Abercrombie & Fitch CEO’s turnaround playbook: Lead This Way premiere

In This Article:

Fran Horowitz took over the top job at Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) in 2017, following a tumultuous stretch for the retailer. Under Horowitz’s leadership, Abercrombie & Fitch has undergone a revival, not only reclaiming its cultural relevance, but delivering profits for investors in the process.

While visiting the company’s new flagship store in New York City, Horowitz tells Yahoo Finance Executive Editor Brian Sozzi what it took to turn around the legacy retail brand. Horowitz describes the qualities that she says make her an effective leader, such as being authentic, having patience and admitting when she’s wrong.

“Make a mistake. And when you make a mistake, just fix it and move on,” Horowitz says.

Prior to leading Abercrombie & Fitch, Horowitz rose up the retail ranks at Express (EXPR), Loft, and Hollister, a brand owned by Abercrombie & Fitch.

Lead This Way is a new series that features big interviews with the business leaders shaping our world today. In these one-on-one conversations, they reveal how their approach to leadership helped them become Wall Street titans.

For more on our Lead This Way Series, tune in to Yahoo Finance every Thursday at 3 p.m. ET for the latest episode.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: This is Fifth Avenue, the Mecca of retail, and here's Abercrombie & Fitch back in New York City.

FRAN HOROWITZ: Probably the proudest moment of my career. No one said it could be done.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

BRIAN SOZZI: So how do you become a successful turnaround CEO? You lead with compassion. You lead with hustle. You lead with empathy. You take all those terms together, and you get Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Fran Horowitz.

Going back to those early days, working in a retail store in high school, are there lessons you learned back then that set you up to do things like this?

FRAN HOROWITZ: The biggest impression in my career was at Bloomingdale's. I worked-- Mike Gould was CEO. Frank Doroff was my GMM. And they were the most authentic people-oriented managers. I, to this day, am fortunate to think that that's really where the best part of my career started because they taught me how to lead. And I lead now through authenticity.

BRIAN SOZZI: What is leading with authenticity mean?

FRAN HOROWITZ: It's going to sound kind of crazy, but you have to be you. And perhaps if that isn't what a person can give. But I leave it all out there. I mean, I'm just-- I'm very approachable. I'm very real. I go to the cafe every day and make sure I get coffee and chit chat with everybody while they're online.

Our meetings are very inclusive of all the levels in the organization. And those are, honestly, things that I learned really early on in my career and have taken with me all the way through.