EXCLUSIVE: H&M Gets Inventive With Evolving Retail Presence

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H&M is getting increasingly inventive, consumer-centric, and less “cookie-cutter” in its store rollout.

The Stockholm-based fashion specialty retailer is applying technologies to improve the customer experience, localizing assortments and testing some new concepts and services, while continuing to increase its store count.

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Michael Beaumont
H&M’s Michael Beaumont.

Much of the investment is happening in New York City. “All 12 stores in Manhattan over the next few years will be either fully rebuilt, refreshed, relocated or simply brand new. So the customer in New York is going to get a really beautiful, elevated experience at H&M in New York,” said Michael Beaumont, head of expansion for H&M Americas, in an exclusive interview.

The investment push comes at a time when H&M, short for Hennes & Mauritz Group, has reported flattish sales and lower profits recently, partly due to some tough competition — in particular from Zara and its trendier brand image, and Chinese ultra-fast-fashion players like Shein.

In response, H&M has been working to improve its fashion, upgrade its retail environments, and broaden its price points as it looks to become a more efficient and profitable company.

Earlier this year, Daniel Ervér, chief executive officer of H&M Group, described 2024 as a year when the company would be “laying the foundation for future growth, increasing the pace of improvements in the customer offering, and deprioritizing things that don’t strengthen our brands or contribute to our sales and profitability.”

Pop-ups are part of the program.

A 1,000-square-foot boutique will operate in Manhattan’s NoLIta neighborhood, from Oct. 24 to Dec. 29, at 374 Broome Street. “It’s very intimate so we can spend more time with customers and talk them through the H&M experience,” said Beaumont. “As you walk in, you’re going to be hit by the color red. We will have these beautiful red panels on the floor-to-ceiling windows that allow this amazing red light to shine through.” There will also be a “red mixed-media library” with books, tapes and records. “We’re really celebrating our brand identity and the red in our logo.”

The NoLIta boutique will also carry a vintage archival collection as well as “signature” styles from H&M’s latest collections that Beaumont said were selected especially for the NoLIta crowd. “This is a very trend-setting, young, fashion-forward crowd, so with a very small footprint to play with, there’ll be very specific garments taken from our latest collection available in NoLIta,” said Beaumont. There will also be an aroma specialist offering shoppers personalized essential oils.