American Fashion Is About Being Cool, Not Price, Says PVH CEO Stefan Larsson

In This Article:

Stefan Larsson has had a busy branding year at PVH Corp.

It started with Calvin Klein’s breakthrough campaign featuring Jeremy Allen White in January and built up to Tommy Hilfiger’s closely watched fashion show in September.

More from WWD

This is not new territory for either brand, but the context, how the businesses sit within PVH and how the company is operating, is new.

But it’s a transformation that has involved a lot of retrospection.

“We are trying to go back to the DNA that made these brands beloved and cut through culture and then make them current,” Larsson, who is chief executive officer, told James Fallon, chief content officer at Fairchild Media Group, at the WWD Apparel and Retail CEO Summit.

It’s a process with two parts.

“We have a consumer-facing part, which is driving as much desirability as possible into product, marketing and experience and then we build a data- and demand-driven underlying business engine,” Larsson said.

Identifying the brand DNA to build on was the easy part.

Larsson, who is exacting by nature and spends “56 percent” of his time traveling, said people all over the world smile when they hear Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger.

“People not only are aware of the brands, they like the brands and there is an underlying love for the brands,” he said. “Tommy had a completely unique take on American style — he took classic American style and then he made it current with his twist.”

Jeremy Allen White, calvin klein underwear
Jeremy Allen White in his second campaign for Calvin Klein denim and underwear.

Calvin Klein “basically created” what Larsson described as “modern American style” that was “confident, essential, minimalistic, rebellious.”

“The DNA is so clear and it’s timeless because both brands have stood the test of time,” he said. “If you look at what’s happening in the fashion industry right now, I see there are two places to go. It’s the sea of generic brands and generic stuff and then there are the most desirable brands in the world.”

Larsson grew up in a small town in Sweden, caught the fashion bug and joined H&M’s fast-fashion charge before moving on to Old Navy, Ralph Lauren Corp. and, five years ago, PVH.

Along the way he developed a clear take on American fashion.

“What I love about American fashion is that it doesn’t try to be pretentious about price,” he said. “American fashion to me is about being cool, cool is not about price.”

Great products and great execution also have very little to do with price, he said.