Daniel Lee - Designer, Creative Director of Burberry | Page 62 | the Fashion Spot

Daniel Lee - Designer, Creative Director of Burberry

i kinda liked the idea of Burberry sub-brands for what it’s worth and although they won’t walk back their decision, it’s another thing that previous management got wrong. the disconnect between the runway and what’s actually in store is not just a Burberry phenomenon, it happens at Armani and Gucci too. It’s just more pronounced due to the type of product that Burberry puts out.

at the end of the day sales are data driven and the average consumer walks in to buy a scarf or a chequered blouson or maybe an EKD tee. if they want to, a trench, but it’s one of those items that you buy for life. for me it makes sense to have a ‘couture’ line which boasts the latest designs but usually ends up as a loss leader, a permanent line with luxe materials, and a mainstream line that has wide appeal and profitability. I think the idea of London as businesswear focused and Brit as the casual label made a lot of sense as long as there was no overlap and cannibalisation of say, premium trenchcoats. It works with Ralph Lauren. The purple label stuff has some really interesting textiles and good craftsmanship. My 2c.
 

www.wsj.com

Burberry Got Too Fancy. This American Is Taking It Back to Its British Roots.​



Portrait of Burberry CEO Joshua Schulman at Burberry HQ.


CEO Joshua Schulman, pictured at Burberry’s London headquarters in June, added ‘scarf bars’ in stores.
By
Nick Kostov

| Photographs by Jérémie Souteyrat for WSJ
July 3, 2025 9:00 pm ET
LONDON—Soon after taking over as Burberry’s chief executive last summer, Joshua Schulman popped into the company’s Fifth Avenue store in Manhattan. The shop floor was cavernous, minimalist and showcased select $3,000 handbags.
What he didn’t see were any $500 umbrellas—the type of higher-volume accessory that, along with trench coats, made Burberry an icon of functional, aspirational luxury for well over a century. As an American who had long admired the British brand, Schulman was puzzled.
“I’m like, why don’t we have hats or umbrellas on the floor?” he recalled. A store employee told him that went against the company’s visual guidelines, which called for sparse setups and no mannequins, another thing that struck Schulman as odd given that Burberry sells a full wardrobe. “I said, ‘Well, why don’t we try?’” (LOL)
Employees quickly retrieved some from the stockroom and propped them up prominently. As luck would have it, a rainstorm soon blew through, and several shoppers bought umbrellas with Burberry’s signature check pattern within the hour.
One year in as Burberry CEO, Schulman is taking a back-to-basics approach to reviving the cachet of a company that once helped define British culture around the world. He is unwinding some of the brand’s overly ambitious detours and refocusing on what built Burberry’s name: classic British style and clothing designed to withstand the elements. A new ad campaign proclaims “It’s Always Burberry Weather” and features Olivia Colman, who played Queen Elizabeth II on “The Crown,” in a quilted jacket and Liam Gallagher of Oasis in a parka ahead of the ’90s British rock band’s reunion tour.
“Some of this is about slicing and dicing the numbers and looking at deep analysis,” says the 53-year-old in an interview in his office at Burberry’s London headquarters near the Thames. “And some of it is just leaning into the assets that we have already and celebrating who we are.”
Since its founding in 1856 and Thomas Burberry’s invention of weatherproofed gabardine fabric designed to withstand the British climate, Burberry has outfitted polar explorers, soldiers and royalty. A young Princess Diana was frequently photographed in her Burberry trench, establishing the coat as a symbol of understated aristocratic style. By the late 1980s, it was becoming the uniform of London’s club kids and fashion outsiders. The shift diluted its luxury image; it was too everywhere. In the 2000s, the brand mounted a comeback, running ads with the likes of Kate Moss and aristocratic model Stella Tennant that blended heritage with edge.

55e0cd9c72b76b0b62d7d65d0aeb1f8ce1c5ca65.avif


Burberry’s Bond Street store in London in 2023 shows how the retailer then favored a minimalist aesthetic with no mannequins.

d685c12eb458d1e84f1c7718b6b17726792e36fa.avif
Since Schulman joined as CEO, Burberry is featuring more traditional patterns and full wardrobe looks on mannequins, as seen in its Regent Street store in London in June.
In recent years, a series of CEOs and designers tried to catapult Burberry into the top tier of the fashion world with avant-garde runway looks and bags at prices that rivaled Louis Vuitton.
The timing couldn’t have been worse. As Burberry tried to push upmarket, the luxury industry turned. Consumers cut back amid economic uncertainty and balked at prices that had soared during the pandemic boom in demand. Sales were hit especially hard in China, the world’s largest luxury market.
Burberry was caught in an identity crisis.
The brand, Schulman believes, had lost focus, pursuing a niche aesthetic at the expense of its more universal luxury appeal.
And because Burberry is the U.K.’s only global luxury brand—as well as the marquee name at London Fashion Week—its missteps have wider implications for British fashion as a whole.
“When it falters, it exposes how heavily the system depends on a single brand to lead,” said Andrew Groves, a professor of fashion design at the University of Westminster.
6c0dd7dc917051c268662685e41027de28aae388.avif
Princess Diana, with Prince Charles on tour in Nova Scotia in 1983, made the Burberry trench a symbol of understated aristocratic style.
Other fashion rivals are privately owned (Chanel) or part of sprawling conglomerates (Gucci or Dior), but Burberry is on its own as a company and publicly traded. That puts more pressure on Schulman to turn things around, despite the weaker luxury market, and fast.

In May, Burberry announced a second annual decline in sales and a net loss for the fiscal year ended in March. Burberry’s share price is down more than 50% since early 2023. Schulman moved quickly to overhaul the executive team and announced plans to cut roughly 1,700 jobs by 2027—nearly 20% of its global head count.
The oldest of six children, Schulman grew up in Los Angeles. As a boy, he had his nose in Women’s Wear Daily, known in the industry as the “fashion bible,” and corporate annual reports. He would memorize the layouts and square footage of major department stores from company filings.
“I was a very strange child,” he admits with a laugh.
When Nordstrom announced it would open a store nearby in West Los Angeles, Schulman, then around 13 years old, wrote to one of the company’s leaders to say he was “ecstatic.” The executive wrote back, and he’s kept the letter ever since.
Around the same time, Schulman got his first job at a children’s clothing boutique in Beverly Hills. Kris Kardashian came in to shop for her young children. So did Kathy Hilton, for her daughter Paris. Schulman knew the regulars by name and paid close attention to their tastes. He joined the owner on buying trips, bringing back Versace and Moschino for kids.
“A lot of what I learned was in those four walls,” he says. He was convinced he’d rocket straight to being CEO of Bloomingdale’s.
After college at New York University and then Parsons School of Design, Schulman landed his first job in fashion at Perry Ellis, an American menswear brand known for its dress shirts and slacks. The company was in turmoil. It had just parted ways with Tom Ford—who would soon reinvent Gucci—and brought in Marc Jacobs, whose now-legendary Grunge collection also got him fired.
Schulman quickly learned the risks of misalignment between creative vision and corporate leadership.
A few years later, in 1997, he joined Gucci. There, Schulman was responsible for the commercial side of the ready-to-wear business, working closely with Christopher Bailey, who was head of women’s design. Bailey later jumped to Burberry.
Schulman kept a close eye on Burberry as Bailey led a revival of the brand, and Schulman’s interest deepened when he relocated to London to run Jimmy Choo from 2007 to 2012.
“Burberry was like the shining city on a hill,” he said.
A succession of CEOs—five since the turn of the century—have tried to push Burberry higher up the luxury ladder, with some experimenting with less traditional styles like an urban, sports-luxe aesthetic.

f2160de3329731f443a788a5c387c0ab89b4f9b5.avif


Schulman at a Jimmy Choo event in 2009, when he was CEO of the luxury footwear label.
Burberry built out a network of global flagships and tightened control over its image. It gave up profits from high-volume licensing deals in Spain and Japan, pulled back from discount-friendly department stores in the U.S., and stripped out promotions from full-price boutiques.
The push accelerated during the pandemic. In late 2022, the company hired designer Daniel Lee and leaned hard into expensive handbags. Burberry increased prices on leather goods by 60%.
“It’s been a mistake for them to raise prices like they did and to try to carve out a whole new lane for themselves,” says Pete Nordstrom, president of the Seattle-based Nordstrom department store, one of Burberry’s most important wholesale partners in the U.S. “That’s going to have a negative impact with customers—and it has.”
Meanwhile, Schulman was on a fast track through some of America’s biggest fashion names, including Coach and Michael Kors.
Schulman was in talks to bring more fashion know-how to Burberry as a potential board member in spring 2024, just as Burberry’s strategy was unraveling. The company had issued a profit warning and seen its share price tumble. Shareholders were losing patience.
Instead of a board seat, Schulman was named CEO.
On his first day, he stood before staff at Burberry’s London headquarters and delivered a blunt diagnosis: The brand had drifted too far into niche fashion. It needed to capitalize more on its roots—trench coats, scarves, the classic red, white, black and tan checks.
Within weeks, Schulman convened a 200-person session of designers, merchandisers, product developers and marketers. Burberry had narrowed its appeal too drastically, he told them, focusing on the “opinionated customer” while neglecting others who he called investors, aspirers, hedonists and conservatives.

4588075a1f8b7eb497063d72e4e5be20f0ca508c.avif


Burberry scarves are no longer tucked away in drawers. Prominent ‘scarf bars’ allow shoppers to pick among an array of patterns and colors of cashmere scarves, with on-the-spot monogramming.
“We had left behind the broader universe of luxury customers,” he says.
One symbolic casualty of that shift was the classic Burberry polo, historically with an embroidered equestrian knight or checked trims.
“We had replaced that with a more anonymous polo shirt…at a much higher price point,” Schulman said. “Our customer didn’t respond to that.”
Pricing has been recalibrated: Schulman is charging a premium where the brand has authority—particularly outerwear and trench coats, which can run upward of $3,400—while pulling back in categories like handbags, where Burberry’s credentials are weaker.
He is also highlighting globally recognizable symbols of Britishness—but with a sharper eye on how they would resonate internationally with, say, an American like himself. Internal data revealed a recurring problem under the previous leadership: Campaigns aimed at showcasing Burberry’s “modern British luxury” aesthetic struck a chord in the U.K., but often failed to resonate as strongly abroad.

In the fall, Schulman unveiled an ad campaign tied to the reopening of Burberry’s New York flagship that featured British model and actress Cara Delevingne in front of London’s iconic Big Ben. “It may not be the most subtle reference, but it’s globally recognizable,” Schulman said. “You can see the Eiffel Tower in ads for three or four of our French competitors all the time.”
Nowhere is Schulman’s shift more visible than in how Burberry displays scarves, once tucked away in drawers. New “scarf bars” prominently showcase cashmere scarves in an array of patterns and colors that can be monogrammed on the spot.
Investors are optimistic. Same-store sales fell 5% in the six months to March 29—an improvement from the 20% drop in the previous half. Burberry’s share price is up about 30% this year.

At a showroom in Paris shortly after Schulman joined Burberry, Nordstrom says his buyers and merchandisers were ready to lay out everything that wasn’t working. Before they could start, Schulman cut in: “You don’t need to tell me. I know. We’ll fix it.”

Schulman and his team are eager to work collaboratively, says Nordstrom. “Their time to shine is really the second half of the year, especially fall and winter. I think we’ll know a lot more then.”
With its recent focus on more accessibly priced products, some warn the brand risks drifting into “affordable luxury” territory—a profitable but less rarefied space, closer to Coach. Two former Burberry executives contend that the shift to the higher end would have worked if given enough time, or if the broader environment hadn’t changed so dramatically.
“It takes years to elevate a brand,” said one. “Burberry started that process, but it’s very hard to achieve when you’re a publicly listed company. Shareholders want results.”

Schulman insists he has no intention of turning Burberry into a “British Coach,” emphasizing that the ambition remains firmly rooted in full luxury positioning. First, however, he needs to lure more customers with the kind of classic coats and scarves that made Burberry famous.

“We could be among those top five luxury brands in the far future,” he says. “That is the North Star for this business.”

5252a1c6959a0ff692ba20e821449b45bb12c88d.avif


LOL article

ZERO mention of its creative director ...so disrespectful and the article isn't saying much feels like a promotion of the ceo it does not deep dive into the brand its self other than superficial level touch points

good luck lol
 
^ The article in insane. Those shameless PR moves from CEOs willing to drag their CD (“I’m like, why don’t we have hats or umbrellas on the floor?” he recalled. A store employee told him that went against the company’s visual guidelines, which called for sparse setups and no mannequins" that's to put the blame on Daniel Lee because he's know to be very involved brand image-wise) to the mud to put themselves in a better light are always wild.

Now when you go on their website is a bunch of ugly, non-desirable, dated chavy pieces. The brand looks like it doesn't even have a CD if you look at the product selection. Daniel Lee must have a contract of steel after BV with a massive payout if he gets fired, and for sure they can't afford to fire him. So he'll stay put until the contract ends.

Good luck to Schulman and his British Michael Kors plan.
 
Frankly both retail concepts are awful but he seems like a Grade A prick. If I were Daniel I'd leave stat. Burberry just does not need to be a luxury fashion house, end of day. They should take a page from Canada Goose and Moncler and keep it pushing.
 
At this point, maybe we should create a thread on Schulman.
Since he joined the brand, it seems like PR is only focused on him.
Do magazines still do profiles on Burberry?
Apart from the Met Gala and the runway show, what is Lee doing there?
Wasting a talent.
 
This article sounds like a self promotion for bigger roles in the future for this CEO. Right now, the creative voice of this brand is so muted (and seems very deliberate). Other than some special events like MET, you don't see Daniel Lee anywhere. All products featured in ads are very basic af functional outfit, which has been crammed by not only by existing competitors but also outdoor brands with much modern outdoor brands & activewear brands which provides better products for functionality.
If you don't have driving fashion for Burberry, unlike coach and MK, you don't have bags to be the bottomline. Scarves and umbrellas aren't going to save this brand with dying goodwill. Burberry's trench coat can only go that far with that antic story about its heritage cause most of those associations have long lost its appeal to the mass market (only extreme small percentage ppl would still care about British royal and Kate Moss these days). Yes Burberry represents British fashion and a part of British fashion. However, it will do no good to the brand if you decide to draw a circle and insist on standing in that circle where the place you decide to stand on is a swamp.
Also “You don’t need to tell me. I know. We’ll fix it.” is such a typical way to sink a brand.
 
“We could be among those top five luxury brands in the far future,” he says. “That is the North Star for this business.”

Right, keep on dreaming Mr. Schulman.

At this point, it almost seems like a top job at Burberry after the Bailey era is a career curse—for both CEOs and Creative Directors. Marco Gobbetti, Jonathan Akeroyd, and Riccardo Tisci don’t seem to have exactly blossomed after leaving the brand.

With so much designer musical chairs going on in the last two years, Daniel Lee could have landed a more impactful CD role elsewhere. Now, it feels like his momentum will also fade while being stuck at a stagnant Burberry.
 
Burberry is the british Ferragamo IMO, the fashion landscape is too crowded and the economic scenario is too uncertain to allow a proper rebrand. Not even Hedi Slimane or Maria Grazia Chiuri would ever be able to salvage these two brands...
No one is going to splurge 1k on a small check print bowling bag for a brand that is not perceived "luxury" when they can get a LV speedy for 1,5k and flaunt the "status symbol".
These brands will progressively scale down production and primarily focus on icons: Burberry got the trench / check print, Ferragamo got the Gancini loafer. Look at the Burberry items on display on the website and you will be overwhelmed by basic merchandise, it's basically H&M with Burberry tags and check prints...
 
I'd have a suggestion what the genius merchandiser could do with those scarf bars, but I really don't want to get banned. Let me say that repeating the same story of him being THE saviour of Burberry (his wonderful ideas included) won't be enough to convince people.

It's getting out of control, and I really hope Daniel won't be affected by this circus. He's way too good for that. Even if some of his collections were questionable, he just doesn't deserve having his voice completely muted. As for Burberry, what's the point of having anyone as the chief creative officer if the CEO is clearly too involved in the creative part?
 

Burberry Investors See Progress​

A year after Josh Schulman became CEO of the British mega-brand, investors say they’re pleased with early signs of recovery even though sales are still falling.
Burberry is expected to report another sales decline in its latest quarterly results.

Analysts expect the group to report on Friday that comparable retail sales fell 3 percent in the April-June quarter. (SOPA Images)

By Reuters
14 July 2025

A year after Josh Schulman became Burberry’s CEO with a mandate to turn the British luxury brand around, investors say they’re pleased with early signs of recovery even though sales are still falling.

Burberry, known for its trademark trench coats and check pattern scarves, is in the early stages of a reboot as Schulman tries to reverse the group’s years of underperformance and return sales and profit to growth.

Analysts expect the group to report on Friday that comparable retail sales fell 3 percent in the April-June quarter from a year earlier, according to a consensus provided by Burberry. That would mark an improvement from a 6 percent fall in the January-March period.

Burberry issued a string of profit warnings under previous CEO Jonathan Akeroyd, and Schulman after taking over said the brand had lost its focus on outerwear and recognisable British references, and had strayed too far into a “niche aesthetic”.


Its shares are up around 63 percent since Schulman took the helm, outperforming luxury peers, and analysts have grown more upbeat in recent weeks, with HSBC saying Burberry has the opportunity to gain market share from rivals.

“We are seeing the improvement in terms of the product range, pricing, marketing, and there are early signs that is leading to a pickup in sales – but it’s early days still,” said Dan Carter, a member of the investment team at Phoenix Asset Management Partners in London.

Burberry’s marketing under Schulman has drawn on its association with British heritage, but in a way that is also contemporary, Carter added.

Burberry typically makes more of its revenue in the autumn/winter season. However, it has been trying to tap into key events of the British summertime, with its most recent “Burberry Festival” campaign timed to coincide with Glastonbury music festival.

The campaign featured hip-hop artist Loyle Carner and music producer Goldie, as well as model Cara Delevingne sitting in a pit of mud in Burberry rain boots, in a nod to Glastonbury’s unpredictable weather.

“They’re a brand that is focusing on outerwear and protection against the weather... so to try and stretch that through the year makes sense,” said Carter.

As part of its turnaround, Burberry announced in May it would cut a fifth of its global workforce, a radical cost-cutting move that investors have welcomed.

Less Expensive Bags, More High-End Trenches​

The brand has moved away from high-priced bags and brought in more affordable models like its recently launched Cotswold range, priced at 1,490 pounds to 1,890 pounds ($2,012.99 to $2,553.39), and the 850-pound Horseshoe crossbody bag - driving its average bag price down by 9 percent since the start of October last year, according to pricing analysis by Luxurynsight.


“They’re kind of trying to thread the needle of being luxury while shifting the assortment down a little bit,” said Brett Sharoni, senior analyst at Pzena Investment Management in New York, which owns shares in Burberry.

“We had been engaging with Burberry for over a year before we ended up buying - and one of our big pieces of feedback to them was, you know, you don’t really have a right to sell handbags for $3,000,” he said.

Burberry has, though, brought in some higher-priced outerwear products such as a 115,000 yuan ($16,044.65) corduroy trench coat in China, Luxurynsight found, and has broadened its range of outerwear products by 22 percent since the start of October last year.

Yumi Shin, chief merchandising officer at New York department store Bergdorf Goodman, said she supports the emphasis on the brand’s trademark products, like the classic trench coat and winter accessories.

“We’re continuing to feel optimistic about Burberry’s transformation under Josh’s leadership,” said Shin. “Josh has a merchant’s mindset and understands the necessity to balance fashion and function on the shop floor.”
 

Users who are viewing this thread

New Posts

Forum Statistics

Threads
214,658
Messages
15,270,458
Members
88,773
Latest member
clomaka
Back
Top