You poured your heart into every design stayed up until 3 AM perfecting that neck detail, finally launched your collection to the world, and for a brief, glorious moment... people noticed.
Then silence.
Within 24 hours, the buzz evaporates. The Instagram comments stop. The inquiries dry up. And you're left wondering what went wrong.
Here's the brutal truth: talent isn't enough.
The fashion industry is littered with incredibly gifted designers whose collections disappear into obscurity while less skilled competitors build thriving, sustainable brands. The difference isn't creativity. It's strategy, credibility and visibility.
After working with hundreds of fashion designers, I've identified five critical mistakes that separate the designers who build lasting brands from those who remain trapped in the cycle of launch, buzz, silence, repeat.
If you're making even one of these mistakes, you're leaving money, influence, and impact on the table.
Yo...
You pour so much into your work ... late nights, strained eyes, tired hands and a passionate heart.
So when you're showcasing your collection at a trade show or pop-up shop and someone holds up your $950 dress and says, “This is just like something I saw in Zara”
it stings.
Not because they’re trying to be rude.
But because they just don’t see what you see.
This is avoidable. But if no one ever taught you how to demonstrate your work in a way that communicates its value ... the intention, the feeling, the standard ... how could your potential customers ever understand the difference between fast fashion and what you’re doing?
This isn’t about defending your price. It’s about shifting the perception of your potential customers.
Because your customer isn’t just buying a dress.
She’s buying a feeling.
A standard.
A story she wants to wear.
And when you speak to that — the essence, the craftsmanship, the energy behind it … the Zara comparison quietly falls away. Because not...
If you're gearing up to launch your next collection or debut your brand you're probably obsessing over every detail:
“Are the buttons the right shade?”
“Should the thread be a tone darker… lighter?”
“Do the straps look better 2 mm wider… narrower?”
But here’s what no one talks about.
It’s not just about the clothes.
A strong collection matters, but it’s your launch that gets it seen.
Because quietly existing won’t cover your fabric costs or pay your manufacturer. A strategically planned launch puts you in front of buyers, press and paying customers.
Without a clear plan, even your best work can go unnoticed.
The good news? Launching successfully is a skill you can learn.
And once you know what to look for, you can plan with more strategy, without losing the soul of your creativity.
Over the past three decades supporting designers at every stage, I’ve s...
From the start, you were taught to keep them apart:
Design is creative. Business is strategic.
Design comes from the heart. Business comes from the head.
Design is cool. Business is boring.
But what if that belief, the one that feels so normal, so obvious, is the exact thing holding you back?
Let’s look at what shaped this belief.
Fashion school taught you how to develop concepts, sketch ideas and construct garments. But it didn’t show you how to build a business around that creativity.
Internships taught you how to cut a perfect sleeve, not how to structure a launch or create demand.
Awards celebrate “visionaries,” not profit margins. You’re praised for pushing creative boundaries—not for building a brand that actually grows and sustains itself.

So of course the “business side” feels like it belongs to someone else.
You weren’t trained for it. You...
Every week I talk to fashion startups who want to get their designs in front of the RIGHT people who will actually buy. You want to show at fashion week, get stocked in Harrods or Neiman Marcus and have consistent sales on your website!
The problem is you are stuck in designer jail creating products for the WRONG audience who won’t pay what you are charging.
You hoped that posting on instagram 3 times a week would build an audience but you just get 5 likes, 1 spam comment and zero engagement.
So how DO you target the RIGHT audience?
But for social media to generate sales you need to nurture thousands of followers and how can they value your products over fast fashion when they can’t touch & feel the quality and, since you are just one of 2 billion users on instagram, how will people trus...
Huhhh. 🫣……
OK….. I am being a little dramatic!!! 🤣
BUT the reality is that you can no longer rely SOLELY on social media marketing if you want to avoid an empty order book!
According to McKinsey & Company BRAND MARKETING is back!!
They said in their annual State of Fashion report that [in 2024] 71 percent of executives plan to spend more on brand marketing than in 2023.
So what does this mean for you as an independent fashion designer….
It means that brand marketing is more relevant in 2024 and you cannot be AS dependent on Instagram!!
You need both social media AND brand marketing!
In 2024 your Instagram, other social media marketing and Facebook (Meta) ads demand more raw authenticity than ever…. and your content needs to be turbocharged to create an emotional connection if you want to drive people to eventually become a customer.
A HUGE mistake I see hundreds of ...
Most of the designers I meet are working 14 hour days designing and doing photoshoots but struggle to get any more than 300 views and 5 likes on Instagram. They think social media is the only solution but it is not…
So, take off your Gucci sunglasses and watch closely because I am about to show you how to FINALLY get your brand noticed:
STEP ONE
Firstly here’s how to turn your audience into loyal customers. Most fashion startups burn themselves out designing amazing collections for an audience who don’t actually want to buy them.
So they invest more time and money designing more and more products but it doesn’t matter how many products you design if people don’t resonate with your brand they won’t buy.
Instead what you want to do is define the vibe of your brand. This is an attitude or feeling that will inform your designs, photography, videography, and merchandising so that all your designs and communication of them are consistent and aligned with what your audie...
Most fashion designers, when pricing their garments and products, will follow a percentage mark-up method which should ideally leave them with a workable profit margin.
However it’s never that simple because some customers don’t care what your make price is, the pricing method used or even how much profit you made. They just want the BEST! ….
Some want the cheapest but some customers want the BEST; the most durable; lowest cost per wear; the most timeless or some want the best fit.
Of course it’s understandable that you use the percentage mark up method because it’s what you’ve been taught to do and it is the simplest way to approach pricing…..
But I don’t need to tell you that when your garments are priced like this you STILL get people telling you the price is too high! … and thousands of designers all over the planet use this method and STILL can’t sell enough to make a profit.
The popcorn you buy at the movies has a mark-up of around 1,000%. You happ...
If all independent Fashion Designers get behind a new concept we could create a paradigm shift in the fashion industry, making it much easier for small creative fashion designers to thrive alongside the big brands.
I call this concept LUXIE. Luxie is a hybrid concept where big LUXURY brands collaborate with small INDIE designers.
When I started my business in the 90’s consumers wanted big brand labels so it was a struggle and that’s why I want to make it easier for independent designers to thrive in a much more even playing field without the struggles we experienced.
For the first time in at least 40 years more consumers now actually do want to buy from small independents and at long last realise that it is cool to buy more authentic, unique products produced in small quantities and to have a real connection with the designer.
I think the large luxury brands could risk becoming dinosaurs if they don’t adapt and the most obvious solution is for them to work with, spon...
Wanting To Sell More Is Not Going To Help You Sell More!
Don’t worry. I understand why you want that. Every independent fashion designer wants to sell more and you might have been trying for at least three months to sell but can’t find enough people who will actually pay for your fashion products or garments.
But I’m going to ask you a question:
If you were an accessory designer selling £50 purses to gen Z direct to consumer and a futurist said to you “I’ve looked into your future and you are going to get one new sale in the next 90 days” would you be jumping up and down in excitement that you had made…. Erm, lets see 🤔 £3.33 a week.
But, if you were the designer of exclusive designer pieces selling wholesale at £1,000 to high end retailers such as Neiman Marcus who has 36 locations and would probably buy a significant number of each piece and that soothsayer or futurist said the same thing …. “I’ve looked into your future and you will get one new sale in the next...
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