234 episodes

Looking to start or grow your boutique business? Tune in to Emily Benson's podcast! With 18 years of retail experience and a no-nonsense teaching style, Emily shares strategies and interviews experts to help you succeed. Whether you have a brick-and-mortar, online, pop-up, or mobile boutique, this podcast provides valuable insights to boost your business. From owning a mobile boutique called The Fashion Truck to being Associate Merchant for Girls' Accessories at Abercrombie & Fitch, Emily has turned her success into your success. Don't miss out on the secrets, tips, and best practices to grow a 7 or 8 figure boutique business.

Boost Your Boutique with Emily Benson Boost Your Boutique with Emily Benson

    • Business

Looking to start or grow your boutique business? Tune in to Emily Benson's podcast! With 18 years of retail experience and a no-nonsense teaching style, Emily shares strategies and interviews experts to help you succeed. Whether you have a brick-and-mortar, online, pop-up, or mobile boutique, this podcast provides valuable insights to boost your business. From owning a mobile boutique called The Fashion Truck to being Associate Merchant for Girls' Accessories at Abercrombie & Fitch, Emily has turned her success into your success. Don't miss out on the secrets, tips, and best practices to grow a 7 or 8 figure boutique business.

    Chic Chronicles: Navigating 20+ Years of Fashion and Friendship with Noelle Auberger

    Chic Chronicles: Navigating 20+ Years of Fashion and Friendship with Noelle Auberger

    11:45.1 We did what we wanted.  We did it pretty professionally and we did it with like a level of class and style where people took us seriously.
    11:58.2 We had access to these amazing creative tools, professors who really pushed us, who gave us Tons of access and free time to play and explore with our art. And like our minds were just so rich. And I think you and I, and our whole friend group, we were all just like reveling in this.
    18:36.7 I need to get in to see a client. I need to convince them that what I have to offer is a value. I need to find out how to make it a value to them because Sometimes they're not advertising in with my brands or sometimes they don't believe in the types of things I'm talking about.
    18:52.4 So it's a process of getting in, building awareness, making sure they understand what I'm offering, and then trying to find those fits, you know, trying to find that right fit for my clients are all for it.
    21:51.0 One of the reasons I want to have you on is because you and I are the type of people were just like, we have this idea and we're going to go for it and we're going to put the blinders on. We're not going to ask for permission. In fact, like we didn't even think that we needed to ask for permission, let alone even like, you know, skip that part. It was just like, no, we're going to do this and we're going to do this.
    28:00.4 follow that gut, follow your intuition, follow your thought, follow your, you know, and there's so much of that that like, that's where the magic comes out of.
    31:17.6 There's so much heaviness, I think that women are still carrying and processing just from that,  that you need good girlfriends, sisterhood. You need that so bad to be able to function, to be able to function and come out of this with any kind of head on your shoulders to get through any sort of day to day functionality.
    33:29.9 Owning those choices, you know, as a woman and being informed and being involved in guiding those choices gives you so much agency and so much more freedom than I think it allows. It also allows me as a business woman to operate with a lot more levity. 
    34:31.0 Our dynamics and the systemic structures that have been built are not really afforded the luxuries to women that may have been afforded to men in the past when they were the breadwinner, right? 
    35:12.5 Because you are commission based in your ad sales, right? So very, very similar to a boutique in that you kind of never know what's coming, but you kind of do, but like one day you're making a ton the next day you're like, Darn that deal fell through. Very dry seasons. And then there's like Q4, which is bananas, right? Which is very similar to how retail works, right? 
    36.24.7 there's so many things right that'll pull you off track so many little stressors so many flare ups, whether it's a, you know, client you didn't close or it's a sale you see walk out the door, you know,  It can be, it can be really demoralizing.
    37:18.0 Go back to your toolkit and what works for you instead of going down the, let me beat myself up over what a loser I am because that sale didn't close.
    38:30.2 If you can master a rebound, you can master the game. And that's what it's all about is not letting that little ops offset
    40:35.0 The reality of us sitting here is we are very powerful women. We have created a lot of wonderful things in our life. What's to say that cannot continue.
    43:25.6 Iowa didn't win because Caitlin Clark was the Michael Jordan of that team. Michael Jordan had to learn. He needed Scotty Pippen. He needed Dennis...

    • 5 min
    My Advice for Boutique Owners in 2024

    My Advice for Boutique Owners in 2024

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    • 21 min
    Manufacturing Clothing & Accessories for Influencers with Jackie Hutson and Camille Worstell of Atrium Apparel Company

    Manufacturing Clothing & Accessories for Influencers with Jackie Hutson and Camille Worstell of Atrium Apparel Company

    0:54.6 If you're an influencer or if you are in a position where you are ready to start manufacturing your own clothing and accessories or you already do and you want a different take on it and you want to hear from people who are really in the day to day of what's coming next, they're a little bit right ahead of the curve, you're going to want to listen to this episode.
    4:24.3 We're now working with influencers, which is super fun and exciting and new. And I think that's the greatest part about the business side that I'm on now is every day is different. Every day we have different products that we're touching, different customers we're working with and really getting to adapt and continue to grow and evolve our business as our customer base changes.
    5:59.5 It feels like a lot of people who want to sell don't understand that a retail industry.
    7:15.9 I think when you're talking about selling to the masses and especially for what we're doing with these influencers, you know, it is about mass appeal still. And so you have to be really conscious on that trend curve to not push too fast, too forward, unless again, That is your customer. 
    9:36.9 I've been saying for a long time, I think wholesale is the biggest opportunity right now. 
    11:15.5 I think the biggest thing when you're starting this out is. It's okay not to know. You're not going to know. So finding a trusted partner that can help take you through that process.
    12:33.2 And the other part of it is selling, you know, and you know, it is, you can have a huge following and a bunch of eyeballs, but if you don't really like to sell, then  You're going to have a problem.
    13:36.3 We don't want to ever push a customer into overbuying something and then have them fail. Like that's not a win for anybody. 
    14:23.0 if you don't launch the right product at the right time, at the right price point. Well, guess what? You're not going to sell it.
    15:52.4  I think it really all starts with that concept piece of starting to think of what kind of items could be right for you and your audience.
    16:40.8 We don't want to overwhelm. We don't want to bring too much to market. Let's start with one drop. Let's figure out your customer, figure out your quantity, figure out your buy, and then. Put together a strategy and scale plan from there. 
    21:05.5 I do think engagement is what's important. To be honest, I think you could have 10, 000 followers. And if you have Super high engagement. I don't think you have an issue selling 500 t shirts. 
    21:26.6 Just like when you're shopping in a boutique, right? I mean, I love boutique shopping because it's unique stuff. It's different. You can't find it anywhere else. So it's taking all those exact same concepts, you know, to your own personal product and say, what is unique about this?
    24:27.0 I think we also saw a lot of business where, but in really fun ways, I think women are absolutely dominating the world right now, which is super exciting. And I think they're doing it in style. So as you're going back to the office, as you're going to these events, having fun, fashionable stuff, trousers and blazers and all that kind of stuff.
    27:17.1  And as a boutique owner, again, it's like making it accessible to your girl and finding the way that makes sense for your customer. I don't think it always needs to be this pushed fashion forward thing, but like, how do you bring that one piece in to incorporate and make it feel new?
    ➡️Check out ATRIUM...

    • 35 min
    Curves in Commerce: The Business of Plus Size Retail with Ashley Full, Founder of Amour 781

    Curves in Commerce: The Business of Plus Size Retail with Ashley Full, Founder of Amour 781

    0:51.0 Our promise to you today is that we hope you will open your mind to adding more plus size to your retail store as a vendor and how to do it in a way that's going to make you money.
    3:08.6 I think sizing is one of the most challenging aspects of the plus size and extended market.
    3:36.7 Extra large is not plus size. No. So there's a different size grade to the plus size demographic. So a 1x is not the same as an extra large and that's a huge misconception. 
    6:33.4 Size grading is crucial. 
    7:26.7 If you are offering plus size, don't charge me extra. You don't charge the customer that's buying from extra small to extra large any different when she buys that size wrap. 
    8:42.5 I think as a retail community, we really need to push vendors to take more risks  in the plus size community.
    10:56.4 I hear these questions all the time. So,  I brought plus size into my store, Ashley. It's not selling. Why isn't it selling? Because the plus size girl is not going into your store because you've excluded her for so long.
    17:55.0 We also had true representation of sizes for our models and just everybody. Cause even though the vendors will send us different photos, a lot of the time plus size is shot on like a size eight.  Which then it really doesn't depict what it's going to look like.
    21:20.0 Quality is key. And to help mitigate those returns, we offer the styling. So, because we carry about 65 different brands, it's kind of a wide range, so we want to make sure that you get exactly what you're looking for. So we'll set up a styling appointment with you.
    22:21.2 So what are your big top three tips?  So for stores, I think not excluding plus size in your size run when you're merchandising it.
    23:26.6 Number two, quality. Number three is having fashion. We do not want. something fuddy duddy. We want really cool stuff. 
    25:27.8 Because there's nothing better than having that relatability as, as women, as we go into a fitting room, we're vulnerable, or even when you're buying something online, and you take it home, and you're in the privacy of your own home, and you can put something on, and we're, we're the most critical of ourselves.
    25:58.0 That's the number one selling thing is feeling good about what you wear.
    27:15.0 to be honest with you, I think all of us, retailers, vendors, we started our business because we want to make people feel good for our products, right? Like, that's easy. And I think what we're up to today is there's a huge population of women, and probably men,  You don't feel good enough, though.
    And we have the opportunity to help them. We have the opportunity to say, you know what? We're going to solve the problem. 
    Resources:
    Visit Boutique Training Academy - If you want to make more money in your boutique or retail business you're in the right place. We'll guide you step by step in your journey through Boutiqueland. 🛍️

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    • 33 min
    Creating a Legacy Retail Boutique Business with Darlene Mitchell

    Creating a Legacy Retail Boutique Business with Darlene Mitchell

    1:04.0 My name is Darlene Mitchell and I am a retail business strategist. And my strength really is around inventory and profitability. So I help business boutique owners. Understanding inventory strategies so they can have legacy, not just so they can have a business, but they can have a legacy business, a business that stays around. 
    1:32.8 I was in corporate retail for 25 plus years. And what I do now is exactly what I did in corporate retail
    1:51.4 I'm teaching my clients what I learned in big retail and fortune 500 retail.
    2:12.7 There's a lot of money. There's a lot of trajectory. Like it's a great career, I think for anyone interested in fashion or selling or like how products get to the floor.
    2:29.8 You are not born with this knowledge. Retail math is very different math than math. 
    5:43.5 So like a buyer or a merchant, like depending on what the company kind of called it, that's like the lead business person now who I think is like the most similar to like a boutique owner.
    11:06.2 I don't care what your markup is. Any of that, you're pricing yourself out of the business.  If you don't get that, what are you doing to get that track again?
    12:17.3 We planned out every promotion. We knew post promotions would happen. They rarely were reactionary.
    12:45.5 I think that a lot of people in the  boutique space think that it's okay. To constantly run reactive sales because they're like, well, they're running it. The big companies are running it, but we're not seeing again behind the scenes, the look that Darlene and I are always going to give you is like, that is planned.
    13:39.7  It's heavy duty math. And a lot of people are just not getting that. And to your point, they're running these reactionary sales. I'm like, well, you plan to run that sale? Do you need to run that sale? Or are you just doing it because someone else is doing it? Does your business require that?
    15:25.4 We let a competitor dictate our business.  No, that's  awful. Yeah, that was awful. It was awful. And imagine the buyers and everyone who put all this work in to develop this product line and we were discounting it like crazy  because we were watching what a competitor was doing.
    16:13.8  I think most boutique owners, most, you know, I wouldn't say retail businesses doing under 5 million.  They're a little messy behind the scenes. They're a little weird. Like I think until people start to make real money, do they think of investing in someone like a planner?
    17:04.8 financial planning and your profit and loss statement is really different from your inventory management.
    17:33.2 Every quarter we look at what's our intention for this next quarter. What's our sales intention? What's our profit intention? Before we place product before we buy product, what's our intention first?
    18:03.0 Understand how you show value to that customer.
    18:22.4 There are a couple of things you do before you even get to the product.  Because all those things, everything has to mix for your product mix and your position, right? Because if you just go in and buy products at the right, wrong margin, and it's, and by the way, everyone, it's not find a cost times four to get a four times markup. That is not, that's not a strategy. That's just, that's reckless, right? That's a little reckless. So you want to do all those other things to understand before you buy the product.  Yeah. Right. I love it. So position. Person. Pricing. Product.  And then the fifth and bonus is...

    • 54 min
    From Homeless to $1M Wholesale Company: Molly Trumpler's Story

    From Homeless to $1M Wholesale Company: Molly Trumpler's Story

    1:22.0 I use retail as a sort of the stepping stone to gain awareness about myself and to build capital.
    2:58.1 It's very important that I feel that the clothes that we make are just made for a woman's body, not a specific woman's body, but like just the woman's body. So I pay a lot of attention to where themes are and how long certain sleeves are to make it to make everybody feel like they can wear it and not be self conscious.
    4:06.1 I do think that the clothes you put on your body have a lot to do with how you leave your house.
    4:22.6 it's really hard for boutique owners to find  Quote unquote, cute clothes in curvy sizes.
    9:03.0  no matter how big or small can they know, well, hopefully they know, or are starting to at least learn what sizes sell best for their particular demographics. 
    11:01.3 We're not going to sacrifice style quality or anything like that, but I am willing to  kind of do what needs to be done to stay relevant in whatever changing market is happening or doesn't happen.
    13:10.7 That's all I think most boutique owners want. They want to know that like someone cares about them from the wholesale side
    19:10.6 There's a big piece of feeling represented in clothing and clothing manufacturing.
    26:15.3 The best way, in my opinion, to get started is two things. Reach out to a vendor that you trust and ask if they would be willing to work with you, um, with custom designs.
    26:43.4 that is a great way to get your feet wet in my opinion is go to someone that you like their style already You've already built a relationship with them Ask them if they'd be willing to do custom pieces for you um and  Kind of learn about the process that way, not asking them, you know, and taking all their trade secrets, but just getting your feet wet into that.
    30:01.8  that is a great way to get your feet wet in my opinion is go to someone that you like their style already You've already built a relationship with them Ask them if they'd be willing to do custom pieces for you um and  Kind of learn about the process that way, not asking them, you know, and taking all their trade secrets, but just getting your feet wet into that.
    35:08.2 you're talking about building more income because you have that unique stuff.
    37:24.4  in the course that I took with you, when we worked one on one and looked at  Um, the timing of when I was launching things and we learned that I was kind of a step behind.
    So when I, it wasn't that what I was launching wasn't good and people didn't want it. It's just that I was bringing them in a little too late, which made me not sell as much as I could because for a lot of my customers, the time had already passed for them to successfully bring in that style.
    44:21.2 you want to be basic, but you don't want to be too basic. I think that's a big piece of it.  And at the same time, the hardest part about being a fashion forward,  bold dresser is. The basics always sell. That's why I'm like, how much, you know, if someone says, Oh, I did a t- shirt and it did so well in, in black, I'm like, did you do it in white? 
    46:26.9 If you're starting in April, you're going to want to be working out winter, for sure, as someone who's just starting, because there's no way in hell that your first samples are going to come and you'd be like, yep, perfect, love it.
    50:03.4 You probably aren't seeing fully or like making the connections and you know, I just remember our calls, like I would get on and I was just like, Oh, this is the...

    • 1 hr 8 min

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