaleâs has the opportunity to stand out from the rest of the pack.
âBloomingdaleâs has a distinctly different image than other luxury competitors,â said Kloppenburg. âItâs fun, itâs accessible and itâs very New York-centric. When you go to Neiman Marcus, itâs not so fun. And thatâs okay because they have Valentino and Prada but itâs not like theyâre entertaining me or giving me an experience that is beyond shopping.â
A New Standard for Partnership
Bronâs strategy is rooted in winning back the favour of fashion brands that have grown wary of wholesale, as well as making changes that will resonate with Bloomingdaleâsâ particular demographic. Its shoppers tend to be younger and prefer a less formal shopping experience â a largely different profile from customers who visit standalone brand boutiques.
Bron said he wants Bloomingdaleâs to be a place where consumers are introduced to new brands, but also for it to continue to serve as a conduit between the two. For instance, over the summer, Bloomingdaleâs co-hosted a Saint Laurent pop-up in the Hamptons, inviting 30 top clients to a personalised private shopping session of the brandâs recent and upcoming seasons.
âMy obsession is how we become more and more relevant for our brands and how we can play a role in their retail strategy,â he said.
In-store activations will also play a major role, exemplified by the large-scale Italy-themed activation ongoing in its Manhattan flagship until the end of the month. Dubbed âFrom Italy With Love,â the campaign involves multiple concurrent in-store events, participation from more than 150 brand partners including Ferragamo and Bottega Veneta and an intensive store makeover with dozens â if not hundreds â of store displays (some in the shape of giant tomatoes and lemons).
The retailer will continue investing in brand-specific activations, as well as in bringing different partners together to create something new, like the tie-up between denim label Rag & Bone and Brooklyn pizza restaurant Lucali as part of From Italy With Love. The unlikely collaboration featured a co-branded merch capsule and a meatball-making class hosted by Lucaliâs owner. Other examples include collaborations it facilitated between cookware brand Le Creuset and interior designer Sheila Bridges, and a collection between Off-White and football team AC Milano.
âWhat is inspiration?â said Bron. âItâs not necessarily bringing only what exists on the market, but creating newness on the market ⦠and a point-of-view.â
Brand partners have already seen a difference.
âI recently met Olivier and was impressed by the breadth of his international experience as well as his vision for Bloomingdaleâs,â Patrice Louvet, CEO of Ralph Lauren, told BoF in a statement. âI very much look forward to Olivier bringing international department store best practices to Bloomingdales and the broader Macyâs group.â
The Bloomiesâ Experience
Bron also has big plans for the 57 existing Bloomingdaleâs locations, taking a page out of his experience managing department stores in Asia and Europe: strong product assortment, great customer service and an emphasis on Bloomingdaleâs own unique branding.
âItâs cosy to shop at Bloomingdaleâs,â he said. âItâs not like other department stores, or brandsâ boutiques. Itâs less intimidating â casual.â
Itâs a subtle differentiator â Bloomingdaleâs informal vibe â but one that sets the retailer apart from its competitors as long as it continues to improve and innovate on the shopping experience.
âWe donât want to be the biggest department store chain in the US,â said Bron. âWe want to be the local leader.â This means opting for a bottom-up approach in shaping the customer service and merchandising strategy for each of Bloomingdaleâs stores.
In recent months, Bloomingdaleâs has started making store improvements, from lighting upgrades and new furniture to renovating entire departments. Now, itâs looking to make major alterations in its 59th street Manhattan flagship, including expanding the luxury footprint, building new shop-in-shops and revamping its design shoe section.
Itâs not a small undertaking; the project will take multiple years to complete. But Bron believes it will help set the chain up for success for years to come.
âItâs not just about products, but the joy and pleasure of shopping, from the façade and curbside of the building to all the small things inside the store,â said Bron. âItâs always a surprise to our customers, and thatâs fantastic.â
Brian Baskin contributed to the reporting.