{"id":12314,"date":"2019-12-11T18:33:14","date_gmt":"2019-12-12T02:33:14","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.therightbrainstudio.com\/?p=12314"},"modified":"2019-12-11T18:33:14","modified_gmt":"2019-12-12T02:33:14","slug":"old-navy-shifts-to-brand-building","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.therightbrainstudio.com\/blog\/old-navy-shifts-to-brand-building\/","title":{"rendered":"Old Navy Shifts to Brand Building"},"content":{"rendered":"
I walk past Banana Republic and Lucky Jeans on Ventura Boulevard in my wonderful hometown of Studio City, California nearly every day. A year ago, I could have included The Gap in this retail mix, but that store has closed, a victim of the chain\u2019s ability to stay relevant and tough times for retail overall. I still shop at the first two, but I had stopped going to The Gap well before they closed, despite the store having once been a frequent destination.<\/p>\n
It was Ryan Gosling telling Steve Carell in \u201cCrazy, Stupid, Love\u201d that he was \u201cbetter than The Gap\u2019 that hit home. Never went there again! I needed to dress better.<\/p>\n
An appearance by fashion guru Tim Gunn on Bill Maher\u2019s show was the final push I needed. Gunn posited that Americans are suffering from malaise and low self-esteem because they do business, socialize, and generally run around, in sweats, yoga pants, t-shirts and jeans all the time. Hard to feel great about yourself if you’re dressed like a slob.<\/p>\n
I had let the pendulum had swung too far in the casual direction, with my appearance possibly projecting an aura of “I don’t care.”\u00a0 All my beautiful Italian suits, jackets, shirts and other clothes from the dress-up days were sitting in my closet collecting dust while I was content in my uniform of t-shirt, jeans and running shoes. At least I still wore long pants. I remember getting ready to leave for a meeting with a TV producer one day to\u00a0 pitch a project I was working on with some young collaborators. One of them showed up at my office in a t-shirt, shorts and flip-flops. “Not acceptable,” I told him. \u201cGo home and change right now, young man.\u201d (He did.)\u00a0 I had become my parents.<\/p>\n
Just as they had always looked me up and down in shock and disgust when I was a teenager heading into New York City for a concert and said, \u201cYou\u2019re going like that!?!,\u201d I now go crazy when I see people on airplanes wearing tank tops and gym shorts or at Broadway shows where most are dressed appropriately for a backyard barbecue.<\/p>\n
I thank Gunn for inspiring me to upgrade my wardrobe and dressing better. Perhaps I\u2019m clinging to a very old-fashioned belief that people will take me more seriously and treat me with more respect if I\u2019m wearing nice clothes. Regardless, I feel better about myself.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s true, I am better than The Gap! I\u2019m surprised that this message of enhanced self-esteem has not been embraced by any of the big clothing chains, especially when it comes to men\u2019s clothing.<\/p>\n
But rather than selling aspiration, the chains have become addicted to discounting. Communications on the style, quality or distinctiveness of the clothing have taken a back seat to price reductions. And where are the aspirational, emotional benefits like self-esteem?<\/p>\n
So while I buy clothes fairly frequently these days, I\u2019ll walk right by Banana Republic and Lucky Jeans if I don\u2019t see a sign out front advertising at least a 40% discount. And sometimes that’s not enough, as I know that 50%-60% reductions can’t be too far off. The retailers have trained me to buy this way. It\u2019s no different in the supermarket or drug store. As brands shifted spending from long-term, brand building to short-term discounting, my favorite toothpaste is now whatever is on sale at Costco when I run out.<\/p>\n