Stefan Larsson’s Journey: From Out in the Wild to Next in Line at PVH

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Stefan Larsson is coming in from the fashion wilderness.

And he’s back on his way to the corner office — at PVH Corp., where he was named president and heir-apparent to longtime chief executive officer Emanuel Chirico, who is also chairman.

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The move marks the beginning of a deliberate changing of the guard at PVH, the $9.7 billion fashion player that’s home to Tommy Hilfiger, which is going from strength to strength and drove revenues up 11.6 percent to $4.3 billion last year, and Calvin Klein, which is pivoting away from the more fashion-forward direction of Raf Simons, but still drove revenues up 7.8 percent last year to $3.7 billion.

Chirico, at 61, isn’t sprinting for the exit, but is more aware that it’s there. And although he just re-upped for five years, the general plan is for Chirico to give Larsson a chance to learn the business and then he’ll transition to executive chairman over the next three to four years, handing over the job of ceo.

Larsson, 44, comes from a different generation, but in an exclusive interview with WWD on Tuesday, the two executives seemed to have chemistry and certainly shared a business philosophy, one that revolves around building consensus, taking care of their workers, building brands and leveraging global scale. His first day is June 3.

But Larsson is also coming in with a new attitude, having had something of a ceo gap year contractually imposed on him after leaving Ralph Lauren Corp. in 2017 amid clashes with founder Ralph Lauren.

And at PVH, Larsson will have time to acclimate, whereas at his two former posts, at Gap Inc.’s Old Navy and Ralph Lauren, he had to quickly access the business and set a new strategic vision.

“We wanted to bring Stefan in, give him a chance to learn the company,” Chirico said. “He obviously already knows the industry cold, but [give him] a chance to learn the company, the people, not walk into — like he has had to in the last few situations, what I would describe as turnaround situations. PVH is not that. So having the ability to walk in and really take the business in, understand it and then the two of us work together on the strategy.

“Our corporate culture and how we operate is critical to us,” Chirico said. “As I was meeting with candidates for the last 12 months, I was really looking for someone who would fit into our culture. He’s very much a consensus builder. I think, like me, he doesn’t mandate things from the top and then drive them down, [he] more or less gets the input, makes a decision and then moves on, so stylistically we’re very similar.